“There is not a one-size-fits-all campaign in this nationally, that’s going to work. So, in each state, in each community and each state, we are building programming, virtual and in person,” said O’Malley Dillon, the campaign manager. 

“You’re also seeing the vice president and Senator [Kamala] Harris continuing to travel, and you’ll see that with Dr. Biden and Doug Emhoff as well,” she said, referring to the nominees and their respective spouses.

The Biden campaign’s next trip will be Monday, when Harris travels to Milwaukee, Wisconsin to mark the Labor Day holiday. Later in the week, Biden will travel to Pennsylvania and Michigan, two crucial swing states that broke for Trump in 2016, but which Democrats hope to win back this year. 

With traditional, in-person voter outreach sidelined by the pandemic, Biden’s campaign has invested heavily in TV and digital advertising and virtual one-on-one conversations for specific groups of voters, said O’Malley Dillon. 

In August alone, she said, the campaign had 2.6 million conversations with voters in battleground states. 

O’Malley Dillon also said that in response to the increase in early voting and mail-in ballots, the campaign has approached its ad spending by front-loading a lot of its programming, “so that we’re hitting voters now, assuming that they’re going  to be voting early.” 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/05/biden-campaign-previews-its-election-strategy-this-fall-.html

The White House is furiously fighting back against a politically explosive report that the president called U.S. military heroes killed in battle ‘losers’ and ‘suckers’ – and turned down a trip to visit U.S. war dead in France due to the rain.

Fox News, the Washington Post and Associated Press were among the news outlets to all confirm the Atlantic’s reporting on Friday. 

Donald Trump was so enraged by Fox News’ reporting, confirming the story, that he demanded the journalist Jennifer Griffin be fired. 

Melania Trump on Friday evening joined the fray and denied the highly-damaging report, tweeting that it was untrue and brought shame on journalism.

‘TheAtlantic story is not true,’ she said. 

Melania Trump on Friday evening denied the Atlantic’s story about her husband

Melania Trump on Friday evening became the latest White House figure to deny the story

Donald Trump on Friday called for the firing of Jennifer Griffin of Fox News after she confirmed the Atlantic’s story

‘It has become a very dangerous time when anonymous sources are believed above all else, & no one knows their motivation. 

‘This is not journalism – It is activism. And it is a disservice to the people of our great nation.’

Her response came as Fox News independently confirmed all of the details in the Atlantic’s report, with their national security correspondent, Jennifer Griffin, appearing on the network to say her sources had told her it was entirely true.

Griffin said that she was told the president did indeed decide he didn’t want to attend the rainy ceremony commemorating U.S. war dead in France.

‘The president drives a lot,’ Griffin said she was told. ‘The other world leaders drove to the cemeteries. He just didn’t want to go.’ 

Two former senior officials also confirmed to her that he disparaged war dead. 

According to Griffin, one of the former senior Trump administration officials told her: ‘When the President spoke about the Vietnam War, he said, “It was a stupid war. Anyone who went was a sucker”.’ 

Griffin’s sources confirmed that they heard Trump say he didn’t want ‘wounded guys’ in military parades, adding: ‘Americans don’t like that’.

A senior Defense Department official with firsthand knowledge of events and a senior U.S. Marine Corps officer who was told about Trump’s comments confirmed some of the remarks to The Associated Press, including the 2018 cemetery comments. 

The Washington Post also confirmed the Atlantic’s reporting, and noted that Jim Mattis, the former defense secretary, and John Kelly, the former chief of staff, did not respond to requests for comment on Friday. 

Other retired Marine generals who have worked with them, including Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr. and Gen. John R. Allen, also declined to comment.

On Friday evening Trump speculated that Kelly could have been the possible source of the report.

Trump did not assert definitively his belief that Kelly was the source of the report – which he also asserted may have come from made-up sources.

But he accused the former top aide of bad mouthing him.

President Donald Trump attacked former White House chief of staff Gen. John Kelly when asked if Kelly could be a source for a blistering Atlantic story that Trump called fallen U.S. troops ‘losers’

Trump furiously denied a report he referred to fallen troops as ‘losers’

‘This man was totally exhausted. He wasn’t even able to function in the last number of months,’ Trump said.

‘He was not able to function. He was sort of a tough guy. By the time he got eaten up in this world, he was unable to function.’

‘I told him: John you’re going to have to go,’ Trump said, describing Kelly’s prolonged departure. ‘And now he goes out and bad-mouths. Now, there are people that are jealous. There are people that are upset that they’re not here anymore. There are people – we’ve done an incredible job, the virus came in, and now w’ere doing an incredible job again,’ Trump said, his thoughts shifting to the pandemic.

‘I don’t know that it was him. I haven’t seen that. I mean I see “anonymous.” But it could have been a guy like a John Kelly – just so you understand,’ Trump said.

Kelly was a key figure who appeared twice in the story, once regarding the 2018 trip to Belleau Wood, and once regarding Trump’s 2017 visit to Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day.  

A former senior administration official told the Washington Post that the president frequently made disparaging comments about veterans and soldiers missing in action, referring to them at times as ‘losers.’

In one account, the president reportedly told senior advisers that he didn’t understand why the U.S. government placed such value on finding soldiers missing in action because they had performed poorly and gotten caught and deserved what they got. 

Jennifer Griffin, national security correspondent for Fox News, confirmed the Atlantic story

Sources told Fox News that the Atlantic’s report about Trump’s remarks was factually accurate

Former officials within the White House told the news station that the reporting was true 

President Donald Trump earlier on Friday repeated his attack on the Atlantic magazine. 

‘The Atlantic Magazine is dying, like most magazines, so they make up a fake story in order to gain some relevance,’ Trump tweeted. ‘Story already refuted, but this is what we are up against. Just like the Fake Dossier. You fight and and fight, and then people realize it was a total fraud!’ Trump continued.

Trump ripped the report as he met with the president of Serbia and the prime minister of Kosovo at the White House Friday.

‘It was a terrible thing that somebody could say the kind of things – especially to me, because I’ve done more for the military than almost anybody else,’ Trump fumed. ‘Nobody’s done what I’ve done’ for the military, Trump claimed.

Then he brought up the tell-all book by former national security advisor John Bolton – a book that accuses Trump of giving ‘personal favors to dictators.’   

‘I hate to bring up his book, but John Bolton, no friend of mine I mean he didn’t know too much about what he was doing, he didn’t do a good job. But he wrote a book. He talks about this incident and he doesn’t mention it,’ said Trump.

‘There’s nobody that considers the military and especially the people that have given their lives in the military – to me they’re heroes,’ Trump said of Americans who die while serving the country. ‘It’s even hard to believe how they could do it. And I say that. The level of bravery …’ he said.    

In addition to the president himself calling the story in the Atlantic fill of ‘lies,’ the White House communications shop has turned to an unlikely source of defense: Bolton, who Trump has ridiculed since his slicing memoir.

‘He is a liar,’ Trump said after Bolton released his tell-all book trashing the administration.

Following publication of the Atlantic story, the White House press shop retweeted an image of Bolton’s book, ‘The Room Where it Happened,’ where Bolton says it was bad weather and the special contingencies of presidential travel that caused the White House to nix a planned cemetery visit by Trump in 2018.

The White House’s furious pushback against a new Atlantic article that reports President Donald Trump called fallen soldiers ‘losers’ included quoting from the tell-all book by former National Security Advisor John Bolton. Trump called Bolton a ‘liar’ after the release of his book

President Trump attacked the Atlantic magazine and called its report ‘fake’

Trump was to have visited the cemetery near Belleau Wood on the 100th anniversary, a cemetery which holds a special place for Marines. 

‘The press turned canceling the cemetery visit into a story that Trump was afraid of the rain and took glee in pointing out that other world leaders traveled around during the day,’ Bolton wrote. ‘Of course, none of them were the President of the United States, but the press didn’t understand the rules for US Presidents are different from the rules for 190 other leaders who don’t command the world’s greatest military forces.’

Bolton wrote that Marine One’s crew were saying it was ‘imprudent’ to fly by helicopter due to the weather, and the drive could be 90 minutes each way. 

The Atlantic piece takes a much harsher view: ‘Trump rejected the idea of the visit because he feared his hair would become disheveled in the rain, and because he did not believe it important to honor American war dead, according to four people with firsthand knowledge of the discussion that day,’ wrote author Jeffrey Goldberg.

White House deputy communications director Brian Morganstern retweeted the passage from the book, as did White House Communications Director Alyssa Farah. 

Farah also called the article ‘offensive & patently false.’ 

Another White House press official, Judd Deere, blasted out people who contradicted accounts in the article.

‘Anyone else notice that there are now four individuals with first-hand knowledge who are ON THE RECORD denying The Atlantic story? This matches the publications four anonymous sources. Will The Atlantic stand by their false anonymous reporting or listen to those who were there?’  

White House officials circulated Bolton’s book, which contradicts key elements of the story’s account

A White House official retweeted an image of internal documents showing visibility as low as 1 mile the day Trump’s Marine One helicopter trip was scrubbed

French President Emmanuel Macron (C) attends the Armistice Day commemorations marking the end of World War I on November 11, 2017, near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Friday also used the fact that the Trump administration had named sources defending him, while the Atlantic only had anonymous sources.

She tore into the media over the report by citing an array of presidential events and photo-ops with troops – including one with a hero military dog and a recent event with Greatest Generation vets during an electrical storm.

McEnany blasted the Atlantic magazine for its stunning report, which among other things reported that Trump skipped a visit to a fabled military cemetery because he wanted to stay out of the rain. 

McEnany marshaled new on-the record comment from officials who report to Trump, including former White House staff secretary and counselor to the president Derek Lyons.

‘He was extremely disappointed that arrangements could not be made to get him to the site and that the trip had been cancelled,’ she quoted Lyons as saying. 

House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany blasted the media following a report that President Trump called fallen U.S. troops ‘losers’ and avoided a visit to a historic cemetery

A senior Defense Department official with first-hand knowledge of events and a senior Marine Corps officer who was told about them confirmed the accounts to the Associated Press – ‘including the cemetery incident.’ 

‘This is more made up Fake News given by disgusting & jealous failures in a disgraceful attempt to influence the 2020 Election!’ Trump tweeted Thursday.

Trump fumed late Thursday upon his return from a speech in Pennsylvania: ‘I would be willing to swear on anything that I never said that about our fallen heroes.’

‘There is nobody that respects them more. No animal – nobody – what animal would say such a thing?’ Trump added.  

The Joe Biden campaign ran with the story and blasted Trump in a Friday conference call.

‘I’d take my wheelchair and titanium legs over Donald Trump’s supposed bone spurs any day,’ said Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), who lost her legs in a combat helicopter accident during the Iraq war. She was referencing Trump’s deferments during Vietnam due to bone spurs.

‘It’s time for this man to leave office,’ she added.

‘His soul cannot conceive of integrity and honor,’ said Gold Star father Khizr Khan, whose son Humayun Khan was killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq in 2004 and whose Democratic convention speech prompted extended back-and-forth with Trump. ‘His soul is that of a coward,’ Khan said. 

Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, who has been released from prison, tweeted that the Atlantic article ‘is accurate.’

‘I testified, ‘Trump claimed it was because of a bone spur. When I asked for medical records, he gave me none and said there was no surgery. He finished with: ‘You think I’m stupid, I wasn’t going to Vietnam.”

The report, published by the Atlantic Thursday, credits four separate military sources, and claims that Trump cancelled a visit to Aisne-Marne American Cemetery near Paris in November 2018 because he was worried his hair would be disheveled by the rain.

In a conversation with senior staff before the planned visit, Trump reportedly asked aides: ‘Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.’

During the same trip, the president allegedly later referred to the more than 1,800 Marines who lost their lives in the Battle of Belleau Wood in France as ‘suckers’ for getting killed.  

Trump, however, has emphatically denied the report Thursday night, calling it ‘a disgraceful situation’ by a ‘terrible magazine.’ 

‘It’s a total lie. It’s fake news. It’s a disgrace, and frankly it’s a disgrace to your profession,’ Trump said. 

President Donald Trump talks with reporters at Andrews Air Force Base after attending a campaign rally in Latrobe, Pa., Thursday, Sept. 3, 2020, at Andrews Air Force Base

Trump vehemently denied the claims, which were first reported in the Atlantic , that he referred to the American war dead at the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery (above) in France in 2018 as ‘losers’ and ‘suckers.’

The president’s alleged comments are in stark contrast to Trump’s public persona as a self-proclaimed champion of the military and its veterans. 

A source described to have first-hand knowledge of the president’s views said Trump ‘doesn’t see the heroism in fighting’. Other sources said Trump is deeply anxious about dying or being disfigured, and that fear manifests itself as disgust for those who have suffered. 

The day of the planned visit at Aisne-Marne American Cemetery, November 10, 2018, was also the 243rd birthday of the U.S. Marine Corps. 

The WWI Battle of Belleau Wood, which lasted 20 days in June 1918 and ended with German forces soundly defeated, was a defining moment in World War I for the Marine Corps. 

But Trump, on the same trip, reportedly asked aides, ‘Who were the good guys in this war?’ He also said that he didn’t understand why the United States would intervene on the side of the Allies, the Atlantic reported.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, Trump said he’s be ‘willing to swear on anything’  that he never said anything derogatory ‘about our fallen heroes.’ 

‘There is nobody that respects them more. No animal — nobody — what animal would say such a thing?’ 

He also wanted to go to the cemetery in France but said he was unable to because of heavy rainfall in Paris, and that the U.S. Secret Service would not allow him to motorcade there.  

‘The helicopter could not fly. The reason it couldn’t fly, because it was raining as hard as I’d ever seen. And on top of that it was very, very foggy,’ Trump said on Thursday.

He added that staffers tried to arrange a motorcade, but that it would have meant going through busy parts of Paris.

‘The Secret Service told me, you can’t do it. I said I have to do it. They said you can’t do it,’ Trump said. 

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, also decried the report, saying ‘It’s sad the depths that people will go to during a lead-up to a presidential campaign to try to smear somebody.’  

Trump was meant to join John Kelly in paying his respects to Kelly’s son’s grave and comfort the families of other fallen service members in Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day, 2017 (above). However, Trump reportedly turned to Kelly and said: ‘I don’t get it. What’s in it for them?’

Tombs are pictured at the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery and Memorial in Belleau, on November 10, 2018

In another account, detailed by the Atlantic, the president told senior advisers that he didn’t understand why the U.S. government placed such value on finding soldiers missing in action because they had performed poorly and gotten caught and deserved what they got, a source said.

The president allegedly said that those who served in the Vietnam War were also ‘losers’ because they failed to dodge the draft. Trump received a medical deferment from Vietnam over alleged bone spurs.

In a conversation with then-Chief of Staff John Kelly, Trump reportedly complained bitterly that he didn’t understand why John McCain, who was imprisoned and tortured during Vietnam, was so revered.

‘Isn’t he kind of a loser?’ Trump asked, according to the four sources.

Trump has previously derided McCain’s legacy as a war hero publicly. On the 2016 presidential campaign trail in Iowa, Trump said: ‘He’s not a war hero. I like people who weren’t captured.’

At the same event, Trump said ‘I don’t like losers’ referencing McCain losing the 2008 presidential election to Barack Obama.

‘I supported him. He lost. He let us down. But, you know, he lost. So I have never liked him as much after that, because I don’t like losers,’ he said.  

The senior Marine Corps officer and the Atlantic, citing sources with firsthand knowledge, further reported that Trump said he didn’t want to support the August 2018 funeral of Republican Sen. John McCain.

The Atlantic reported that Trump was also angered that flags were flown at half-staff for McCain, saying: ‘What the f*** are we doing that for? Guy was a f***ing loser.’

Trump acknowledged Thursday he was ‘never a fan’ of McCain and disagreed with him, but said he still respected him and approved everything to do with his ‘first-class triple-A funeral’ without hesitation because ‘I felt he deserved it.’ 

The magazine said Trump also referred to former President George H.W. Bush as a ‘loser’ because he was shot down by the Japanese as a Navy pilot in World War II.

In a conversation with then-Chief of Staff John Kelly (seen above), Trump reportedly complained bitterly that he didn’t understand why John McCain, who was imprisoned and tortured during Vietnam, was so revered

Trump has previously derided McCain’s legacy as a war hero publicly. On the 2016 presidential campaign trail in Iowa, Trump said: ‘He’s not a war hero. I like people who weren’t captured.’

The Atlantic also details another exchange between Trump and Kelly on Memorial Day, 2017, at the graveside of Kelly’s son, Robert, who died at 29 years old in Afghanistan in 2010. 

Trump was meant to join Kelly in paying his respects to Robert’s grave and comfort the families of other fallen service members. 

However, Trump reportedly turned to Kelly at his son’s graveside and said: ‘I don’t get it. What’s in it for them?’ 

The Defense officials also confirmed to AP that Trump made the remarks.

One of Kelly’s friends, who is a four-star general, told the Atlantic: ‘[Trump] can’t fathom the idea of doing something for someone other than himself. He just thinks that anyone who does anything when there’s no direct personal gain to be had is a sucker. There’s no money in serving the nation.

‘Trump can’t imagine anyone else’s pain. That’s why he would say this to the father of a fallen marine on Memorial Day in the cemetery where he’s buried,’ the source continued.

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said Thursday, ‘If the revelations in today’s Atlantic article are true, then they are yet another marker of how deeply President Trump and I disagree about the role of the President of the United States.’

‘Duty, honor, country — those are the values that drive our service members,’ he said in a statement Thursday night, adding that if he is elected president, ‘I will ensure that our American heroes know that I will have their back and honor their sacrifice — always.’ 

Biden’s son Beau served in Iraq in 2008-09. 

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8699957/Melania-Trump-joins-fights-against-claims-Donald-Trump-called-WWI-Marine-heroes-losers.html

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Friday that he won’t allow the Pentagon to cut funding for the military’s independent newspaper, Stars and Stripes, effectively halting Defense leaders plan to shut the paper down this month.

“The United States of America will NOT be cutting funding to @starsandstripes magazine under my watch,” Trump tweeted. “It will continue to be a wonderful source of information to our Great Military!”

Trump’s tweet came as he fought off new accusations that he called service members killed in World War I “losers” and “suckers” during an event in France in 2018. The comments, first reported by The Atlantic and confirmed by The Associated Press, are shining a fresh light on Trump’s previous public disparaging of American troops and military families and they delivered a new campaign issue to his Democratic rival Joe Biden, less than two months from Election Day.

The Defense Department’s has ordered the paper to halt publication by Sept. 30, and dissolve the organization by the end of January. The order, in a recent memo to Stripes, follows the Pentagon’s move earlier this year to cut the $15.5 million in funding for the paper from the Defense Department budget. And it is a reflection of the Trump administration’s broader animosity for the media and members of the press.

The Trump White House hadn’t spoken out against the Pentagon plan to close the paper before today, even though it’s been in the works and publicly written about for months. On Friday, howeve, Trump worked to shore up his reputation as a staunch supporter of the nation’s armed services.

“I’ve done more for the military than almost anyone else,” he said Friday in the Oval Office.

Trump was alleged to have made the comments about the war dead as he was set to visit the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery during a trip to France in Nov. 2018.

Members of Congress have objected to the defunding move for months. And senators sent a letter to Defense Secretary Mark Esper this week urging him to reinstate the money. The letter, signed by 15 senators — including Republicans and Democrats — also warns Esper that the department is legally prohibited from canceling a budget program while a temporary continuing resolution to fund the federal government is in effect.

“Stars and Stripes is an essential part of our nation’s freedom of the press that serves the very population charged with defending that freedom,” the senators said in the letter.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., in a separate letter to Esper in late August, also voiced opposition to the move, calling Stripes “a valued ‘hometown newspaper’ for the members of the Armed Forces, their families, and civilian employees across the globe.” He added that “as a veteran who has served overseas, I know the value that the Stars and Stripes brings to its readers.”

In the memo, the department says Esper made the decision as a result of his department-wide budget review. Signed by Army Col. Paul Haverstick, acting director of the Pentagon’s Defense Media Activity, the memo says plans to close the paper are due on Sept. 15 and the last newspaper is to be published on Sept. 30.

The memo adds that if the paper continues to be funded by either a continuing resolution “or other unforeseen circumstances” then Stripes must submit a plan by Sept. 15 to shut down at the end of the next budget year, Sept. 30, 2021. Haverstick’s memo says that in that case, the last date for publication of the newspaper will be determined based on budget or other circumstances.

The Stripes ombudsman, Ernie Gates, told The Associated Press on Friday that shutting the paper down “would be fatal interference and permanent censorship of a unique First Amendment organization that has served U.S. troops reliably for generations.”

The first newspaper called Stars and Stripes was very briefly produced in 1861 during the Civil War, but the paper began consistent publication during World War I. When the war was over, publication ended, only to restart in 1942 during World War II, providing wartime news written by troops specifically for troops in battle.

Although the paper gets funding from the Defense Department, it is editorially independent and is delivered in print and digitally to troops all over the world.

The Pentagon proposed cutting the paper’s funding when making its budget request earlier this year, triggering angry reactions from members of Congress.

The House-passed version of the Pentagon budget contains funding for the paper’s publication, but the Senate has not yet finalized a defense funding bill.

Source Article from https://www.snopes.com/ap/2020/09/04/trump-wont-let-pentagon-close-stars-and-stripes-newspaper/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2020/09/04/portland-shooting-how-protesters-right-and-left-may-arm-themselves-rallies/5723571002/

President Donald Trump attacked former White House chief of staff John Kelly at an extraordinary White House press conference Friday evening as the possible source for a report that he had called fallen troops ‘suckers.’

Trump denounced the report and tore into Kelly, saying the former Marine General ‘got eaten alive’ and ‘petered out’ serving as his top advisor in the White House. 

Trump ripped Kelly when asked about the brutal Atlantic story that reports he spoke of fallen U.S. soldiers as ‘losers’ and ‘suckers’ while skipping a planned solemn centennial visit to a cemetery in France that houses fallen Marines over concerns about getting rained on. 

‘I know John Kelly. He was with me – didn’t do a good job. Had no temperament. And ultimately was petered out. He was exhausted,’ Trump said, when asked about Kelly’s notable absence from public comment about the story.

President Donald Trump attacked former White House chief of staff Gen. John Kelly when asked if Kelly could be a source for a blistering Atlantic story that Trump called fallen U.S. troops ‘losers’

Trump did not assert definitively his belief that Kelly was the source of the report – which he also asserted may have come from made-up sources.

But he accused the former top aide of bad mouthing him.

‘This man was totally exhausted. He wasn’t even able to function in the last number of months,’ Trump said.

‘He was not able to function. He was sort of a tough guy. By the time he got eaten up in this world, he was unable to function.’

‘I told him: John you’re going to have to go,’ Trump said, describing Kelly’s prolonged departure. ‘And now he goes out and bad-mouths. Now, there are people that are jealous. There are people that are upset that they’re not here anymore. There are people – we’ve done an incredible job, the virus came in, and now w’ere doing an incredible job again,’ Trump said, his thoughts shifting to the pandemic.

‘I don’t know that it was him. I haven’t seen that. I mean I see “anonymous.” But it could have been a guy like a John Kelly – just so you understand,’ Trump said.

Kelly was a key figure who appeared twice in the story, once regarding the 2018 trip to Belleau Wood, and once regarding Trump’s 2017 visit to Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day. 

Trump furiously denied a report he referred to fallen troops as ‘losers’

White House Chief of Staff John Kelly, left, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford attend a ceremony at the Aisne Marne American Cemetery near the Belleau Wood battleground, in Belleau, France, Saturday, Nov. 10, 2018. Belleau Wood, 90 kilometers (55 miles) northeast of the capital, is the place where U.S. troops had their breakthrough battle by stopping a German push for Paris shortly after entering the war in 1917. Trump did not attend as planneed

‘I don’t know that it was him. I haven’t seen that. I mean I see “anonymous.” But it could have been a guy like a John Kelly – just so you understand,’ Trump said, asked about Gen. John Kelly and whether he might be a source for the Atlantic article

Trump said Kelly ‘didn’t do a good job – had no temperament’

Trump was to have joined Kelly in paying respects to his son, Robert Michael Kelly, who is buried there and who was killed in action in Afghanistan.  

Trump reportedly turned to Kelly and said: ‘I don’t get it. What’s in it for them?’ according to the new story in the Atlantic – which Trump repeatedly termed a ‘failing’ magazine. 

Trump also cited the weather and French authorities, as well as Paris traffic, as reasons he simply couldn’t do the trip to Belleau Wood under the circumstances. 

He said the Secret Service, who are doing a report, were ‘unable to even think about it’ amid bad weather. 

‘I said: “Nope, I want to go. I insist on going,’ Trump said. ‘It would have taken us forever. The Paris police said please you can’t do this. They’d have to shut down various parts of Paris. It just was not a possible situation,’ Trump added. 

Other world leaders, including French President Emanuel Macron, ended up making the 90-minute drive, and Trump’s absence became a story at the time. 

Fox News confirmed key elements of the original story.  

Earlier, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany tore into the media over the report by citing an array of presidential events and photo-ops with troops – including one with a hero military dog and a recent event with Greatest Generation vets during an electrical storm.

McEnany blasted the Atlantic magazine for its stunning report, which among other things reported that Trump skipped a visit to a fabled military cemetery because he wanted to stay out of the rain. 

McEnany marshaled new on-the record comment from officials who report to Trump, including former White House staff secretary and counselor to the president Derek Lyons.

House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany blasted the media following a report that President Trump called fallen U.S. troops ‘losers’ and avoided a visit to a historic cemetery

‘He was extremely disappointed that arrangements could not be made to get him to the site and that the trip had been cancelled,’ she quoted Lyons as saying. 

Then she ran down a list of many interactions Trump, who serves as commander in chief, has had with the military. 

She also produced a heavily redacted document from a Marine official stating ‘we have a ‘bad weather call’ for the scheduled flight in November 2018, and blasted ‘cowardly anonymous sources who probably do not even exist.’

She mentioned a World War II vet who flew with the president on a helicopter in Normandy, ‘visits the president had with our wounded warriors, special ops teams who came to the Oval Office, including the team that got [Abu bakr] Al-Baghdadi, and they brought along Conan the dog as well.’

U.S. Army dog Conan sits in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC, USA, 25 November 2019. Trump honored the Belgian Malinois dog named Conan, who participated in the raid on ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. Conan sustained injuries in the chase which led al-Baghdadi to detonate a suicide bomb vest, killing himself and three children

McEnany ran through times Trump has met with U.S. troops, and mentioned the Rose Garden event with a surprise visit by the dog, Conan

She also mentioned the time Trump attended the World Series and brough along veterans. Also there are now Director of National Intelligence Rep. John Ratcliffe (l)and now White House chief of staff Rep. Mark Meadows (r)

President Donald Trump speaks at the Battleship North Carolina in Wilmington, North Carolina, on September 2, 2020, the 75th anniversary of the end of WWII, where he praised the ‘greatest generation’

Trump quickly zipped through his remarks amid thunder and an approaching storm

‘He met with families at the Army-Navy game. He does this routinely,’ she said.  

Trump also has met wounded warriors at Walter Reed Naval Medical Center. 

‘At the World Series, when he got an opportunity to go watch the Nationals, he brought veterans with him,’ McEnany continued.

‘I’ve also seen him just a day before this article came up – talk about how there was random lightning popping around and he said, “I want to go out there and I want to talk to our World War II veterans,”‘ she said. ‘This is America’s greatest generation and the president holds them in the highest of regards,’ she said.’

She teed off on the article at a White House press briefing where national security advisor Robert O’Brien also vouched for his own time talking with Trump about security issues.

She spoke of the dignified transfers of the remains of fallen soldiers, which he called the ‘toughest job’ any president had, and described times he has had to inform Trump of the deaths of U.S. soldiers. 

‘I’ve seen him send me to Dover when he couldn’t go because of scheduling issues or him being overseas and asking me to represent him there,’ O’Brien said, a comment he made at a time when Trump was facing criticism for traveling there four times in his 3 1/2 year presidency, when there have been 96 such transfers.

‘Here is the one truth: No one, and I mean no one, loves and cares for our servicemen and women as President Donald J. Trump,’ McEnany said, in one of her signature walk-off conclusions to a press briefing. She then left the podium without taking any questions. 

McEnany’s recitation came as the White House furiously fighting back against a politically explosive report that the president called U.S. military heroes killed in battle ‘losers’ and ‘suckers’ – and turned down a trip to visit U.S. war dead in France due to the rain.

President Donald Trump rejoined the fray on Friday, attacking the Atlantic magazine, which published the report that he termed ‘fake.’ 

‘The Atlantic Magazine is dying, like most magazines, so they make up a fake story in order to gain some relevance,’ Trump tweeted. ‘Story already refuted, but this is what we are up against. Just like the Fake Dossier. You fight and and fight, and then people realize it was a total fraud!’ Trump continued.

Trump ripped the report as he met with the president of Serbia and the prime minister of Kosovo at the White House Friday.

‘It was a terrible thing that somebody could say the kind of things – especially to me, because I’ve done more for the mil than almost anybody else,’ Trump fumed. ‘Nobody’s done what I’ve done’ for the military, Trump claimed.

Then he brought up the tell-all book by former national security advisor John Bolton – a book that accuses Trump of giving ‘personal favors to dictators.’   

‘I hate to bring up his book, but john Bolton, no friend of mine I mean he didn’t know too much about what he was doing, he didn’t do a good job. But he wrote a book. He talks about this incident and he doesn’t mention it,’ said Trump.

‘There’s nobody that considers the military and especially the people that have given their lives in the military – to me they’re heroes,’ Trump said of Americans who die while serving the country. ‘It’s even hard to believe how they could do it. And I say that. The level of bravery …’ he said.    

In addition to the president himself calling the story in the Atlantic fill of ‘lies,’ the White House communications shop has turned to an unlikely source of defense: Bolton, who Trump has ridiculed since his slicing memoir.

‘He is a liar,’ Trump said after Bolton released his tell-all book trashing the administration.

Following publication of the Atlantic story, the White House press shop retweeted an image of Bolton’s book, ‘The Room Where it Happened,’ where Bolton says it was bad weather and the special contingencies of presidential travel that caused the White House to nix a planned cemetery visit by Trump in 2018.

The White House’s furious pushback against a new Atlantic article that reports President Donald Trump called fallen soldiers ‘losers’ included quoting from the tell-all book by former National Security Advisor John Bolton. Trump called Bolton a ‘liar’ after the release of his book

President Trump attacked the Atlantic magazine and called its report ‘fake’

Trump was to have visited the cemetery near Belleau Wood on the 100th anniversary which holds a special place for Marines. 

‘The press turned canceling the cemetery visit into a story that Trump was afraid of the rain and took glee in pointing out that other world leaders traveled around during the day,’ Bolton wrote. ‘Of course, none of them were the President of the United States, but the press didn’t understand the rules for US Presidents are different form the rules for 190 other leaders who don’t command the world’s greatest military forces.’

Bolton wrote that Marine One’s crew were saying it was ‘imprudent’ to fly by helicopter due to the weather, and the drive could be 90 minutes each way. 

The Atlantic piece takes a much harsher view: ‘Trump rejected the idea of the visit because he feared his hair would become disheveled in the rain, and because he did not believe it important to honor American war dead, according to four people with firsthand knowledge of the discussion that day,’ wrote author Jeffrey Goldberg.

White House deputy communications director Brian Morganstern retweeted the passage book, as did White House Communications Director Alyssa Farah. 

Farah also called the article ‘offensive & patently false.’ 

Another White House press official, Judd Deere, blasted out people who contradicted accounts in the article.

‘Anyone else notice that there are now four individuals with first-hand knowledge who are ON THE RECORD denying The Atlantic story? This matches the publications four anonymous sources. Will The Atlantic stand by their false anonymous reporting or listen to those who were there?’  

White House officials circulated Bolton’s book, which contradicts key elements of the story’s account

A White House official retweeted an image of internal documents showing visibility as low as 1 mile the day Trump’s Marine One helicopter trip was scrubbed

French President Emmanuel Macron (C) attends the Armistice Day commemorations marking the end of World War I on November 11, 2017, near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris

A senior Defense Department official with first-hand knowledge of events and a senior Marine Corps officer who was told about them confirmed the accounts to the Associated Press – ‘including the cemetery incident.’ 

‘This is more made up Fake News given by disgusting & jealous failures in a disgraceful attempt to influence the 2020 Election!’ Trump tweeted Thursday.

Trump fumed late Thursday upon his return from a speech in Pennsylvania: ”I would be willing to swear on anything that I never said that about our fallen heroes.’

‘There is nobody that respects them more. No animal – nobody – what animal would say such a thing?’ Trump added.  

The Joe Biden campaign ran with the story and blasted Trump in a Friday conference call.

‘I’d take my wheelchair and titanium legs over Donald Trump’s supposed bone spurs any day,’ said Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), who lost her legs in a plane accident in Iraq. She was referencing Trump’s deferments during Vietnam due to bone spurs.

‘It’s time for this man to leave office,’ she added.

‘His soul cannot conceive of integrity and honor,’ said Gold Star father Khizr Khan, whose son Humayun Khan was killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq in 2004 and whose Democratic convention speech prompted extended back-and-forth with Trump. ‘His soul is that of a coward,’ Khan said. 

Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, who has been released from prison, tweeted that the Atlantic article ‘is accurate.’

‘I testified, “Trump claimed it was because of a bone spur. When I asked for medical records, he gave me none and said there was no surgery. He finished with: ‘You think I’m stupid, I wasn’t going to Vietnam.”’

The report, published by the Atlantic Thursday, credits four separate military sources, and claims that Trump cancelled a visit to Aisne-Marne American Cemetery near Paris in November 2018 because he was worried his hair would be disheveled by the rain.

In a conversation with senior staff before the planned visit, Trump reportedly asked aides: ‘Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.’

During the same trip, the president allegedly later referred to the more than 1,800 Marines who lost their lives in the Battle of Belleau Wood in France as ‘suckers’ for getting killed. 

A senior Defense Department official with firsthand knowledge of events and a senior U.S. Marine Corps officer who was told about Trump’s comments confirmed some of the remarks to The Associated Press, including the 2018 cemetery comments. 

Trump, however, has emphatically denied the report Thursday night, calling it ‘a disgraceful situation’ by a ‘terrible magazine.’ 

‘It’s a total lie. It’s fake news. It’s a disgrace, and frankly it’s a disgrace to your profession,’ Trump said. 

President Donald Trump talks with reporters at Andrews Air Force Base after attending a campaign rally in Latrobe, Pa., Thursday, Sept. 3, 2020, at Andrews Air Force Base

Trump vehemently denied the claims, which were first reported in the Atlantic , that he referred to the American war dead at the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery (above) in France in 2018 as ‘losers’ and ‘suckers.’

The president’s alleged comments are in stark contrast to Trump’s public persona as a self-proclaimed champion of the military and its veterans. 

A source described to have first-hand knowledge of the president’s views said Trump ‘doesn’t see the heroism in fighting’. Other sources said Trump is deeply anxious about dying or being disfigured, and that fear manifests itself as disgust for those who have suffered. 

The day of the planned visit at Aisne-Marne American Cemetery, November 10, 2018, was also the 243rd birthday of the U.S. Marine Corps. 

The Battle of Belleau Wood, which lasted 20 days in June 1918 and ended with German forces soundly defeated, was a defining moment in World War I for the Marine Corps. 

But Trump, on the same trip, reportedly asked aides, ‘Who were the good guys in this war?’ He also said that he didn’t understand why the United States would intervene on the side of the Allies, the Atlantic reported.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, Trump said he’s be ‘willing to swear on anything’  that he never said anything derogatory ‘about our fallen heroes.’ 

‘There is nobody that respects them more. No animal — nobody — what animal would say such a thing?’ 

He also wanted to go to the cemetery in France but said he was unable to because of heavy rainfall in Paris, and that the U.S. Secret Service would not allow him to motorcade there.  

‘The helicopter could not fly. The reason it couldn’t fly, because it was raining as hard as I’d ever seen. And on top of that it was very, very foggy,’ Trump said on Thursday.

He added that staffers tried to arrange a motorcade, but that it would have meant going through busy parts of Paris.

‘The Secret Service told me, you can’t do it. I said I have to do it. They said you can’t do it,’ Trump said. 

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, also decried the report, saying ‘It’s sad the depths that people will go to during a lead-up to a presidential campaign to try to smear somebody.’  

Trump was meant to join John Kelly in paying his respects to Kelly’s son’s grave and comfort the families of other fallen service members in Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day, 2017 (above). However, Trump reportedly turned to Kelly and said: ‘I don’t get it. What’s in it for them?’

Tombs are pictured at the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery and Memorial in Belleau, on November 10, 2018

In another account, detailed by the Atlantic, the president told senior advisers that he didn’t understand why the U.S. government placed such value on finding soldiers missing in action because they had performed poorly and gotten caught and deserved what they got, a source said.

The president allegedly said that those who served in the Vietnam War were also ‘losers’ because they failed to dodge the draft. Trump received a medical deferment from Vietnam over alleged bone spurs.

In a conversation with then-Chief of Staff John Kelly, Trump reportedly complained bitterly that he didn’t understand why John McCain, who was imprisoned and tortured during Vietnam, was so revered.

‘Isn’t he kind of a loser?’ Trump asked, according to the four sources.

Trump has previously derided McCain’s legacy as a war hero publicly. On the 2016 presidential campaign trail in Iowa, Trump said: ‘He’s not a war hero. I like people who weren’t captured.’

At the same event, Trump said ‘I don’t like losers’ referencing McCain losing the 2008 presidential election to Barack Obama.

‘I supported him. He lost. He let us down. But, you know, he lost. So I have never liked him as much after that, because I don’t like losers,’ he said.  

The senior Marine Corps officer and the Atlantic, citing sources with firsthand knowledge, further reported that Trump said he didn’t want to support the August 2018 funeral of Republican Sen. John McCain.

The Atlantic reported that Trump was also angered that flags were flown at half-staff for McCain, saying: ‘What the f*** are we doing that for? Guy was a f***ing loser.’

Trump acknowledged Thursday he was ‘never a fan’ of McCain and disagreed with him, but said he still respected him and approved everything to do with his ‘first-class triple-A funeral’ without hesitation because ‘I felt he deserved it.’ 

The magazine said Trump also referred to former President George H.W. Bush as a ‘loser’ because he was shot down by the Japanese as a Navy pilot in World War II.

In a conversation with then-Chief of Staff John Kelly (seen above), Trump reportedly complained bitterly that he didn’t understand why John McCain, who was imprisoned and tortured during Vietnam, was so revered

Trump has previously derided McCain’s legacy as a war hero publicly. On the 2016 presidential campaign trail in Iowa, Trump said: ‘He’s not a war hero. I like people who weren’t captured.’

The Atlantic also details another exchange between Trump and Kelly on Memorial Day, 2017, at the graveside of Kelly’s son, Robert, who died at 29 years old in Afghanistan in 2010. 

Trump was meant to join Kelly in paying his respects to Robert’s grave and comfort the families of other fallen service members. 

However, Trump reportedly turned to Kelly at his son’s graveside and said: ‘I don’t get it. What’s in it for them?’ 

The Defense officials also confirmed to The AP that the Trump made the remarks.

One of Kelly’s friends, who is a four-star general, told the Atlantic: ‘[Trump] can’t fathom the idea of doing something for someone other than himself. He just thinks that anyone who does anything when there’s no direct personal gain to be had is a sucker. There’s no money in serving the nation.

‘Trump can’t imagine anyone else’s pain. That’s why he would say this to the father of a fallen marine on Memorial Day in the cemetery where he’s buried,’ the source continued.

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said Thursday, ‘If the revelations in today’s Atlantic article are true, then they are yet another marker of how deeply President Trump and I disagree about the role of the President of the United States.’

‘Duty, honor, country — those are the values that drive our service members,’ he said in a statement Thursday night, adding that if he is elected president, ‘I will ensure that our American heroes know that I will have their back and honor their sacrifice — always.’ Biden’s son Beau served in Iraq in 2008-09. 

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8699691/Trump-says-believes-former-COS-Kelly-claims-called-dead-troops-losers.html

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/04/politics/militia-members-kenosha/index.html

Protesters marched in Rochester, N.Y., on Thursday night, as many appeared unswayed by the city’s mayor’s recent decision to suspend seven police officers involved in the suffocation death of Daniel Prude.

Prude, 41, a Black man, died when he was taken off life support March 30. Just seven days earlier, a “spit hood” was put over his head during an encounter with Rochester police to prevent him from spitting — after he ran naked in the street. He was held down by police for roughly two minutes until he stopped breathing.

A medical examiner ruled his death as “complications of asphyxia in the setting of physical restraint.” Delirium and acute intoxication by phencyclidine, or PCP, were listed as contributing factors.

ROCHESTER MAYOR SUSPENDS OFFICERS INVOLVED IN DANIEL PRUDE’S DEATH

Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren announced the suspensions at a news conference. His death had received no public attention until body camera footage was released by his family on Wednesday. Warren said Prude “was failed by the police department, our mental health care system, our society, and he was failed by me.”

After her announcement, protesters denounced racism as they marched on Rochester police headquarters, where officers stood dressed in riot gear, as the crowd waved Black Lives Matter signs and flags, according to Rochester’s WHAM-TV.

Protesters tear down the barricades in front of the Public Safety Building in Rochester, N.Y., Thursday, Sept. 3, 2020. Seven police officers involved in the suffocation death of Daniel Prude in Rochester were suspended Thursday by the city’s mayor, who said she was misled for months about the circumstances of the fatal encounter. (AP Photo/Adrian Kraus)

Officers doused some protesters with a chemical spray and fired an irritant after demonstrators approached the building and shook surrounding metal fences. Multiple reports indicated pepper balls were fired by police.

Throughout the night, officers would continue to deploy the use of pepper balls at protesters, according to video by WHAM reporter Tanner Jubenville.

DANIEL PRUDE: FAMILY WANTS OFFICERS CHARGED AFTER VIDEO OF ARREST EMERGES

Video later showed officers pushing demonstrators away from Rochester police headquarters towards an area underneath the I-490 overpass, located south of the building, reports said.

Some protesters responded by throwing bottles, and it appeared at least one person was detained, according to a video.

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Police continued to push the protesters south, and a crowd of roughly 70 people was later seen crossing the Ford Street Bridge around 2 a.m., with a patrol car monitoring behind them, according to video by WHEC reporter Andrew Hyman.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/protesters-march-rochester-mayor-suspends-police-officers-involved-mans-suffocation-death

That describes the height in dekameters, or tens of meters, that the halfway point of the atmosphere’s mass is above the surface. When air warms, it expands. When it cools, a volume of air shrinks. An air mass this hot expands a lot, causing a column of air to grow and raising the atmosphere’s halfway point. With this particular system, that level is 5,980 meters — or about 19,000 feet — above the surface. Elsewhere across the western United States, the number will be higher, at or above 6,000 meters, or about 19,700 feet, above the surface.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2020/09/04/california-heat-wave-fires/

But in a news release, the Gamaleya Institute implied that its vaccine was superior to AstraZeneca’s. It said that the level of antibodies from vaccinated volunteers was “1.4-1.5 times higher than the level of antibodies of patients who had recovered from Covid-19.”

AstraZeneca, they claimed, only produced antibody levels equal to that in convalescent plasma.

It is not clear why the paper presents a different picture. The authors of the study did not respond to a request for comment.

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John Moore, a virologist at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York who was not involved in the study, said that it was too early to make any meaningful comparisons among the various Covid-19 vaccines. Each team uses different tests to measure antibody levels. And each group of recovered patients they study for convalescent plasma may have different levels of antibodies.

“We have long been suffering from the apples-versus-oranges scenario, but now we’re into fruit salad territory, and it drives me bananas trying to figure it all out,” he said.

One thing is clear, however: No Phase 1 / 2 trial can demonstrate protection against Covid-19.

That requires a so-called Phase 3 trial, in which a large number of volunteers are given either a vaccine or a placebo. A Phase 3 trial can also reveal harmful side effects missed by small preliminary studies.

In their paper, the Russian scientists wrote that they got approval on Aug. 26 to run a Phase 3 trial on 40,000 people. There are seven other vaccines currently in these late-stage trials. Johnson & Johnson is expected to start its own Phase 3 trial later this month, and Novavax is expected to start its own in October, bringing the total to 10.

Phase 3 trials can take months to yield clear results, Dr. Bar-Zeev said, and even then they have to be carefully reviewed before any decision is made about using a vaccine widely.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/04/health/russia-covid-vaccine.html

Former White House national security adviser John BoltonJohn BoltonConspicuous by their absence from the Republican Convention Trump goes after niece who wrote critical book: ‘Unstable’ and ‘shunned’ entire life Rand Paul hits Biden over Iraq: He ‘will continue to spill our blood and treasure’ MORE said in comments published Friday that he never heard President Trump refer to slain American soldiers buried at a French cemetery as “losers” and “suckers,” after the allegations were made in a bombshell report published Thursday.

“I didn’t hear that,” Bolton told The New York Times. “I’m not saying he didn’t say them later in the day or another time, but I was there for that discussion.”

Bolton’s remarks came after Trump himself denied any allegations of disrespectful comments toward American soldiers killed in action, which were first reported by The Atlantic’s editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg.

“I would be willing to swear on anything that I never said that about our fallen heroes,” Trump said to the press as he was exiting Air Force One early Friday. “There is nobody that respects them more. So, I just think it’s a horrible, horrible thing … no animal, nobody, what animal would say such a thing.” 

The Atlantic reported that Trump bailed on his appearance at Aisne-Marne American Cemetery in 2018 due to concerns that rain would dishevel his hair.

“Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers,” Trump also allegedly told aides before canceling his trip to Belleau, France.

Several White House staff and Trump campaign aides denied the president ever made the comments.

Bolton’s defense of the president comes just months after his release of his memoir “The Room Where It Happened,” which offered a behind-the-scenes look at Trump’s discourse with officials in the White House.

Bolton served as national security adviser for Trump from April 2018 to September 2019, and he served as the 25th U.S. ambassador to the United Nations from 2005 to 2006 during the Bush administration.

Trump in 2015 garnered criticism after mocking late Sen. John McCainJohn Sidney McCainTrump denies report he called U.S. service members buried in France ‘losers’, ‘suckers’ Overnight Defense: Seventh US service member dies from COVID-19 | Trump reportedly called American war dead in French cemetery ‘losers’ | Trump expected to name new ambassador to Afghanistan Trump called American war dead in French cemetery ‘losers:’ report MORE (R-Ariz.), who was captured and tortured by North Vietnamese forces during the Vietnam War, saying he preferred people who “weren’t captured” and aren’t “losers.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/515132-john-bolton-says-he-didnt-hear-trump-insult-fallen-soldiers-in-france

TOPLINE

President Trump refused to visit the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery in France in 2018 because he regarded the dead World War I veterans as “suckers” and “losers,” according to a report from the Atlantic citing four senior staffers, echoing disparaging comments made against late Sen. John McCain’s service in the military while campaigning for president in 2015.

KEY FACTS

The bombshell report did not name the staffers who made the allegations, including details from a November 2018 trip to France, when Trump claimed bad weather that had forced his helicopter to be grounded was the reason for cancelling a planned visit to the cemetery, where 2,289 U.S. troops are buried, many of whom died at the bloody Battle of Belleau Wood.

However, according to the Atlantic, the visit was actually cancelled because Trump worried the weather would ruin his hair and because he felt the Americans buried there were “suckers” for dying.

“Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers,” Trump reportedly said, along with questioning why the Marines fought for the Allies and who the “good guys” of the war were.

The words echo what Trump said about McCain in 2015, saying at an Iowa summit at the time, “He was a war hero because he was captured,” and that “I like people who weren’t captured,” with the Atlantic adding that Trump called McCain a “f—ing loser” when he died in 2018.

The report also describes an Arlington National Cemetery visit in 2017, where Trump asked former White House chief of staff John Kelly, “I don’t get it—what’s in it for them?” as he stood near the grave of Kelly’s son Robert, who was killed in Afghanistan.

Attempting to hold a military parade in 2018—which was postponed after reports that it would cost $92 million—Trump also reportedly asked not to include wounded veterans because “nobody wants to see that.”

White House Communications Director Alyssa Farah called the Atlantic report “offensive and patently false.”

Key Background

Trump infamously avoided the draft for the Vietnam War with four education deferments and a fifth deferment for “bone spurs,” Trump told the New York Times in 2016. As illustrated by the Atlantic report, Trump has a streak of questioning military service. In 2016, Trump criticized the Muslim parents of a slain U.S. soldier who said at the Democratic National Convention that Trump “sacrificed nothing,” responding by saying, “I think I’ve made a lot of sacrifices; I work very, very hard,” and questioning why the soldier’s mother didn’t say anything during the speech.

Tangent

After Trump chose not to visit the cemetery in 2018, the French army tweeted a picture of a recruit navigating an obstacle in the rain with the caption, “There is rain, but it’s okay. We stay motivated.”

Chief Critic

In June, Trump’s former secretary of defense, Gen. James Mattis, strongly criticized Trump’s use of federal troops against peaceful protesters in Washington, D.C., to afford him a photo op in front of St. John’s Church. “When I joined the military, some 50 years ago, I swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution. Never did I dream that troops taking that same oath would be ordered under any circumstance to violate the Constitutional rights of their fellow citizens—much less to provide a bizarre photo op for the elected commander-in-chief, with military leadership standing alongside.”

Big Number

42%. That’s the percentage of active-duty troops that view Trump very unfavorably, according to an August Military Times poll. Support for Trump from members of the military has fallen since 2016, when 40.5% favored him over the 20.6% who preferred Hillary Clinton. In its August poll, former vice president Joe Biden has 41.3% support versus 37.4% for Trump.

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/mattperez/2020/09/03/report-trump-called-us-wwi-veterans-suckers-and-losers/

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The man believed to have fatally shot a supporter of Donald Trump following skirmishes between Black Lives Matter protesters and a pro-Trump caravan in Portland, Oregon, was a regular at the demonstrations that have roiled the north-western city for months.

Michael Forest Reinoehl, 48, had described himself in a social media post as “100% ANTIFA”, and suggested the tactics of counter-protesters amounted to “warfare”. He had been shot at one protest and cited for having a gun at another.

Reinoehl was himself killed on Thursday when he pulled a gun as a federal taskforce attempted to apprehend him near Lacey, Washington, the US Marshals Service said in a statement.

The killing came shortly after Reinoehl gave an interview to Vice News in which he appeared to acknowledge having killed Aaron “Jay” Danielson, 39, on Saturday. In the interview, Reinoehl said he “had no choice” but to do what he did because he thought he and his friend were about to be stabbed.

“You know, lots of lawyers suggest that I shouldn’t even be saying anything, but I feel it’s important that the world at least gets a little bit of what’s really going on,” Reinoehl told the TV news program. “I had no choice. I mean, I … I had a choice. I could have sat there and watched them kill a friend of mine of color. But I wasn’t going to do that.”

His sister said in a text message to Associated Press that she told police he appeared to be a person caught on video running from the scene of the fatal shooting. She provided the statement on the condition of anonymity, citing dozens of threats her family had received since people online identified him from a video of the shooting.

Danielson was fatally shot in the chest on 29 August after some participants in a caravan of Trump supporters, estimated at about 600 cars, drove downtown and encountered Black Lives Matter protesters. Skirmishes broke out, with people in the caravan firing paintball weapons at people in the street. Video taken by a live-streamer appeared to show Danielson, a member of the rightwing group Patriot Prayer, spraying pepper spray just before he was shot.

Earlier, on 5 July, police cited Reinoehl on allegations of possessing a loaded gun in a public place, resisting arrest and interfering with police.

On 26 July, Reinoehl was shot in the arm after he got involved in a scuffle between an armed white man and a group of young people of color. The man who was carrying that gun, Aaron Scott Collins, told the Oregonian that he and a friend had just left a bar when they saw the group harassing an older Black man. His friend began filming them with a phone, and the group confronted them, calling them Nazis, he said.

In the ensuing scuffle, Collins said, he was struck in the head with a skateboard and fell down. He felt people trying to grab his gun from its holster, and he decided to pull it out to get control of it. Reinoehl, whom he did not know, then began grabbing at the slide, Collins said.

Reinoehl later that day spoke to an AP videographer. He said he didn’t know what had started the altercation between Collins and the group, but that several people had decided to intervene when they saw Collins fighting with minors.

“As soon as the adults jumped in, he pulled out a gun,” Reinoehl said. “I jumped in there and pulled the gun away from people’s heads, avoided being shot in the stomach and I got shot in the arm.”

He added: “It’s escalating to a point where they’re trying to disrupt us in every way that’s illegal. They’re shooting at us, they’re sending people in who are starting fights. It’s terrible. It’s warfare.”

Reinoehl was also wanted on a warrant out of Baker county in eastern Oregon, where court records show he skipped a hearing related to a June case in which he has been charged with driving under the influence of controlled substances, reckless driving, reckless endangerment and unlawful possession of a firearm.

Police said he drove on an interstate at up to 111mph, with his daughter in the car, while racing his 17-year-old son, who was in a different vehicle. His daughter also has attended protests with him; at one, she was photographed carrying a baseball bat.

“I’m trying to give her an education,” he told the AP. “She’s going to be contributing to running this new country that we’re fighting for.”

Reinoehl wrote on his Facebook page that he was a professional snowboarder for Deviation, a Portland ski and snowboard company. But in a statement on Monday, Deviation said Reinoehl had never been an employee or sponsored athlete of the company.

One friend who knows Reinoehl through snowboarding said he had been sponsored by various companies over the years and had sometimes won “big air” competitions to the point that his nickname became “Big Mike”. The friend described him as “a really nice guy, a gentle giant” who sometimes fashioned himself into “a defender role”. The friend spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing threats he had received online.

In her text message, Reinoehl’s sister said they were never close and she had been estranged from him for the past three years. She said she learned about his potential involvement in the shooting when she received a threatening phone call on Sunday, the first of 60 that day.

“Violence and hate are never acceptable,“ she added. “When people use violence to fight for peace and equality, all we get is more violence, and the cause suffers.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/sep/04/portland-shooting-suspect-michael-reinoehl

A 28-year-old man named Miguel Hernandez ultimately pleaded guilty in the case to improperly returning a marked ballot. According to local news reports at the time, a woman identified Hernandez as the man to whom she had given a blank ballot she placed in a white envelope but had not signed. Bruce Anton, Hernandez’s defense attorney at the time, said that as best he could remember, Hernandez was hired by others to canvass neighborhoods for mail-in ballots, which he would then turn over to those who hired him for possible alteration. He said that, on a good day, Hernandez might collect 12 ballots. “1,700? Not a prayer in the world,” Anton said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/barr-claims-a-man-collected-1700-ballots-and-filled-them-out-as-he-pleased-prosecutors-say-thats-not-what-happened/2020/09/03/923aafac-ee2e-11ea-ab4e-581edb849379_story.html

Scores of current and former law enforcement chiefs endorse Joe Biden and call Donald Trump a ‘lawless president’ despite wrapping his campaign in laws and order’ rhetoric

  • List includes 190 sheriffs, state attorneys general, prosecutors, former police chiefs, and U.S. attorneys
  • It comes as Trump continues to center his campaign around ‘law and order’ 
  • Names come from such states as Arizona, Colorado and Michigan, and Ohio 

Democrat Joe Biden‘s presidential campaign has amassed more than 190 endorsements from sheriffs, prosecutors and attorneys general even as Donald Trump centers his campaign around a call for ‘law and corder.

The list includes former sheriffs, state attorneys general, and U.S. attorneys. Many come from battleground states such as Colardao, Michigan, and Arizona, during a campaign when protests and violent clashes in cities has become an undercurrent of the campaign. 

Some of those lending the name to the effort, which was reported by Fox News, blasted Trump as a ‘lawless’ president.

Joe Biden’s campaign announced the backing of 190 former sheriffs, state attorneys general, and U.S. attorneys

Among them was Noble Wray, the retired police chief of Madison, Wisconsin. “It’s ironic that a lawless president claims to be the ‘law and order’ president,” Wray told the network. “We are at a crossroads with this nation, and we need a president that has always prioritized the safety of Americans and their families.”

Said the Biden campaign in a statement Friday morning: ‘Their endorsement comes on the heels of Donald Trump’s attempts to characterize himself as the ‘Law and Order’ president despite failing to condemn violence, his gross mismanagement of the coronavirus, and his incitement of chaos, destruction and violence as a way to rally his base and advance his political agenda. Additionally, 23 Democratic Attorneys-General have already endorsed Biden.’ 

Biden’s list came out a day after the former vice president toured Kenosha, Wisconsin and met with the family of Jacob Blake, who was shot in the back seven times by a police officer.

President Donald Trump listens to Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth (R) on September 1, 2020, at Mary D. Bradford High School in Kenosha, Wisconsin. – Trump visited Kenosha, the city at the center of a raging US debate over racism, despite pleas to stay away and claims he is dangerously fanning tensions as a reelection ploy

Trump has made support from law enforcement groups a pillar of his campaign

Both candidates toward Kenosha, the site of protests and destruction following the shooting of Jacob Blake

The Biden camp announced the endorsements after both he and Trump visited Kenosha, Wisconsin

Trump had visited a day earlier, where he toured small businesses turned to rubble and met with law enforcement members who support him – including Sheriff David Beth, who has already drawn controversy for his 2018 comments calling for a group of black shoplifters to be warehoused for life.

Late Thursday, Trump tweeted: ‘Why aren’t the Portland Police ARRESTING the cold blooded killer of Aaron “Jay” Danielson. Do your job, and do it fast. Everybody knows who this thug is. No wonder Portland is going to hell!’ He tagged the Justice Department and the FBI. 

Michael Reinoehl, 48, an Antifa gunman who had admitted shooting Danielson, a Patriot Prayer supporter, died later in a shootout with U.S. Marhsalls.

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Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8698059/Scores-current-former-law-enforcement-chiefs-endorse-Joe-Biden.html