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‘Zero Remorse’: Trump Doesn’t Condemn Gunman Who Allegedly Threatened FEMA Workers

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Donald Trump came under fire Monday after not condemning an armed gunman who was arrested for allegedly threatening FEMA workers trying to help North Carolina victims of Hurricane Helene. Trump also continued to spread lies about FEMA and the federal government’s response to that devastating and deadly event.

A reporter told Trump about the man who had been arrested, and that his threats had caused FEMA to “stand down” for safety reasons, which inhibited their ability to help victims. He asked the ex-president if it was “helping” the recovery efforts “to keep making these claims that FEMA is not doing their job?”

Trump defended his lies and false attacks on the agency, and immediately replied, “I think you have to let people know how they’re doing.”

The ex-president, CNN reported earlier this month, “has delivered a barrage of lies and distortions about the federal response to Hurricane Helene.” The network noted he “has been one of the country’s leading deceivers on the subject. Over a span of six days, in public comments and social media posts, Trump has used his powerful megaphone to endorse or invent false or unsubstantiated claims.”

READ MORE: ‘Exhausted,’ ‘Weary’ and ‘Decomposing’ Trump Keeps Canceling Interviews: Reports

“If they were doing a great job, I think we should say that too,” Trump also told reporters Monday, “because I think they should be rewarded, but if they’re not doing, does that mean that if they’re doing a poor job, we’re supposed to not say it? These people are entitled to say it. And these are honest people behind us. If we were doing well, they would be saying they did a good job.”

There has been strong bipartisan praise of the Biden-Harris administration’s response to Helene. Democratic and Republican governors impacted by Helene have complimented FEMA as well.

“Some of the claims swirling around federal responders have been amplified by former president Donald Trump as he seeks to return to the White House,” The Washington Post reported earlier this month. “Trump has alleged, without evidence, that the federal government was ‘going out of their way to not help people in Republican areas’ and repeatedly claimed that FEMA was diverting disaster relief money for migrants.”

The arrested man charged with threatening FEMA workers, William Jacob Parsons, was found by law enforcement officers “armed with a handgun and a rifle.” He had “posted a message on Facebook calling for people to ‘overtake’ the FEMA site in Lake Lure based on what he says were social media reports that FEMA was withholding supplies from hurricane survivors,” WGHP had reported.

“Upon arriving at Lake Lure, however, Parsons said he realized the situation was different than he had imagined,” WGHP also reported.

“I went up and saw that there was absolutely nothing there, so I stayed, and I volunteered all day,” said Parsons, who “insists he was simply exercising his Second Amendment rights.”

In Tennessee, FEMA workers were also threatened, as this local news report shows:

Meanwhile, on Monday Trump had also falsely claimed, “you’ve obviously seen nothing but, uh, you know, very bad statements coming out about the job that FEMA and this administration has done having to do with this area North Carolina as a whole and by the way, other states also, they’re also complaining.”

And he falsely said, “look, a lot of the [FEMA] money is gone, they don’t have any money, they have to have they have to have a meeting in Washington, a special meeting in Washington to get money. It’s all gone. They’ve spent it on illegal migrants.”

“Many of them are murderers, many of them are drug dealers, many of them come out of mental institutions and insane asylums, and many of them are terrorists,” Trump falsely charged, “and they spent money to bring these people into our country and they don’t have money to take care of the people from North Carolina and other states.”

READ MORE: ‘Almost Loved Me to Death’: Officer Who Defended Capitol Slams Trump Over J6 ‘Day of Love’

The Associated Press reported that Trump was “repeating the falsehood that the response was hampered because FEMA spent its budget helping people who crossed the border illegally, a claim that was debunked weeks ago by U.S. Rep. Chuck Edwards, R-N.C., who stood behind Trump as he spoke.”

Trump also went on to claim that “our FEMA,” meaning when he was president, did a “really incredible job,” but that same agency under the Biden-Harris administration did not.

Progressive news site Tennessee Holler noted: “Trump expresses zero remorse about FEMA workers being threatened by armed gunmen (including in Carter County, TN) — and immediately continues to lie about the response efforts.”

“Trump has endangered and destroyed countless lives with COVID, the climate, and the January 6 insurrection. Now he threatens American citizens again, encouraging violence against FEMA workers who bring aid during a crisis. The only ‘enemy from within’ is Donald Trump,” The Lincoln Project wrote, referring to Trump’s repeated attacks on Democrats, including one on Sunday.

Watch the videos below or at this link.

READ MORE: ‘Aghast’: Trump Dodges and Dismisses Latino Voters’ Concerns at Univision Town Hall

 

 

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‘Worst of All the Bad Ideas’: Trump’s High-Risk Iran Commando Raid Plan Scorched

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A “high-risk” commando raid plan requested by President Donald Trump, which involves building a runway in Iran to seize Iran’s nuclear stockpile, is being blasted by experts.

“The U.S. military has given the president a plan to seize nearly 1,000 pounds of highly enriched uranium in Iran that would involve flying in excavation equipment and building a runway for cargo planes to take the radioactive material out,” the Washington Post, citing two sources, reported in an exclusive. “The complex plan was briefed to the president in the past week after he asked for a proposal, they said, as were its significant operational risks.”

“This would be one of, if not the largest, most complicated special operations in history,” Mick Mulroy, a former deputy assistant secretary of defense and retired CIA and Marine officer, told the Post. “It’s a major risk to the force.”

The operation, never before attempted during wartime, would take weeks and “would require the airlift of potentially hundreds or thousands of troops and heavy equipment to support the excavation and recovery of radioactive material.” Those troops would be subject to being under fire inside Iran.

READ MORE: ‘Feckless’: Political Scientist Torches Trump’s ‘Stunningly Incompetent’ War Effort

Asked about the plan, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt did not appear to deny the Post’s reporting, stating: “It’s the job of the Pentagon to make preparations in order to give the Commander in Chief maximum optionality. It does not mean the President has made a decision.”

Last month, Brendan P. Buck at The Cato Institute wrote of an apparently similar idea, stating that in “reality, the so-called ‘commando option,’ while perhaps technically feasible, would be extraordinarily risky, operationally complex, and unlikely to accomplish its stated mission.”

The Trump plan was quickly denounced.

Foreign policy and defense expert Ilan Goldenberg, who has extensive government experience covering Iran’s nuclear program according to his bio, slammed the plan.

“An operation to seize Iran’s HEU [Highly Enriched Uranium] by force is the worst of all the bad ideas that are on the table right now,” wrote Goldenberg, a former advisor to Vice President Kamala Harris. “I cannot see this being a realistic military option.”

READ MORE: How Trump’s TACO Set the Stage for Our Current ‘Catastrophe’: Columnist

“Every single thing about this idea screams disaster, to the point where I wonder whether even Trump could be this dumb,” wrote Toronto Star columnist Bruce Arthur.

“If Trump goes ahead with this and it’s a high-casualty debacle what do you think he’d do then?” asked Mike Prysner, executive director at the Center on Conscience & War. “Take the L and deescalate? A ‘commando raid’ would only remain as such if it was a huge success.”

“This zero dark thirty: uranium plan is so goofy,” declared author Adam Johnson. “Everyone knows they cant possibly get it all. At best it’s a delusion / distraction for our idiot president, at worst it’s a pretext for a regime change invasion designed to create hostages and deaths to rally public sentiment.”

“Feels like Trump wants his version of the Bin Laden raid, and he’ll take on enormous risk–or, more accurately, he’ll place that risk onto U.S. military forces–to get it,” noted Jacob Stokes of the Center for a New American Security.

READ MORE: ‘Nothing but Lie’: Trump Ripped for Iran Rhetoric as He Preps Prime-Time Address

 

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‘Feckless’: Political Scientist Torches Trump’s ‘Stunningly Incompetent’ War Effort

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President Donald Trump’s prosecution of the Iran war has been “stunningly incompetent,” exposing “the worst wartime political leadership America has ever had,” says political scientist Eliot A. Cohen in The Atlantic.

While giving Trump a break on his changing war objectives, Cohen, who served as a counselor under Bush-era Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, says: “What is not normal, and what is stunningly incompetent, is just about every other facet of the administration’s conduct of the war.”

He offers a plethora of “egregious failures,” such as the “failure to explain the war to the American people, aside from a presentation by the president in his summer home while he wore an unserious white baseball cap.” There’s also Trump’s failure to consult with Congress, “or at least secure its approval for the war.” And there’s Trump’s “failure to bring allies along with a minimum of surprises and a maximum of persuasion to support the war.”

Rather than attempting to “minimize internal friction and feuds,” Trump has been picking fights over Homeland Security funding, while making “doomed attempts to revoke birthright citizenship and to meddle in states’ election administration” — moves that appear “almost calculated to enhance internal divisions.”

READ MORE: How Trump’s TACO Set the Stage for Our Current ‘Catastrophe’: Columnist

The concept of national unity “in a time of war seems utterly beyond this president, who follows his capricious instincts and continues, as ever, to spray venom at domestic opponents (and, for that matter, allies) when they are needed to wage and win the war,” writes Cohen, a military history expert.

Worse, says Cohen, are Trump’s own advisers, whom he likens to “an array of toadies and lickspittles, operating beyond their competence in an atmosphere of organizational chaos.”

“Never has the United States had a secretary of defense less capable, more egregiously belligerent, or less suited to provide civilian direction of a war than Pete Hegseth,” Cohen says. He charges that Hegseth has exhibited “unconscionable stupidity” by going to war “with an Islamist power” while the U.S. “has partnered with other Muslim states,” but then deciding” to place his own, peculiarly militant Christian beliefs at the center of his public rhetoric.”

Cohen scorches Trump’s other key advisers, including Vice President Vance, National Security Adviser and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and the undersecretary of defense for policy, Elbridge Colby, all of whom have “avoided leadership in this war as best they can.”

He closes with this dire warning: “With political leadership so feckless, so dysfunctional, so incapable of planning, so willing to betray friends and allies for short-term advantage, so willing to lie and advocate criminal behavior, our military is simply not in responsible hands.”

READ MORE: ‘Nothing but Lie’: Trump Ripped for Iran Rhetoric as He Preps Prime-Time Address

 

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How Trump’s TACO Set the Stage for Our Current ‘Catastrophe’: Columnist

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President Donald Trump’s inadvertent “TACO” strategy is the vehicle that drove America to its current catastrophe.

Andrew Egger at The Bulwark writes on the eve of the one-year anniversary of “Liberation Day” — when the president imposed “an unbelievably strict regime of massive tariffs,” Trump’s eventual retreat from those measures, now dubbed “TACO” (“Trump Always Chickens Out”), has become ingrained in how markets and nations interpret the American president’s every move.

After holding firm for about one week, Trump caved on his massive tariffs — after markets went haywire.

“This was the moment that the world learned the lesson that Trump would, in the final and bitterest moment, respond to normal economic stimuli,” Egger writes.

Trump’s momentum had seemed “unstoppable,” until Liberation Day, but, “faced with the prospect of inevitable economic calamity, he had blinked.”

Trump’s actions created a clear lesson for the markets: if they got spooked, Trump would “see reason.” So, those who rode out the wave of Trump’s “nightmare” policy swerves stood to benefit “when Trump abruptly chickened out.”

“Overnight, the TACO trade was born.”

READ MORE: ‘Nothing but Lie’: Trump Ripped for Iran Rhetoric as He Preps Prime-Time Address

But now, everyone assumes Trump will ultimately chicken out. So when he says or does something that creates chaos in the markets or the headlines, the reaction is no longer as severe, because everyone is wise to his apparent strategy.

“The only thing that seems to get through to Trump is catastrophic market movements—but those market movements are not only reacting to Trump, but trying to predict him, too,” Egger writes. “The more the TACO trade philosophy permeates through the markets, the less the markets respond to Trump’s rash impulses and grandiloquent proclamations—because they expect him to reverse course once the damage becomes obvious.”

Now, Trump risks “a global depression by precipitating Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—and has now apparently deluded himself into thinking America can actually get on just fine without solving that problem.”

Markets have yet to go “truly berserk … in part because they’re expecting Trump to change course. But he has convinced himself he has little incentive to change course, since they haven’t yet gone berserk!”

Liberation Day, writes Egger, “wasn’t just the economic catastrophe that set the tone for the 2025 economy. By introducing us to the TACO model, it sowed the seeds of our present catastrophe, too.”

READ MORE: ‘Alarm Bells’ as Trump Turns to Civil War White Supremacists in SCOTUS Case

 

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