Speaker At A Trump-Vance Rally Calls For ‘Civil War’ If Trump Does Not Win In November
In other words, almost everything Trump accuses Biden of, he is guilty of himself – and spectacularly so.
Speaker At A Trump-Vance Rally Calls For ‘Civil War’ If Trump Does Not Win In November
S.V. Date
Tue, 23 July 2024 at 7:55 am AWST
Donald Trump’s Twisted Take On Unity
Barely a week after coup-attempting former President Donald Trump was nearly assassinated at a rally in Pennsylvania, a speaker at an Ohio rally for his running mate on Monday called for “civil war” if Trump does not win back the White House.
“I’m afraid if we lose this one, it’s going to take a civil war to save the country,” said George Lang, a state senator from the Cincinnati area, shortly before Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance took the stage at his first solo rally in Middletown, his hometown.
Trump campaign officials did not respond to HuffPost queries about Lang’s remarks, but about half an hour later, Lang apologized for them in a social media post.
“I regret the divisive remarks I made in the excitement of the moment on stage. Especially in light of the assassination attempt on President Trump last week, we should all be mindful of what is said at political events, myself included,” he wrote.
The campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris, now the presumptive Democratic nominee amid Joe Biden dropping out of this year’s presidential race, was quick to note that calls for violence are not new at Trump events.
“Donald Trump and JD Vance are running a campaign openly sowing hatred and promising revenge against their political opponents,” Harris campaign spokesperson Ammar Moussa said in a statement. “It’s a feature, not a bug, of their campaign and message to the American people. That’s why a Republican official was empowered to predict a civil war while introducing these candidates.”
Indeed, Trump has aggressively stoked violence since the time he ran for office in 2015. Trump routinely encouraged rallygoers to beat up protesters who came to his events.
As president, he wanted law enforcement officers and the military to shoot protesters and people crossing the border illegally. In his pre-insurrection rally near the White House on Jan. 6, 2021, he wanted the Secret Service to allow people who were carrying guns into the security perimeter, calling the people in town that day “my” people who would not hurt him.
Then, when his mob attacked the Capitol and assaulted hundreds of police officers, Trump watched it all unfold and did not try to stop it until it became clear that police and the National Guard had regained control and his attempt to coerce Congress into giving him a second term failed.
In the early evening of July 13, Trump came within a fraction of an inch of taking a bullet in the head after a 20-year-old shot at him with an AR-15-style rifle from a roof some 160 yards away from where he was speaking during his Pennsylvania rally. The FBI and an independent commission are both investigating how the Secret Service failed to prevent someone armed with a high-powered rifle from taking a position with a clear line of sight to Trump.
Trump’s campaign claimed that the near-death experience had made him almost spiritual and promised a “new tone” from him in his Republican National Convention acceptance speech last week.
While Trump did start with a somber tone as he recounted the shooting, it quickly devolved into his normal, hour-and-a-half rally speeches, filled with lies about his own record, personal attacks on his critics and demands that the criminal prosecutions against him all be dropped.
Yahoo News
Sean O'Grady
Mon, 22 July 2024 at 5:16 pm AWST
‘Harris is smiling, optimistic, youthful, articulate, forensic and smart. Trump is the distinct opposite’ (Getty)
So much for unity. At least, in his acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention (RNC) Donald Trump – or leastways his speechwriters – made some attempt to deliver the improbable “New Trump” promised after the assassination attempt.
He managed to mention Biden personally in one brief passage, albeit absurdly as of the worst presidents in history: “The damage he has done to this country is unthinkable,” he said, “just unthinkable.”
This is an example what psychologists might call transference, because of course it is Trump who has the strongest claim to have been the worst president in history (and now wants another shot at it to scrape new lows and clinch the tile forever).
Trump cannot help himself, though – and he was even less classy than usual in the statement he put out after Biden quit. In one short, crass, nasty statement Trump reminded America of why they rejected him in 2020. He says Biden was “not fit” to serve, whereas it is Trump who is the insurrectionist; the man found liable for sexual assault in a civil trial; the convicted felon.
Trump, childish as ever, calls him “crooked Joe”, whereas it is Trump who is permanently in the law courts. He says that Biden only became president because of “lies”, while it is Trump who can’t get through a sentence without uttering some mistrust or hopelessly mutilated fact.
Encased in that assertion, by the way, is the snide but persistent notion still peddled cynically by Trump that the 2020 contest was stolen – baseless, like everything else. Almost needless to say, there aren’t millions of people coming across the border, many spilling out of “prisons, mental institutions” – and there never have been.
In other words, almost everything Trump accuses Biden of, he is guilty of himself – and spectacularly so. What we’ve seen since that bullet nicked his ear is just the same old stuff, albeit now with the added delusional quality of divine intervention.
Trump did indeed tell his delegates at the RNC the other day: “I stand before you … by the grace of almighty God”, which may be true, but coming from Trump, with his dictatorial tendencies, it has as a hint of the “divine right of kings” about it. God moves in mysterious ways.
More than anything, though, what shines through Trump’s characteristically boorish remarks is the sense of child who has just had his favourite toy taken away from him. Trump, JD Vance and the team had been looking forward to a good few months of tormenting Joe Biden and the Democrats about the the president’s failings and supposed lack of mental acuity.
It amounted to an election-winning strategy. They’d not need to mention abortion and women’s reproductive rights, but just point to the last time Biden lost his thread or mixed up a name. They’d not have to admit they’d surrender to Putin, because people would be more concerned about Biden coping in a crisis.
Trump’s refusal to say he’d accept the election result would melt away once it became obvious he’d beat “sleepy Joe” anyway. Well, to borrow another phrase from US presidential history, because of the present president’s statesmanlike decision, Trump won’t have Biden to kick around any more and the focus will now be on Trump’s age, mental acuity and – where he has always been weak – his emotional immaturity and instability, amply evidenced in his recent behaviour.
Americans have long yearned for a choice other than Biden v Trump, again, and now they have been presented with someone who is indeed younger and yer more mature than other of the old bits they’ve been used to. The system, after a fashion, does work.
Whatever else, Kamala Harris does represent a fresh start – and many may feel the time has come for a female president. Harris seems a more attractive personality than Hilary Clinton. Trump has a problem with powerful women and he may well find Harris difficult to deal with in the way that Nancy Pelosi used to send him nuts.
America will soon be faced with a striking personal choice. Trump derides Harris for her cheerful demeanour – “I call her laughing Kamala…she’s nuts” – but who would not prefer that to the scowling mugshot of Donald Trump?
Harris is smiling, optimistic, youthful, articulate, forensic and smart. Trump is the distinct opposite. If Harris does run, then the 2024 contest will remind British audiences, at least, of the clashes between the bombastic Boris Johnson, when he was prime minister – and Keir Starmer, another ex-prosecutor like Harris, who consistently got the better of him and saw him off.
Trump represents the darker side of America. Harris is something brighter and more hopeful. Many Americans will surely want to let the sunshine in at last.
Independent
But Don't forget RFK - my choice.
I gave up on tv and got rid of the satellite. I get more info from reading Substack writers! They
Run in both sides. If I try to read
Many , I get nothing else done . Lol
Very interesting that this writer says it’s a lie to say foreign countries have not emptied their prisons of convicted felons etc.
No evidence given?
Reports in this country have said
Those countries have suddenly and significantly seen their crime rates drop and ours has risen nationwide? Where are the facts??
Let’s see some numbers please.
It’s easy to make generalized comments but fail to back them up?
Everytime they say something is a lie, let’s ask for backup evidence
and some prove able info? And that holds for both sides?