This article is for you to share with your Trump-loving friends, many of whom still support Trump, and even worship him as the savior of America, despite the fact that he tried to kill them all with Operation Warp Speed program.
Although there is a mountain of evidence of Trump’s egregious crimes against humanity, blatant lies, rapes, theft and fraud, for most of the die-hard Trumpaholics, none of this matters, because truth is not a weapon that will pierce their thin armour.
Though I could easily hurl much invective and abuse upon Trump’s bloated carcass, the most scathing criticism comes from his own former staff members. Former Defence Secretary Mark Esper has called him a “threat to democracy.” Former national security adviser John Bolton has declared him “unfit to be president.” And former Vice President Mike Pence declined to endorse him, citing “profound differences.”
Sarah Matthews, a former Trump aide who testified before the House Jan. 6 committee and is among those warning about the threat he poses, said it’s “mind-boggling” how many members of his senior staff have denounced him.
“These are folks who saw him up close and personal and saw his leadership style,” Matthews said. “The American people should listen to what these folks are saying because it should be alarming that the people that Trump hired to work for him a first term are saying that he’s unfit to serve for a second term.”
“Fundamentally, a second Trump term could mean the end of American democracy as we know it, and I don’t say that lightly,” former Trump White House communications director Alyssa Farah Griffin told ABC in December.
John Kelly, Trump’s former chief of staff, had his own long falling-out with Trump. Kelly, in a lengthy October statement to CNN, described Trump as “a person who admires autocrats and murderous dictators” and “has nothing but contempt for our democratic institutions, our Constitution, and the rule of law.”
Bill Barr, Trump’s former attorney general referred to Trump as “a consummate narcissist” who “constantly engages in reckless conduct that puts his political followers at risk and the conservative and Republican agenda at risk.”
James Mattis, Trump’s former Secretary of Defence, criticizing Trump’s handling of demonstrations in the wake of George Floyd’s death. He called Trump “the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people. We are witnessing the consequences of three years of this deliberate effort. We are witnessing the consequences of three years without mature leadership. We can unite without him, drawing on the strengths inherent in our civil society. This will not be easy, as the past few days have shown, but we owe it to our fellow citizens; to past generations that bled to defend our promise; and to our children.”
Former Navy Secretary Richard V. Spencer was fired for going outside his chain of command by proposing a secret agreement with the White House over Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher’s case. In a Washington Post op-ed, Spencer called Trump’s intervention in the war crimes case “shocking and unprecedented. It was also a reminder that the President has very little understanding of what it means to be in the military, to fight ethically or to be governed by a uniform set of rules and practices.”
Cliff Sims, former special assistant to the President and director of White House Message Strategy wrote Team of Vipers, claiming that Trump created an “enemies list” consisting of members of his own administration. In early 2019, after the book was published, Sims sued Trump and sought an injunction against the nondisclosure agreements Trump had him agree to, when he worked at the White House.
Omarosa Manigault Newman, former director of communications for the White House Office of Public Liaison recorded her firing while in the White House Situation Room, and it was subsequently shared with news organizations. She claimed she was fired because she knew too much about a possible audio recording of Trump saying a racial epithet. After being fired from the White House, her book, “Unhinged: An Insider Account of the Trump White House,” contained several unflattering claims against the President and his staff.
She wrote in her book:
“Donald Trump, who would attack civil rights icons and professional athletes, who would go after grieving black widows, who would say there were good people on both sides, who endorsed an accused child molester; Donald Trump, and his decisions and his behavior, was harming the country. I could no longer be a part of this madness.”
Former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told lawmakers in 2019 that Russian President Vladimir Putin was “more prepared than Trump for a meeting in Germany, putting American officials at a disadvantage.” Tillerson told lawmakers he was guided by “American values” such as democracy and freedom, but could not or would not offer an assessment, as to whether the same could be said for Trump, according to a Democratic aide.
Tillerson also called Trump “undisciplined.” He claimed Trump would ask him to do things he didn’t understand were a violation of the law.
Tillerson criticized Trump’s actions during the Ukraine investigation, saying that clearly asking for “personal favors and using United States assets as collateral is wrong.”
TRUMP’S FAMILY
“He’s a clown,” Donald’s older sister, Maryanne Trump Barry, a retired federal appeals court judge said. “The only time Donald went to church was when the cameras were there. It’s mind-boggling. But that’s all about his base. He has no principles. None!”
Fred Trump III, the nephew of President Donald Trump, described his uncle as “atomic crazy” and criticized him for using racial slurs. Fred also mentioned that his uncle has been cruel to him and his family in his book titled “All in the Family: The Trumps and How We Got This Way.”
Mary Trump, the niece of former President Donald Trump, wrote a book detailing her family’s history and described the Trump family as abusive and neglectful. She criticized her uncle’s mental fitness and emotional state, stating that he is “psychologically unfit” for office.
You can fool some of the people some of the time, but not all of the people, all of the time:
THE FATHER OF THE VACCINE
I compiled these quotes, straight from the orange horse’s mouth, and not just because I literally loathe the ground this idiotic traitor walks upon, but also because, sometimes, the only way to show people the truth about someone is to let that person speak for themselves:
I recommend taking the vaccines. I did it, it’s good. Take the vaccines.”
— Donald J Trump, August 21st, 2021
"I hope everyone remembers when they're getting the COVID-19 Vaccine, that if I wasn’t President, you wouldn’t be getting that beautiful 'shot' for 5 years, at best, and probably wouldn't be getting it at all. I hope everyone remembers!"
— Donald J Trump, February 28th 2021
"I would recommend it and I would recommend it to a lot of people that don't want to get it and a lot of those people voted for me, frankly."
— Donald J Trump, March 16th 2021
"We have our freedoms and we have to live by that, and I agree with that also. But it is a great vaccine. It is a safe vaccine, and it is something that works."
— Donald J Trump, March 17th 2021
"Get those shots everyone!"
— Donald J Trump, December 17th 2020
“I guess in a certain way, I’m the father of the vaccine because I was the one that pushed it. To get it done in less than nine months was a miracle.”
— Donald J Trump, April 29th 2021
"Everybody, go get your shot."
— Donald J Trump, February 28th 2021
"It works incredibly well. 95%, maybe even more than that...and it is really saving our country and it is saving frankly the world."
— Donald J Trump, March 9th 2021
"It will save millions of lives, and soon end the pandemic once and for all. These vaccines are also very safe."
— Donald J Trump, December 11th 2020
"The Vaccine and the Vaccine rollout are getting the best of reviews. Moving along really well. Get those shots everyone!"
— Donald J Trump, December 17th 2020
"Well, I got the Pfizer, and I would have been very happy with any of them. I thought a very bad statement was when they did a pause on Johnson & Johnson. I think that frightened people. That was a bad thing to do. At that time, when they did the pause, they had six people that may have had some difficulty out of millions that received it. But I think the pause was a very bad thing to do."
— Donald J Trump, October 2nd 2021
"During my administration, everybody wanted the vaccine. There was nobody saying oh, gee, I don't want to take it. Now they say that. And that's because they don't trust the Biden administration. I can think of no other reason. But they say we don't want it, we aren't going to take it. When I was there, everybody wanted it and we were doing great. Well, the military did a fantastic job."
— Donald J Trump, October 7th 2021
"I'm very proud of the vaccine, I've taken it, you've probably taken it. But I'm very proud of it. I think we could have another situation with the Spanish Flu, 1917, where up to 100 million people were killed."
— Donald J Trump, August 18th 2021
For more on Trump’s deep state connections:
He lied from day one about “Covid” and his dishonesty cost tens of thousands of lives even before the rollout of Operation Warp Speed. Betsy DeVos intentionally wouldn’t create a nationwide system for tracking the non-pandemic, despite having gone through a run down drill “if a pandemic were to happen” when assuming power from the Obama administration. States and districts were left in disarray to further deteriorate, and although the Department of Education is unconstitutional it could’ve been made to coordinate data that would’ve gotten the whole damn school system up and running in a united front.
I have no words to describe Trump’s administration and who is he is to have lied to us.
“In January 2017, mere days before former President Donald Trump's inauguration, the outgoing cabinet secretaries of the Obama administration sat beside the incoming cabinet secretaries – many still in the confirmation process – for a joint cabinet meeting that had become an important tradition to ensure a smooth transition of power from one administration to the next.
The lengthy meeting was designed as a sort of role-playing exercise, in which they were given a series of potential national crises. The soon-to-be former secretaries huddled with their replacements and outlined how they dealt with similar situations during their tenure, what issues might arise and what protocols were in place to ensure each part of the federal government could tackle the crisis effectively.
As former Education Secretary John King tells it, one of the scenarios given to the room was how to deal with a pandemic. But not just any pandemic – specifically, how to deal with a respiratory illness that originated overseas and spiraled into a global pandemic.
“We talked about the need to have clear, science-based communication with the public, and part of that included having good data," says King, who was paired with Betsy DeVos, now a former education secretary herself, but still in the confirmation process at the time of the transition meeting.
Three years later that exact scenario shuttered every school district in the country for more than 50 million children in the U.S.
"The idea was that they would be ready to put those plans into action if they were faced with these kinds of disasters," he says. "They just didn't do any of those things."
https://www.usnews.com/news/education-news/articles/2021-03-12/how-the-trump-administrations-data-failure-has-kept-schools-closed