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Tag: Donald Trump

  • Detroit hip-hop community and leaders come together for ‘Vote or Else’ event

    Detroit hip-hop community and leaders come together for ‘Vote or Else’ event

    Whether it’s a lack of trust in the U.S. political system or simply not liking the candidates, Detroit has always struggled with low voter turnout in regional and presidential elections. According to a July 2024 report from University of Michigan, about 12% of Detroiters who are eligible to vote reported they were unlikely to cast a vote in this November’s election. In June, Detroit elections administrator Daniel Baxter told Outlier Media that of Detroit’s 513,000 registered voters, about 127,000 are inactive.

    To combat this, community leaders, hip-hop artists, content creators, and national media personalities will come together for Mobilize Justice’s ““Vote or Else” event on Tuesday, Sept. 17, which is also Voter Registration Day. Hosted at Detroit’s Huntington Place convention center, Vote or Else is a full day of programming aimed at increasing voter registration and turnout and is held in partnership with the office of Mary Sheffield and the Detroit Entertainment Commission.

    The event will feature a town hall forum at 5 p.m., followed by a debate at 8:30 p.m. with actor Hill Harper, activists Tamika Mallory, Beanie Sigel, Jadakiss, Black Thought of The Roots, Pusha T and more. That will be followed by surprise musical performances starting at 9:30 p.m.

    An EP music project produced by Helluva, Havoc from Mobb Deep, Chris Store, Playa Haze, Plu20 Nash, and others is set to include contributions from Beanie Sigel, Symba, Freeway, Jadakiss, Miles Minnick, Jay Electronica, Benny the Butcher, Black Thought, Styles P, Icewear Vezzo, Rick Williams, Westside Boogie, Bun B, Baby Money, and more.

    The day’s programming will also include a voter mobilization project in Detroit in the morning as well as a visit to Wayne State University.

    “Vote or Else is a campaign that truly represents where we are as a country; it’s a call to action for our communities to unite against hate and disinformation by exercising the rights our elders fought for,” says organizer and pastor Mike McBride. “As we gather in Detroit, we’re bringing together faith leaders, musicians, cultural influencers, designers, activists, and activists dedicated to civic engagement ahead of the 2024 elections. We know our future hangs in the balance, and we must vote because our lives depend on it.”

    Overall, the hip-hop community has been engaged in this year’s presidential election. New York rapper Cardi B and Atlanta native Quavo had publicly endorsed Kamala Harris, while rappers Sada Baby, Peezy, and Icewear Vezzo have expressed support for Donald Trump.

    The Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement reported in 2021 that only 43% of Black voters between 18-29 voted in the 2020 presidential election. This is one of the main demographics Vote or Else is seeking to encourage.

    The campaign has garnered the kind of presence from the hip-hop community that hasn’t been seen since 2004’s “Vote or Die” campaign, when you had hip-hop artists like Eve and LL Cool J encouraging America’s youth to vote by doing commercial spots on issues like gun control.

    More information is available at blackchurchpac.org/orelse.

    Kahn Santori Davison

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  • Trump plans to announce the World Liberty Financial crypto exchange on Monday. Here’s what to know.

    Trump plans to announce the World Liberty Financial crypto exchange on Monday. Here’s what to know.

    Former President Donald Trump on Monday is expected to announce the debut of a new crypto platform called World Liberty Financial that will be controlled by sons Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump.

    The Republican nominee for president plans to discuss the new venture from his Mar-a-Lago resort at 8 p.m. ET on September 16, 50 days before Election Day. In recent weeks, the Trumps have been promoting the endeavor on social media, touting it as “the future of crypto.” 

    Trump’s 18-year-old son Barron, a first-year student at New York University, is identified as the project’s “DeFi visionary,” according to a white paper on the project obtained by cryptocurrency news site CoinDesk. DeFi, short for “decentralized finance,” is a term that refers to financial services offered through public blockchains.

    “We’re embracing the future with crypto and leaving the slow and outdated big banks behind,” Trump said in a video posted Thursday on X from Mar-a-Lago.

    The Trumps’ crypto plans jibe with the former president’s campaign pledge to make the U.S. the “crypto capital of the planet.” But the venture also raises concerns about how Donald Trump might use federal resources to promote a personal financial project. 

    “Taking a pro-crypto stance is not necessarily troubling; the troubling aspect is doing it while starting a way to personally benefit from it,” Jordan Libowitz, a spokesperson for the government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics, told the Associated Press. 

    Libowitz added, “The success of this could be very tied to American economic policy.”

    The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to CBS MoneyWatch’s request for comment.

    What is World Liberty Financial?

    Because the Trumps have released few details about World Liberty Financial, little is known about how the platform will operate. Crypto exchanges are platforms where investors can buy and sell digital currencies, similar to how a traditional stock exchange operates. 

    Eric Trump has said that the startup will promote “financial independence,” while Donald Trump Jr. has said it will “make finance great again.”

    According to the project’s white paper obtained by CoinDesk, 70% of the company’s tokens will be reserved for company insiders, while the remaining 30% will be distributed through a public sale. A portion of those proceeds will go to a founding team, according to the report citing the white paper. 

    Why is Trump launching a crypto exchange?

    Millions of Americans have invested in or traded cryptocurrencies, although these digital assets tend to attract young men, according to data from Pew Research Center

    Forty-three percent of American men ages 18 to 20 say they have invested in, traded or used cryptocurrency, compared to 16% of the general population.

    In May, Trump announced that his campaign would begin accepting donations in cryptocurrency, part of an effort to build and solicit support from what he called a “crypto army.”

    By contrast, while he served as president, Trump described himself as “not a fan” of cryptocurrency. In 2019, he tweeted that cryptocurrency “can facilitate unlawful behavior, including drug trade and other illegal activity.”

    —The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Here’s every musician with a beef or lawsuit against Donald Trump

    Here’s every musician with a beef or lawsuit against Donald Trump

    There’s a lengthy list of musicians who have taken issue with Donald Trump over his presidential campaigns using their songs — and it only continues to grow. Dozens of artists and bands, from ABBA and Elton John to Rihanna and Paul McCartney, have publicly condemned Donald Trump since 2015 for playing their songs at his events and rallies…

    Benjamin Leatherman

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  • Merrick Garland’s DOJ Pep Rally Proves Trump Won the Debate

    Merrick Garland’s DOJ Pep Rally Proves Trump Won the Debate

    Boss Tweed via Wikimedia Commons

    By Rep. Matt Gaetz for RealClearPolitics

    Today, Merrick Garland held a pep rally at the Department of Justice (DOJ) for his employees. Why now? Well, two nights ago, we heard President Donald Trump take aim at the weaponization of DOJ, and we heard Kamala Harris’s non-response. Trump clearly won that exchange, and the Swamp now has to play clean-up for her mess.

    RELATED: U.S. Borrowing Tops $1.9 Trillion So Far This Year

    Remember that in the debate, the ABC moderators interrupted Trump’s answer about illegal immigrant crime to push fake FBI statistics, which Trump swatted aside. In her response, rather than talk about immigration, Harris brought up that Trump has been prosecuted. Trump explained that each of the cases against him were fake, failing, and coordinated by Garland and the Biden-Harris administration. Of course, we know this is true. But the icing on the cake is that Harris’ final non-answer was that Donald Trump would weaponize the DOJ.

    They are telling on themselves.

    But the Harris campaign strategy, and the orders to Garland are clear: blame Trump for things Kamala Harris and Joe Biden are doing right now.

    Frankly, it has to be tough to be an employee of Biden and Harris. You might be asked to violate Departmental Protocol and do a pre-dawn raid of a former President but turn a blind eye to a legally worse situation involving Joe and classified documents in his garage. You might be asked to surveil your neighbors at church, or at school board meetings. You might be asked not to prosecute real crimes involving immigration, opioids, or Black Lives Matter, but asked to prosecute grandma for praying on a sidewalk.

    It must be demoralizing to go into work every day like this.

    And if you complain? If you follow the rules, but go to the Inspector General, or to Congress, or to your boss? Forget that. In violation of law, you might find yourself without a job, suspended without pay, sidelined, or with your security clearance revoked. That happened under Garland and Harris to Marcus Allen, to Stephen Friend, and to so many others.

    RELATED: FACT CHECK: In Presidential Debate, Harris Deflects on Border Record

    This is unacceptable.

    So while Harris and Garland use their platforms to gaslight America, saying that the Department is “proud” to remain “independent” and free from “political interference,” ask yourself: who is really politicizing the justice system?

    Who is bussing in tens or hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants into our cities, merely for their votes? It’s Kamala Harris, not Donald Trump. Harris and the current administration are responsible for the tragedies on the border every day.

    Who refuses to say the names of Laken Riley, or Rachel Morin, or Jocelyn Nungaray, because it’s not politically expedient? Kamala Harris, not Donald Trump.

    Who has fundraised for violent criminals in Minnesota to keep them out of jail? Kamala Harris, not Donald Trump. It’s the California soft-on-crime policies that Harris brought to that state which are tearing our cities apart, even, perhaps especially in the deep red rural areas in swing states like Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Wisconsin that she wants to target.

    Whose DOJ is sending letters to county clerks across the country, and to Secretaries of State, warning them of prosecution if they get too aggressive in protecting our elections? Kamala Harris’s, not Donald Trump’s. Just this past week states acting under federal law to clean up their voter rolls were threatened by Garland. You can’t make this up.

    Whose DOJ has failed to investigate election issues across the country, from the election technology being wide-open to foreign access and control, to ballots being mailed without proof of citizenship? Kamala Harris’s, not Donald Trump’s.

    RELATED: Tim Walz’s Democrats Are Not the Blue Dog Democrats

    And whose DOJ has made head-fakes at consumer protection, while letting drug prices soar, and who was the tie-breaking vote for the Inflation Reduction Act, which has led to Medicare Part D dropping 21 drugs and raising premiums by the double-digits, with far higher increases to come in 2025? Kamala Harris, not Donald Trump.

    America is at a crossroads, and Merrick Garland is right to be concerned about the politicization of DOJ and the federal government, but maybe he and Kamala Harris should look in the mirror.

    Congressman Matt Gaetz (R) represents the 1st Congressional District of Florida. He is a member of the 117th Congress currently serving his third term in the U.S. House of Representatives. 

    Syndicated with permission from RealClearWire.

    RealClearWire

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  • How a fringe online claim about immigrants eating pets made its way to the debate stage

    How a fringe online claim about immigrants eating pets made its way to the debate stage

    Around 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, tens of millions of television viewers watched as Donald Trump spread an unsubstantiated and racially charged rumor running wild online.

    “In Springfield they’re eating dogs,” the former president said, referring to an Ohio city dealing with an influx of Haitian immigrants. “They’re eating the cats. They’re eating … the pets of the people that live there. And this is what’s happening in our country, and it’s a shame.”

    The extraordinary moment — the airing of a claim worthy of a chain email while participating in a prime-time presidential debate — probably puzzled most of the 67.1 million people tuned in for Trump’s clash with Vice President Kamala Harris. But the rumor, which has been criticized as perpetuating racist tropes, was already thriving in right-wing corners of the internet and being amplified by those close to Trump, including his running mate, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio.

    No one involved in Trump’s debate preparations or in a position to speak for his campaign agreed to discuss the strategy on the record or answer questions about how it mutated from a fringe obsession to a debate stage sound bite. 

    “Just, suffice to say, he was aware of it. He decided to bring it up,” Tim Murtaugh, a senior Trump adviser, told NBC News. “Now it’s a major story. We would otherwise probably not be talking about immigration if not for that.”

    Others close to Trump expressed misgivings about the execution.

    “Immigration should be talked about, because Harris as border czar has failed,” said a Trump adviser, who, like others, was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “Did that issue come out in the best way? Probably not. But it’s not something to be shied away from.”

    Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Trump ally from South Carolina, questioned the former president’s focus.  

    “I don’t know about dogs and cats,” Graham said in an interview Thursday. “But there are numerous young women who have been raped and murdered by people who were in our custody here illegally, and we let them go. That’s what I’d be talking about. That should be the face of a broken immigration system, not cats and dogs.”

    While the fallout has been a combination of bafflement and outrage, the makings of the moment are rooted in grievances that have long defined and animated Trump and his followers — and on the platforms where those grievances blossom.

    Trump, who launched his first presidential campaign with a speech that broadly characterized Mexican immigrants as dangerous criminals, has kept immigration and border security issues central to his third White House bid. 

    Meanwhile, the right-wing social media ecosystem that rose up around his 2016 run has calcified as an additive and disruptive force: Trump now has his own social media network, Truth Social, and ally Elon Musk controls X, formerly Twitter. Vance in particular has reveled in fighting the culture wars and other right-wing causes online and often assumes a trolling posture on X while acting as a filter of information between the fringe and the mainstream.

    Vance and others close to Trump have argued that, even if the claims are false, they have served a purpose by pushing the Springfield story into the spotlight.

    “The media didn’t care about the carnage wrought by these policies until we turned it into a meme about cats, and that speaks to the media’s failure to care about what’s going on in these communities,” Vance told CNN after Tuesday’s debate. “If we have to meme about it to get the media to care, we’re going to keep on doing it, because the media could, should, care about what’s going on.”

    The issue in Springfield, about 45 miles from Columbus in southwest Ohio, involves thousands of Haitian immigrants who have settled in the city in recent years, many of them there legally under federal programs after having fled violence and political turmoil. Residents and political leaders, including Vance, have for months raised economic and public safety concerns, asserting that an influx of as many as 20,000 immigrants to a city that in 2020 counted a population of 59,000 has strained resources.

    Claims about pets being abducted, slaughtered and eaten are more recent. 

    Former President Donald Trump spoke to Telemundo Arizona in an exclusive interview before his rally on Thursday.

    Blood Tribe, a national neo-Nazi group, was among the early purveyors of the rumor in August, posting about it on Gab and Telegram, social networks popular with extremists. While the group’s leader has taken credit for Trump’s indulgence of the claims, Blood Tribe’s reach is unknown; its accounts on those sites have fewer than 1,000 followers.

    Some Blood Tribe members also planned a couple of events in the real world, like a small Aug. 10 march in Springfield protesting Haitian immigration and an appearance at a city commission meeting later that month.

    The rumor soon crossed over to mainstream social media, like Facebook and X. NewsGuard, a firm that monitors misinformation, traced the origins to an undated post from a private Facebook group that was shared in a screenshot posted to X on Sept. 5. 

    “Remember when my hometown of Springfield Ohio was all over National news for the Haitians?” the user wrote. “I said all the ducks were disappearing from our parks? Well, now it’s your pets.”

    Around that time, other social media posts about the rumor sprouted and went viral, some of them based in part on residents’ comments at public hearings. On Sept. 6, there were 1,100 posts on X mentioning Haitians, migrants or immigrants eating pets, cats, dogs and geese, according to PeakMetrics, a research company. The next day there were 9,100 — a 720% increase.

    The number of posts spiked again Monday, to 47,000, when Vance advanced the rumor on X.

    “Months ago, I raised the issue of Haitian illegal immigrants draining social services and generally causing chaos all over Springfield, Ohio,” Vance wrote, referring to remarks he had made at a Senate hearing. “Reports now show that people have had their pets abducted and eaten by people who shouldn’t be in this country.”

    Vance, as he noted in his post, had been raising the issue for months, but in less provocative terms. 

    “Now go to Springfield, go to Clark County, Ohio, and ask the people there whether they have been enriched by 20,000 newcomers in four years,” he said in early July, before Trump selected him as his running mate, at NatCon, a right-wing nationalist conference. “Housing is through the roof. People, middle-class people in Springfield who have lived there sometimes for generations cannot afford a place to live.”

    Soon after Vance’s post Monday, Springfield police officials told the Springfield News-Sun — and, later, NBC News and other national media — that they had received no credible reports of such incidents. Vance issued a follow-up post the next day, writing that his office had received reports of “pets or local wildlife” being “abducted by Haitian migrants.”

    “It’s possible, of course, that all of these rumors will turn out to be false,” he added.

    But by that point, Trump was fully on board with them. At 5:19 p.m. Tuesday, less than four hours before his debate with Harris, Trump posted to Truth Social a meme showing cats armed for war and wearing MAGA hats. Fifteen minutes later, he shared a second meme depicting him surrounded by cats and ducks. 

    Then came the debate. When moderator David Muir of ABC News asked about his opposition to a bipartisan border bill, a distracted Trump first insisted on responding to a jab Harris had landed about people leaving his campaign rallies early. His meandering answer eventually turned to Springfield, where, he said, “they’re eating dogs … and cats.”

    Discomfort and disapproval from Trump’s fellow Republicans were soon palpable.

    “I want to be clear on this. That is a very minor, minor issue happening in the United States,” Rep. Byron Donalds, a Trump loyalist from Florida, told NBC News when asked about the pets remark in the post-debate spin room.

    During their closing statements, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump closed Tuesday’s debate with differing messages on the future of America.

    Those looking for someone to blame offered several suspects. Laura Loomer, a right-wing political activist and conspiracy theorist who had been posting about the rumor, traveled with Trump to the debate Tuesday. 

    “Why do you want to speak to me? I don’t work for President Trump,” Loomer responded when reached by NBC News.

    Loomer and Trump did not speak on the plane ride, a source familiar with the trip said. And a Trump aide noted that Loomer “is not a member of our staff.”

    “The president is the most well-read man in America, and he has a pulse on everything that is going on,” the aide added. 

    The Springfield rumor “made it to his desk. He was made aware of what these residents were saying.”

    Others focused their suspicions on Vance, given how he had forced the issue into the spotlight.

    “It’s all JD,” a source linked to the campaign said.

    Another source close to Trump’s campaign said Trump and Vance did not discuss the Springfield issue ahead of the debate.

    “I don’t know what he was thinking,” a different Trump ally said of his choice to bring up the Springfield rumor unprompted. 

    The blame, this person said, solely rests with Trump.

    “You don’t prep Donald Trump,” the ally added. “You can make suggestions.”

    This article first appeared on NBCNews.com. Read more from NBC News here:

    Henry J. Gomez, Brandy Zadrozny, Allan Smith and Julie Tsirkin | NBC News

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  • Trump’s debate line about immigrants eating pets ‘echoes’ racist rhetoric of past world leaders, professor says

    Trump’s debate line about immigrants eating pets ‘echoes’ racist rhetoric of past world leaders, professor says

    During Tuesday’s presidential debate, former President Donald Trump made a claim that quickly went viral on social media — and prompted an immediate fact check.

    During a rant about border control, Trump repeated a conspiracy theory about Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, that has gained traction in some right-wing circles. 

    “In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs, the people that came in,” he said. “They’re eating the cats. They’re eating the pets of the people that live there.”


    MORE: Authors of Jan. 6 graphic novel to send copies to every public high school and library in Pa.


    ABC News anchor and moderator David Muir interjected, saying there are no credible reports of pets being harmed or abused by immigrants in Springfield. But that has not stopped Trump or his running mate, Sen. JD Vance (Ohio), from spreading this and other inflammatory conspiracy theories about Haitian migrants in the Ohio city. In a lengthy Tuesday post to X, formerly known as Twitter, Vance implied that they were also spreading communicable diseases like tuberculosis and HIV.

    Though the extreme nature of these claims might feel new, they have a long and ugly history. Social media users and commentators quickly likened the comments to the dehumanizing rhetoric Nazi Germany deployed against Jewish people leading up to and during World War II. 

    Katie Sibley, a history professor at St. Joseph’s University, believes the comparisons are valid. As she notes, antisemites including Adolf Hitler have long leaned on blood libel myths that date back to the Middle Ages, which accuse Jewish people of kidnapping Christian babies for ritualistic sacrifice. Sometimes, these pernicious stories incorporate cannibalism, with the blood of the children allegedly used to make matzah.

    “It’s really striking,” Sibley said of the similarities in language. “Here we have people who were accused of eating pets, somebody else’s treasured, small, beloved creature. It sort of echoes that.”

    Language’s link to violence

    As scholars have emphasized, dehumanizing language often precedes violence. In the lead-up to the 1994 Rwandan genocide, the Hutu people frequently referred to the Tutsi population as “cockroaches” on a popular radio station. In the mid-1930s, Nazi propaganda depicted Jewish people as worms and “poisonous” serpents. Damaging lies like the blood libel myth were also plastered on the cover of Der Stürmer, the virulently antisemitic German newspaper, and even continued to spread after the concentration camps were liberated. Mobs killed 42 Jews and injured another 40 in a pogrom in the Polish city of Kielce in 1946 after an 8-year-old boy went missing for two days.

    Threats of violence are now starting to emerge in Springfield. Its City Hall was evacuated Thursday over an emailed bomb threat that read, in part, “We have Haitians eating our animals.” The author of the email also claimed to have placed explosives at two DMVs and two elementary schools.

    According to the Haitian Times, many immigrant families in Springfield have kept their children home from school out of fear for their safety.

    Loss of legal rights

    Apart from violence, damaging conspiracy theories are also linked to the suppression of rights throughout history. In 1877, the San Francisco health officer blamed an outbreak of smallpox on “unscrupulous, lying and treacherous Chinamen, who have disregarded our sanitary laws.” Politicians refused to provide Chinese immigrants proper health care, sending them to the filthy “pesthouse” on hospital grounds. 

    This scapegoating and discrimination continued into the 20th century. In 1900, after a Chinese immigrant was diagnosed with the first case of bubonic plague in the United States, the city destroyed local businesses in Chinatown and ransacked homes, burning possessions to “fumigate” the area. The xenophobia toward Chinese immigrants extended far beyond San Francisco, leading to the Chinese Exclusion Act, which banned Chinese laborers from entering the country for a decade.

    “This really had an impact,” Sibley said. “People were very much mistreated. Their communities were cut off, and they were barged in upon by the police.

    “There is that bridge from rhetoric to actual laws.”

    As Sibley notes, racist rhetoric also preceded the internment of about 117,000 Japanese Americans during World War II. Politicians including Chase Clark, the governor of Idaho, compared them to “rats.”

    Trump’s comments in context

    This is not the first time critics have accused Trump of weaponizing language, or echoing Nazi rhetoric. But his and Vance’s comments — along with campaign ads linking immigrants to crime — have alarmed marginalized communities and the historians who have studied these cycles again and again.

    “We think in this country, we’re not going to have those kind of laws anymore,” Sibley said. “You know, we got rid of the Chinese Exclusion Act, and we got rid of internment, of course, after World War II. But remember that when Trump first came into office, he talked about a Muslim registry. 

    I think what’s changed is that the rhetoric has been accepted increasingly, sadly, in the public space.” 


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    Kristin Hunt

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  • Germany responds to Donald Trump’s debate comments

    Germany responds to Donald Trump’s debate comments

    Germany is denying an assertion made by former President Donald Trump during the presidential debate Tuesday about the country’s renewable energy industry. 

    “You believe in things like we’re not going to frack, we’re not going to take fossil fuel, we’re not going to do things that are going to be strong, whether you like it or not,” Trump said in his debate against Vice President Kamala Harris. “Germany tried that, and within one year, they were back to building normal energy plants.”

    But on Wednesday, Germany’s Federal Foreign Office decided to issue a rebuttal, echoing the former president’s language. 

    “Like it or not: Germany’s energy system is fully operational, with more than 50% renewables,” the Federal Foreign Office shared on X. “And we are shutting down – not building – coal & nuclear plants. Coal will be off the grid by 2038 at the latest.”

    The German Foreign Office also poked at Trump for another comment he made during the debate.

    “PS: We also don’t eat cats and dogs,” it concluded, referring to Trump’s debunked claim that Haitian migrants had eaten pets in Springfield, Ohio. The town’s authorities have said that there have not been credible reports about migrants targeting pets.

    “Contradiction with facts and humor — that is the right answer to disinformation,” German State Minister Anna Lührmann added on Thursday about her government’s response. “As democrats, we can no longer allow ourselves to leave false statements uncommented.”

    Climate change and energy policies are raised frequently during both candidates’ election campaigns. Trump also claimed that if Harris wins the election, fracking in Pennsylvania “will end on day one.”

    “Fossil fuel will be dead,” Trump said. “We’ll go back to windmills, and we’ll go back to solar.”

    Before she became vice president, Harris, who was a senator representing California, pushed for climate-friendly policies. “There’s no question I’m in favor of banning fracking,” Harris said in 2019. But as vice president, she has changed course.

    “I have not banned fracking as vice president,” Harris told Trump. “My position is that we have got to invest in diverse sources of energy so we reduce our reliance on foreign oil.”

    After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, energy costs in Germany have spiked as Berlin seeks alternatives to Russian energy. The United States exported over 200 million cubic feet of liquid natural gas to Germany last year. Russian natural gas volumes in the German energy market saw a 30% decline in 2022.

    “Yes, Germany is serious about the energy transition,” the German embassy in Washington said in a post on X. “Our energy system is fully operational, with > 50% renewables. Coal will be off the grid by 2038 at the latest – while we’re investing billions to create new opportunities in former coal regions.”

    Germany shut down its last three nuclear power plants last year, as it plans to transition the majority of its energy consumption to renewable energy by 2050. But the country still needs “additional measures” to reach its climate targets, according to the German Environment Agency.

    As president, Trump criticized Berlin’s energy policy for relying heavily on Russia. In 2019, he signed the Protecting Europe’s Energy Security Act into law, which would sanction vessels participating in the construction of the Nord Stream 2, an undersea pipeline built by Russia’s state-run energy giant Gazprom. 

    In May 2021, the State Department waived previously imposed sanctions, but the waiver was terminated a day before Russia invaded Ukraine. In September 2022, a series of explosions, first detected by Scandinavian authorities off the Danish island of Bornholm, ruptured the pipeline. Last month, German prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for a Ukrainian national, whom they said had resided in Poland, but he had left the country.

    The U.S. denied any involvement in the attack and condemned the sabotage against the pipeline.

    During the debate, Trump still attacked the Biden administration over the pipeline. “Why does Biden go in and kill the Keystone pipeline and approve the single biggest deal that Russia has ever made, Nord Stream 2? Because they’re weak, and they’re ineffective,” Trump said, asking Harris about her administration’s foreign policy.

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  • Donald Trump, Who Is Definitely Not Scared to Face Off With Kamala Harris Again, Says He Won’t Debate Her a Second Time

    Donald Trump, Who Is Definitely Not Scared to Face Off With Kamala Harris Again, Says He Won’t Debate Her a Second Time

    Two days after rambling incoherently about pets being eaten and babies being executed after they’re born, Donald Trump announced that he would not debate Kamala Harris for a second time, claiming, absurdly, that he was the victor of Tuesday night’s proceedings.

    In a post on Truth Social, the GOP nominee told his followers: “When a prizefighter loses a fight, the first words out of his mouth are, ‘I WANT A REMATCH.’ Polls clearly show that I won the Debate against Comrade Kamala Harris, the Democrats’ Radical Left Candidate, on Tuesday night, and she immediately called for a Second Debate. She and Crooked Joe have destroyed our Country, with millions of criminals and mentally deranged people pouring into the USA, totally unchecked and unvetted, and with Inflation bankrupting our Middle Class. Everyone knows this, and all of the other problems caused by Kamala and Joe – It was discussed in great detail during the First Debate with Joe, and the Second Debate with Comrade Harris…. KAMALA SHOULD FOCUS ON WHAT SHE SHOULD HAVE DONE DURING THE LAST ALMOST FOUR YEAR PERIOD. THERE WILL BE NO THIRD DEBATE!”

    In truth, Harris’s team called for a second debate likely because they saw how deftly she nailed the ex-president, with the VP managing to lay out her vision for the country while making the former guy look small and unhinged. While it’s not clear how much of an impact her debate performance will have on voters who haven’t already made up their minds, it’s more than clear that the majority of debate-watchers believe Harris won, and that it wasn’t even close. A CNN poll showed the VP winning the debate 63% to Trump’s 37%, while a YouGov poll put her at 54% to 31%.

    Meanwhile, a Morning Consult election poll conducted the day after the debate found the Democratic nominee leading Trump by five points, while:

    Trump, on the other hand, lost support. Ahead of the debate, 46% of respondents said they would cast their ballot for the former president if the election were held today. After Tuesday’s debate, that decreased to 45%.

    A majority of Harris’s support comes from Democrats, but she leads Trump among independent voters with 46% support to his 40%, the survey found.

    “It’s too early to say whether Harris’s debate performance is the key driver of our latest head-to-head numbers, as our short-term trends suggest she was already building momentum ahead of Tuesday’s televised matchup,” Morning Consult analysts wrote. Still, that debate performance, which was widely seen as successful, will help her sustain that momentum, they wrote.

    So yeah, there’s a reason a second Harris-Trump showdown isn’t happening (for now), but it’s probably not that the VP thinks she lost.

    Republican senator all but declares plans to try to steal the election

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  • Trump Says He Will Not Debate Kamala Harris Again, Claims ‘Polls Clearly Show That I Won’

    Trump Says He Will Not Debate Kamala Harris Again, Claims ‘Polls Clearly Show That I Won’

    After facing off against Joe Biden and then Kamala Harris, Donald Trump has declared: “There will be no third debate!”

    The former president wrote in a lengthy post on his platform, Truth Social, “When a prizefighter loses a fight, the first words out of his mouth are, ‘I WANT A REMATCH.’ Polls clearly show that I won the Debate against Comrade Kamala Harris, the Democrats’ Radical Left Candidate, on Tuesday night, and she immediately called for a Second Debate.”

    It is unclear which polls Trump is referring to, as major polls favored Harris by a landslide. A poll from CNN showed that 63% of registered voters who watched the debate say Harris outperformed Trump. Another one from YouGov had Harris 23 points above Trump in terms of debate performance.

    An hour after Trump’s post, Harris wrote on X: “Two nights ago, Donald Trump and I had our first debate. We owe it to the voters to have another debate.” Harris’ campaign also challenged Trump to another debate minutes after Tuesday’s showdown on ABC News ended.

    Answering questions from reporters immediately after the debate ended, Trump said Tuesday night, “We thought it was our best debate ever — it was my best debate ever. She wants a second debate because she lost.”

    The candidates had not previously agreed to have another debate. Back in March, before Trump faced off against Biden — whose disastrous performance resulted, in large part, in Biden dropping out of the presidential race — Trump wrote on Truth Social: “It is important, for the Good of our Country, that Joe Biden and I Debate Issues that are so vital to America, and the American People. Therefore, I am calling for Debates, ANYTIME, ANYWHERE, ANYPLACE! The Debates can be run by the Corrupt DNC, or their Subsidiary, the Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD). I look forward to receiving a response. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”

    Ethan Shanfeld

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  • ABC’s moderators failed to fact-check Kamala Harris

    ABC’s moderators failed to fact-check Kamala Harris

    This week’s first and possibly only debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump was not nearly as consequential as the June debate, which ended President Joe Biden’s political career. It also differed in another key way: The moderation was incredibly one-sided and unfair.

    This was not true of the previous debate, between Biden and Trump. CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash asked questions but did not interrupt or attempt to fact-check the candidates—they left that to Trump and Biden. Such an approach is preferable; politicians make so many incorrect statements that if the moderators really felt the need to intervene every single time, debates would devolve into showdowns between the moderators and each candidate, which isn’t the point. There are also frequent examples of moderators asserting that a given claim is abjectly false when it may be complicated, ambiguous, or a case where reasonable minds disagree.

    ABC’s David Muir and Linsey Davis thrice followed a remark by Trump with an attempt to fact-check him. These fact-checks introduced valid, conflicting information; Trump said violence in the U.S. was out of control and the moderators pointed to FBI data that contradicts this, and Trump said that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, were eating pets—a completely erroneous claim.

    But when Harris made statements that could have been fact-checked, the moderators declined to do so.

    Harris said that Trump had threatened there would be a “bloodbath” if he lost the election, and Harris implied that this was a threat of actual political violence; the moderators could have pointed out that Trump was describing the state of the economy under prospective progressive governance. Harris also said there were currently no U.S. military service members in active combat zones; this is flatly untrue, as American troops are currently serving in informal war zones in places like Iraq and Syria.

    Then there was bias reflected in the kinds of questions the candidates were asked. Trump was deservedly grilled on his appalling conduct surrounding the 2020–2021 presidential transition, and comments he made about Harris’ race. Meanwhile, Harris fielded zero questions about her complicity in the vast cover-up of Biden’s cognitive decline and infirmity. When she declined to give specific reasons for her flip-flopping on fracking—or even concede that she has flip-flopped—the moderators did not follow up.

    Trump largely failed to elucidate his vision for making the country a better place, and for that he has no one to blame but himself. Still, this debate was often a three-on-one affair, and there’s no reason for that. Future debates should stick to the CNN model.

     

    During the debate, Trump gestured at a viral claim on X and asserted that Haitian migrants living in Springfield, Ohio, are stealing and eating pet dogs and cats.

    Springfield police have said there are no reports of stolen pets. Just because the police are not paying attention to an issue doesn’t mean it’s made up, but it should also be emphasized that there are no credible claims of pet-eating being made on social media. The one cited instance of a person accused of eating a neighbor’s pet cat did not involve a Haitain migrant and did not take place in Springfield.

    Springfield residents have claimed that the migrants hunted wild ducks and geese, killing and perhaps eating them. If people are not respecting the rules of the commons, local authorities should do something about it. But this is obviously a far milder problem. Killing people’s pets is wrong; killing wild birds is not. Duck-hunting isn’t even some specifically Haitian custom, as conservatives well know.

    AI-generated memes of Trump protecting ducks and kittens have gone very viral on social media lately. It’s fine to laugh at these. But anyone who truly believes that pets are routinely abducted in small-town America by gangs of migrants has fallen for a hoax.

     

    On the other side, some commentators who correctly identified Trump’s citation of the Haitian pet-eaters as fake news nevertheless failed to note that a second wild-seeming claim—about Harris’ support for gender-affirming care for detained illegal immigrants—was actually true.

    “Trump made history last night for sure,” wrote The New Yorker‘s Susan Glasser on X. “Who will ever forget him ranting on stage about immigrants eating people’s dogs? Or insisting that the Vice President ‘wants to do transgender operations on illegal aliens that are in jail’?”

    But as CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski reported earlier this week, Harris did in fact support this policy. In 2019, she answered a questionnaire from the American Civil Liberties Union indicating that she would support paying for detained migrants to undergo gender transition surgery.

    TIME magazine must have missed the CNN story. In a write-up of the debate, TIME knocked Trump for accusing Harris of supporting such a policy. Finally, the magazine had to add a correction, making clear that their own fact-check needed a fact-check.

    Amber Duke joins me to discuss Harris’ policies, the war on Elon Musk, Bernie Sanders admitting that Kamala has flip-flopped, and the Democratic Party welcoming the Cheney family into the fold.

     

    I neglected to mention last week that I saw Wolverine and Deadpool… and it was great! While the MCU has gone totally off the rails since Avengers: Endgame, this film succeeded in making me excited for whatever comes next. The movie did a particularly good job incorporating aspects of the Loki series on Disney+, including the Time Variance Authority—enforcers of peace throughout the multiverse—and the Void, where time-displaced variant heroes live out their days.

    Robby Soave

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  • Mary Trump Says Her Uncle Donald Will Never Recover From What Kamala Harris Did To Him

    Mary Trump Says Her Uncle Donald Will Never Recover From What Kamala Harris Did To Him

    Mary Trump said that Kamala Harris put a narcissistic wound on her uncle Donald that he will never recover from.

    Mary Trump told Lawrence O’Donnell on MSNBC’s The Last Word:

    The debate last night was so affirming for those of us who’ve been in this fight uh for years now. And I think when Vice President Harris made those comments about Donald’s rallies, she inflicted a narcissistic wound from which he will never recover. It literally is going to determine how he handles the next 50 days or however many days there are until until the election, he’s going to be reacting to that from now on. It was a beautiful thing to see.

    Vice President Harris threaded so many needles with brilliance with surgical precision. She went after his weaknesses as a leader, his failures as a human being and probably next to the rally sizes, the, the most important thing to him, his complete failures as a trust fund baby and she was absolutely accurate. Donald didn’t inherit $413 million. He was gifted and quote unquote loaned that much money while my grandfather was still alive. And then on top of that, he inherited another $250 million. So she had his number, and the way he reacted to her, the way he was incapable of looking at her, was a perfect indication of the turmoil he was experiencing and the humiliation he would never get over.”

    Video:

    Trump was humiliated in front of 67 million plus Americans by a black woman who thoroughly dominated him at a presidential debate. Trump has already shown an unwillingness to debate Harris again, so he may have to live with the humiliation of what Harris did to him for the rest of the campaign and maybe the rest of his life.

    VP Harris did what nobody else has been able to do. She was able to control Trump and guide him around by the nose.

    Mary Trump was right. Trump is never going to get over this debate, and the wound will never heal.

    To comment on this story, join us on Reddit.

    Jason Easley
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    Jason Easley

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  • Donald Trump to Hold Rally at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale

    Donald Trump to Hold Rally at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale

    Donald Trump speaks at Grumman Studios in Bethpage on Wednesday, April 6, 2016 (Long Island Press photo)