Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed News
Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live

Jewish Group Denounces Trump For False Claims About U.S. Arabs Cheering 9/11

$
0
0

Eric Schultz / AP

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) on Sunday criticized Republican presidential contender Donald Trump for his comments that thousands of Arab Americans cheered as the Twin Towers fell on 9/11.

On Saturday and Sunday, Trump said he observed "thousands and thousands" of Arab people in New Jersey "cheering as the World Trade Center came down" — an online conspiracy debunked by police and media.

"It was well covered at the time," he told ABC on Sunday. "There were people over in New Jersey that were watching it, a heavy Arab population that were cheering as the buildings came down. Not good."

In a statement to BuzzFeed News, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), an international NGO that monitors anti-Semitism, said: "It is unfortunate that Donald Trump is giving new life to long-debunked conspiracy theories about 9/11."

"This seems a variation of the anti-Semitic myth that a group of Israelis were seen celebrating as the Twin Towers fell," the ADL said.

"His comments are irresponsible — not to mention factually challenged."

LINK: Trump Says Falsely That New Jersey Arabs “Cheered” On 9/11


Clinton To Propose Plan To Ease Financial Burden On Caregivers

$
0
0

Bennett Raglin / Getty Images

This fall, Keith F. Thompson met Hillary Clinton and told her his story. He’s 52, a part-time librarian from Brookline, N.H. — and he works part-time so that he can care for his mother, who has Alzheimer’s. Because Medicaid and Medicare don’t provide day-to-day support outside a nursing home, he told Clinton, he takes his mother to work with him. Both Thompson and the candidate parted in tears that day.

In the two months since their encounter, Clinton has mentioned Thompson in nearly every major speech — and she speaks frequently about the “caregiver crisis” facing those who look after loved ones full-time without enough financial support.

And now, Clinton is proposing a new tax credit to ease that burden on millions like Thompson, offsetting up to $6,000 in expenses for caregiving. The tax break targets families “paying for, coordinating, or providing care for aging or disabled family members,” according to a Clinton campaign aide.

The plan would also allow people like Thompson to earn credit toward their Social Security for family caregiving. In the current system, people who take time out from work to care for a loved one do not earn credit toward their retirement.

“No one should face meager Social Security checks because they took on the vital role of caregiver for part of their career,” said a summary of the plan, provided to reporters on Sunday. “Clinton believes that it is time to reform our tax policies, Social Security system, and work-family policies, to support paid and unpaid caregivers and to recognize their fundamental contributions to families and to America.”

Clinton will outline the details of the proposal on Sunday at a town hall in Iowa.

The caregivers credit comes as part of a series of middle-class tax benefits Clinton is beginning to unveil as part of her campaign. Last week, she put forward a tax credit for families and individuals facing major health care costs.

Clinton has also promised not to raise taxes on those making less than $250,000 — a pledge her opponents in the Democratic primary, Sen. Bernie Sanders and former governor Martin O’Malley, have declined to make. Both candidates support a paid leave bill, sponsored by Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, that would raise the payroll tax for all families. Clinton has said she will introduce another way to pay for a paid leave program that does not raise taxes on middle-class families.

Clinton’s campaign, which has yet to outline a full tax plan, did not say how she intends to pay for the caregiving proposal.

As part of her caregiving plan, Clinton is seeking a “Care Workers Initiative,” to create what her campaign calls a “government-wide” effort to support and ensure fair wages for full-time professional caregivers. This summer, Clinton hosted a roundtable with home health-care workers represented by the Service Employees International Union, promising to focus on the often overlooked vocation.

Clinton will also aim to invest more in the Lifespan Respite Care program, which provides grants to family caregivers of any age. In 2015, the program received $2 million in federal dollars. President Obama has asked to up the allocation to $5 million. As president, a campaign aide said, Clinton “would go even further,” committing a total of $100 million from the federal government over 10 years.

LINK: Voter Sees The “Real Hillary” Her Campaign Seeks To Reveal

Here's The Hateful History Of Falsely Accusing U.S. Muslims Of Celebrating On 9/11

$
0
0

Donald Trump said this weekend that he watched "thousands and thousands" of Arab Americans in New Jersey "cheering as the World Trade Center came down" on 9/11.

People in Liberty State Park in Jersey City, N.J., on 9/11.

Mike Derer / ASSOCIATED PRESS

"I watched in Jersey City, New Jersey, where thousands and thousands of people were cheering as that building was coming down. Thousands of people were cheering," Trump said at a rally on Saturday.

"It was on television. I saw it," he told ABC News' George Stephanopoulos again on Sunday. "There were people that were cheering on the other side of New Jersey where you have large Arab populations. They were cheering as the World Trade Center came down."

While elements of this conspiracy have circulated on anti-Islam blogs in recent years, no footage or credible reports have ever surfaced of any Arab-Americans or Muslims celebrating in New Jersey as the Twin Towers fell.

The view from the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City, N.J., on 9/11.

Daniel Hulshizer / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ibrahim Hooper, national communications director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, told BuzzFeed News Trump was “either mistaken or he’s lying.”

“This has been one of these vile memes on the anti-Islam hate sites for some time, but there’s actually no evidence to support it whatsoever,” Hooper said. “And it’d be interesting if he personally saw it. That would be quite interesting since it didn’t happen.”

On Sunday, Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop, a Democrat, wrote on Twitter that Trump’s claims were “absurd.”

So, what's going on?

Well, we know that footage circulated in the wake of 9/11 that appeared to show Palestinians in East Jerusalem celebrating the attacks. Here's some old NBC footage:

youtube.com


The footage was shot by a Reuters camera crew in the immediate aftermath of the attacks, according to the news agency. An online rumor that the footage was 10-years-old proved false.

That's a long way from New Jersey, though, and Trump's target here — as in many recent comments — is American Muslims.

Ironically, the roots of this one may be in another racist online meme: The "Dancing Israelis" conspiracy theory.

In a statement to BuzzFeed News, the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish group that works to counter anti-Semitism, described Trump's comments as "a variation of the anti-Semitic myth that a group of Israelis were seen celebrating as the Twin Towers fell."

This myth has long circulated, particularly in the Middle East, as part of a conspiracy theory that blamed Israel for the attacks, which were proudly claimed by Al Qaeda.

A group of five Israeli men were detained in New Jersey after the attacks, after a woman called police to report men sitting on the roof of a white van and filming smoke billowing from the World Trade Center, the details of which can be found in this 20/20 report from 2002. The woman said the men were taking photos of themselves with the scene of destruction in the background.

While questions were raised about the men's possible ties to Israeli intelligence, no charges were laid against the men and they eventually returned to Israel.

According to 20/20, one of the men later denied to Israeli media that they had been "celebrating," saying they had simply stopped to record what they were witnessing. "The fact of the matter is we are coming from a country that experiences terror daily. Our purpose was to document the event," he said.

Trump's comments also seem connected to the baseless reports on anti-Islam websites that American Muslims in Paterson, New Jersey, were celebrating on the day of the attacks.

Bare Naked Islam

A 2013 story from the anti-Islam website Bare Naked Islam described Paterson as "the city whose large Palestinian population celebrated the attacks on 9/11," but provided no evidence for this claim.

In fact, in 2007 Reuters debunked this myth in a piece on Muslims in Paterson, who the news agency said were "sad" after the attacks:

Paterson was shaken by the September 11 attacks. On that day, a report circulated on some radio stations and Internet sites that Muslims in Paterson had demonstrated in celebration.

Paterson officials promptly issued a statement denying the report, and Muslim leaders insist it was pure fabrication.

... "The Arabs here were sad after 9/11. Believe me, nobody in this community supports bin Laden. He is a criminal. He makes our life difficult here," said Walid Rabah, chief editor of Paterson's Arab Voice newspaper.

And while Trump says he saw this happen, he sure didn't talk about it at the time. Speaking to German media from near Ground Zero two days after the attacks, Trump made no mention of ever seeing any Arabs cheering in New Jersey.

youtube.com

Nor did he bring up the claims in a 2010 discussion with CNN's Larry King in which they reminisced about watching television on the day of the attacks.

youtube.com

Hope Hicks, a spokesperson for the Trump campaign, did not immediately return a request for more information on the basis for the billionaire's claims, but both NPR and the New York Times could find no credible reports of any Muslims celebrating in either Paterson or Jersey City in the wake of the attacks.

Additionally, the independent fact-checking website PolitiFact rated Trump's claim "pants on fire." The website unearthed a Sept. 17, 2001 Associated Press article which referred to "rumours of rooftop celebrations" in Jersey City but described them as "unfounded." Buried within a Washington Post story from a day later was the claim that "law enforcement authorities detained and questioned a number of people who were allegedly seen celebrating the attacks and holding tailgate-style parties on rooftops while they watched the devastation on the other side of the river." However, the newspaper provided no source for this information.

"There’s no conclusive evidence that New Jersey residents celebrated the attacks, and there’s no evidence whatsoever of any demonstrations where 'thousands and thousands of people' cheered," PolitiFact concluded.

Andrew Kaczynski contributed to this report.

LINK: Trump Says Falsely That New Jersey Arabs “Cheered” On 9/11

LINK: Jewish Group Denounces Trump For False Claims About U.S. Arabs Cheering 9/11

GOP Frontrunner Donald Trump Was Once A Pro-Obama Blogger

$
0
0

“The world is excited about Barack Obama and the new United States. Let’s keep it that way!”

Scott Olson / Getty Images

In 2009, Donald Trump penned a blog where he shared his insights and analysis of the country, the economy, and America's new president, Barack Obama.

The blog ran on his Trump University website and was part of the promotional campaign for Trump's book, Think Like a Champion. In his book and that year, Trump praised President Obama.

Trump's blog can be found through the old website for his book.

Here's the site Trump linked to in his tweet, with a link to the blog:

Here's the site Trump linked to in his tweet, with a link to the blog:

Via web.archive.org


View Entire List ›

Paul Campaign Hits Rubio For Missed Votes, But Paul Has His Own Attendance Issues

$
0
0

BuzzFeed News reported earlier this year that Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul had missed a majority of committee hearings for Foreign Relations and Homeland Security.

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul continued his war of words with his opponent, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, over the weekend, calling out Rubio for missing Senate votes.

This time, the attack came in the form of a quiz.

Here's how the quiz looks on his site:

Here's how the quiz looks on his site:

Via randpaul.com


View Entire List ›

Trump In 2005: Families Of Soldiers Killed In Iraq Should Sue NYT For WMD Reporting

$
0
0

“It’s one thing to get a bad review, it’s another to lose more than 2,000 lives because of false or inaccurate reporting.”

Scott Olson / Getty Images

In the mid-2000s, when he was an outspoken critic of the Bush administration and the Iraq War, Donald Trump wrote that the families of U.S. service members who died in Iraq should sue the New York Times for faulty reporting on weapons of mass destruction.

"I think anyone who has lost a son, a daughter, or a loved one in the war in Iraq should sue The New York Times for Judith Miller's false reporting about the so-called 'weapons of mass destruction' as a premise for that war," wrote Trump on his Trump University blog in 2005. "It's one thing to get a bad review, it's another to lose more than 2,000 lives because of false or inaccurate reporting. Imagine having the Judith Millers of the world working for you and getting away with things that are inconceivable to a journalist. We have to draw the line somewhere, and that's where I draw the line."

In the lead up the Iraq War, Miller wrote several front page Times stories on Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons program. Much of the reporting in those stories turned out to be inaccurate, and many critics accused Miller of aiding the Bush administration's case for war.

"All the news that's fit to print seems to have evolved into 'whatever we decide to print is the news, whether it is correct or not,'" wrote Trump."This past weekend I was playing golf with a friend who was irate with The New York Times. His investment portfolio has never been lower. His stock in the company is at the lowest it has been in ten years, and he can only blame the behavior at the so-called 'paper of record' for this plunge."

Donald Trump has said throughout his campaign he was on the record as being vocally against the Iraq War before the invasion in 2003, a claim BuzzFeed News could find no evidence of. Trump did loudly criticize the war as a disaster within a year of the invasion.

"In addition, the current mess with Judith Miller has made me wonder what is going on there," continued Trump on his blog. "What kind of reporting is The New York Times doing? Who are they really working for? Can we afford to believe anything they print? Do they have a conscience? Do they know that power includes responsibility? Do they even know what they are doing?I think The New York Times has some big-time cleaning up to do, but I wonder if it's too late."

Read the post below:

Read the post below:

Via web.archive.org

Jeb Bush: Trump's Call To Send Back Syrian Refugees "Appalling"

$
0
0

“I understand people believe that there’s huge potential threats here, so let’s screen them properly, but let’s don’t send people back that have been screened, who maybe only because they believe in Jesus Christ as their savior, will be beheaded.”

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

w.soundcloud.com

Jeb Bush says that he thinks Donald Trump's promise to send back Syrian refugees is "appalling," adding that Christians who have escaped the country shouldn't be sent back "to their slaughter."

"I think it's appalling," Bush told radio host Michael Medved on Friday, when asked about Trump's position. "If we've screened refugees, if you're a Christian Syrian who but for the good fortune of escaping and crossing through ISIS territory, and crossing the Turkish border, stuck in a refugee camp, and go through the process to prove you're not an Islamic terrorist, you come to the United States, this noble country, to send them back to their slaughter? I find it appalling."

The former Florida governor went on to add that, while he understood concerns about there being "huge potential threats here," refugees shouldn't be returned to Syria to face their death.

"I understand people believe that there's huge potential threats here," he said. "So let's screen them properly, but let's don't send people back that have been screened, who maybe only because they believe in Jesus Christ as their savior, will be beheaded. I just, I reject that out of hand. I apologize."

Asked whether he felt the same way about sending back Muslim refugees, Bush said, "I don't think — if they've been screened properly, and people are satisfied with the screening process — no, not until there is a clear level of security, which only the United States can lead to create."

He added that it was "time for us to take a step forward based on the positive American values that separate us from the rest of the world and believe in our greatness again."

Earlier in the interview, Bush reiterated his view that the United States should pause its resettlement of Syrian refugees in order to determine "what kind of criteria that we need to make sure that we're safe," but that America should "support religious minorities" from the region.

"I also think it's appropriate for the United States to support religious minorities that, but for us, will die, will languish, will be beheaded, will be raped," Bush said. That's what's happening in the Middle East right now thanks to these barbaric Islamic terrorists."

Bush also addressed a question about what he would do differently if he could do-over his presidential campaign.

"I think change the perception that I felt or that the campaign felt that we were a front-runner. I've always felt — uh, I didn't anticipate that there was this perception of front-runner status because I don't really follow the process that much," he replied.

He went on to add, "And had I realized that there was a growing perception that I was a front-runner, I would've discounted that deeply because, everybody's gotta go earn it."

"I don't have to worry about that anymore," he added. "I'm certainly not the front-runner."

Rand Paul: Boston Bombers Were "Coddled," Given "Free Stuff" As Refugees

$
0
0


Joe Raedle / Getty Images

w.soundcloud.com

Rand Paul said on Friday that the Boston bombers came to America as refugees and were "coddled" and given "free stuff," before they "decided to attack us."

"The Boston bombers came here and as refugees, we coddled them, we gave them free stuff, we gave them free housing, and yet, they decided to attack us, so there’s a great risk," Paul told radio host Jeff Kuhner.

Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the brothers responsible for the 2013 Boston marathon bombing, did not enter the country through the refugee screening process. The Tsarnaev family entered on tourist visas and, through a process different from the refugee program, eventually were granted political asylum.

Paul introduced an amendment in the Senate last week to block welfare assistance for new refugees from certain countries, including Syria.

The interviewer asked Paul whether the refugee resettlement process was "as rigorous and stringent as the president and his supporters claim."

Paul answered that he does not think the process is sufficiently stringent, saying that he'd met with the Obama administration in recent days.

"A woman from the administration acted offended because I implied that any refugees could be terrorists," Paul said.

"It’s a mistake for the Obama administration to downplay the risk," he added. "And we’re gonna fight them. I’ve been fighting them all week in the Senate and I promise you this battle’s not over.”


Graham: Database On Muslim Americans An "Offense" To Military Members And Families

$
0
0

“There are 3,500 American Muslims in uniform. Such things are an offense to them, their families. What are they fighting for as American Muslims? The same freedoms that you and I enjoy. God bless them.”

Brian Frank / Reuters

Republican presidential candidate and South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham said Friday that he opposed creating a special database on Muslims in the U.S., calling it an "offense" to American Muslims serving in the military and their families.

Following the recent terrorist attacks in France, fellow GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump called for creating a database of American Muslims last week. Graham said that such calls run contrary to freedom of religion in the U.S.

"No, I'm running for president of the United States, where you can come and worship God your way or not at all," Graham said in a radio interview alongside Sen. John McCain on the Michael Medved Show.

He also said his administration would conduct surveillance based on "the conduct of your behavior."

"The only time you'll get surveilled if I'm president is based on the conduct of your behavior," Graham said.

"There are 3,500 American Muslims in uniform," Graham continued. "Such things are an offense to them, their families. What are they fighting for as American Muslims? The same freedoms that you and I enjoy. God bless them."

McCain highlighted the importance of presidential candidates acknowledging the words of the Constitutional, specifically, it's "freedom of religion" provision.

"Could I just say, Michael, does that mean that we should go on military bases and register those men and women who are serving in uniform who happened to be of the Muslim faith?" McCain said. "Give me a break. I suggest that one thing to be required of a candidate of the President of the United States, and that is read the Constitution, and one of the provisions of the Constitution is freedom of religion."

w.soundcloud.com

Mike Huckabee's 2008 Myspace Page Is Still Up And Still Amazing

$
0
0

Guitars, fedoras, and family photos.

Hillary Clinton's Myspace page may be no more, but another 2008 candidate who is trying his luck again in 2016 still has his up: Mike Huckabee. And it's glorious.

Hillary Clinton's Myspace page may be no more, but another 2008 candidate who is trying his luck again in 2016 still has his up: Mike Huckabee. And it's glorious.

Myspace / Via Myspace.com

Huckabee didn't have Shepard Fairey create a portrait of him that went viral like some other candidate. But he had the next best thing.

Huckabee didn't have Shepard Fairey create a portrait of him that went viral like some other candidate. But he had the next best thing.

Myspace / Via Myspace.com

Here's a picture of him playing guitar with Tyra Banks.

Here's a picture of him playing guitar with Tyra Banks.

Myspace / Via Myspace.com

Here's another picture of Mike Huckabee holding a guitar.

Here's another picture of Mike Huckabee holding a guitar.

Myspace / Via Myspace.com


View Entire List ›

Benghazi Committee Member: My Wife Gave Me An "F" On My Second Set Of Questions To Clinton

$
0
0

Mike Pompeo — and his family — reviewed the game tape.

Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images

Republican Rep. Mike Pompeo, a member of the House Select Committee On Benghazi, said that his son and wife gave him lower grades than he expected on his performance at the Benghazi committee hearings last month.

During a speech at the Wichita Pachyderm Club last week, Pompeo told the gathered audience that he thought he'd done well at the Benghazi hearing — unlike the "C" and "F" his family gave him, on his line of questioning to Clinton.

"I was reminded, I had three opportunities for ten minutes each, my first one I asked her about accountability, where I know wasn't received so much as a — I gave myself an 'A' for that line of questioning. My son gave me a 'C.'"

Pompeo conceded that his second set of questions to Clinton weren't as good.

"My second set of questions I frankly didn't do as well. It was more difficult to control her extended answers — I, it was trickier and I let my emotion get ahold of me a little bit more, you can go back and watch it, it only takes ten minutes, I wasn't as good."

"I gave myself a 'C.' My wife gave me an 'F,'" Pomepo said.

"So it's a tough curve at the Pompeo house," he joked.

Pompeo noted that looking back, he approves of his performance.

"And I mention that Carol because emotion does matter. I actually looked back at my second 10 minutes and I actually like it now. I look back on it, because you can see the enormous frustration on my face, with the place that America finds itself today and I don't want to wait 14 more months. I don't want to wait 14 more hours so we will use and we'll do everything we can. "

View Video ›

buzzfeed-video1.s3.amazonaws.com

Here's the full video

youtube.com


View Entire List ›

6 Untrue Things That Donald Trump Has Said

$
0
0

Make Statements That Are Right Again!

Donald Trump has a history of making claims that are false: exaggerations, conspiracy theories, and more.

Donald Trump has a history of making claims that are false: exaggerations, conspiracy theories, and more.

Here are just a few:

Scott Olson / Getty Images

On Sunday, he repeated the claim: Trump told viewers on This Week that people in New Jersey, a state that he claimed had a large Arab population, were "cheering as the World Trade Center went down."

Officials from the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish group, and the Council on American-Islamic Relations told BuzzFeed News the claim is untrue. And although this rumor has circulated on anti-Islam blogs, no footage exists of this happening in the United States. (There is video of Palestinians celebrating the attack in East Jerusalem.)

According to the New York Times, local police dismissed rumors of a celebration in Paterson, New Jersey, at the time.

"I'm self-funding my campaign. I'm putting up my own money," Trump said in this month's debate, a claim also offered by his campaign manager recently.

"Mr. Trump is funding his campaign on his own; he's not taking donor money," Trump's campaign manger said in a radio interview with Breitbart News.

This isn't true, as BuzzFeed News has pointed out in the past.

In October, the New York Times reported that most of the money that Trump "raised and spent this summer" came from donors:

"Mr. Trump revealed in a filing Thursday to the Federal Election Commission that the vast majority of the money he raised and spent this summer as he rose to the top of national polls came not from his own coffers, as it had in the spring, but from about $3.7 million in what he called 'unsolicited contributions.' Some 74,000 donors pitched in an average of about $50 to help his campaign, he reported."

"Mr. Trump himself contributed only about $100,000 in in-kind contributions, including rent space that he donated and payroll expenses that he covered. That represented a huge drop from the spring, when Mr. Trump donated about $1.9 million to his campaign, financing the bulk of it himself."

Additionally, Trump is accepting donations on his campaign's website, as of Nov. 22, 2015.

In June 2008, Obama released a copy of his short-form birth certificate to the public, an issue that was brought up on the campaign trail.

"I have some real doubts," Trump told Today in 2011 about whether Obama was born in the United States.

"His grandmother in Kenya said he was born in Kenya, and she was there and witnessed the birth. He doesn't have a birth certificate or he hasn't shown it," Trump said. "He has what's called a certificate of live birth. That is something that's easy to get. When you want a birth certificate, it's hard to get."

On April 27, 2011, the White House announced the release of Obama's long-form birth certificate.

In a YouTube video posted by Trump in 2012, Trump credited himself with the release of Obama's long-form birth certificate.

"President Obama is the least transparent president in the history of this country. There's never been anything like it. We know very little about our president," Trump said.

"I'm very honored to have gotten him to release his long-form birth certificate. Or whatever it may be. Now, many, many people have questions and very serious questions."

In 2015, Trump indicated that he was still not convinced if Obama was born in the United States. Trump told CNN, "I really don't know," when asked if he believed that Obama was born in the U.S., adding that he "didn't want to get into it."


View Entire List ›

Donald Trump Defends His Fake, False 9/11 Claim

$
0
0

Donald Trump made a claim that isn't true — that thousands of people celebrated the fall of the World Trade Center in New Jersey. And on Monday night in Ohio, he defend the false claim once again.

youtube.com

Here's Trump in his own words on stage:

During a speech recently, I said that I saw in parts of New Jersey — Jersey City, but parts of New Jersey — I saw people getting together and in fairly large numbers celebrating as the World Trade Center was coming down, killing thousands of people, thousands and thousands of people.

But that's not quite what Trump actually said during his recent speech.

"I watched in Jersey City, New Jersey, where thousands and thousands of people were cheering as that building was coming down,” he said in Alabama.

Not just a few people, or a person, but thousands and thousands of people.

Back to Trump on Monday:

People are still dying over what happened at the World Trade Center, and they're dying a terrible death. And I saw people — and I saw 'em on television, and I read about it on the internet and I read about it — and they said, 'Oh, we can't find anything, Mr. Trump.' The reporters are calling all day, all night, they want to find out, did Trump make a mistake?

So I have some good people, and they checked and they checked, and believe me, it's being cleared off many of stuff — they don't like that, because that's not good for the liberal cause, they don't like it.

And lo and behold, I start getting phone calls in my office by the hundreds. That they were there and they saw this take place! On the internet and my tweets: @realDonaldTrump, @realDonaldTrump, they'll turn those cameras off for a second. Look at all of them. @realDonaldTrump.

So all of the sudden, I'm getting all these tweets, I saw it, I was there, I was this. But I saw it! I saw it! So what happens ... it was a long time ago.

There are no reports of "thousands and thousands" of people celebrating the fall of the World Trade Center in New Jersey.

Despite massive media scrutiny of this claim, no one has yet produced video of people celebrating the fall of the Twin Towers in New Jersey, even though Trump claims that he saw this happen on television.

At the time, Palestinians were filmed celebrating the attacks — but in the Middle East. The Middle East is not located in New Jersey.

So, Sept. 18. Now you know Sept. 11 was one of the worst days — maybe the worst day in the history of our country, worse than Pearl Harbor, because at least with Pearl Harbor they were attacking the military. They were attacking ships and they were attacking ships, and they were attacking the military. Here they're attacking civilians that — I knew people, I knew so many people who died in the World Trade Center, unbelievable people, great people, friends of mine, unbelievable people. They died in the World Trade Center — they didn't have weapons, they didn't have anything. They died horribly, and that was a horrible death. I watched people jumping off the building. How would you like to be 102 stories up and your choice is burn or jump? And many people jumped. I witnessed it. I watched that, because I had a view, I have a window in my apartment that specifically was aimed at the World Trade Center, because of the beauty of the whole downtown Manhattan. And I watched as people jumped, and I watched as the second plane came in. And I was watching television as the first plane hit, and they said, oh, it must have been a boiler explosion. But I'm good at real estate, boilers are not up there. Boilers are underneath — they're in the basements. And I said that was not a boiler… and then I saw the second plane come in, and I said, 'Wow, that's unbelievable.'

That's right: On Monday night, Trump also decided to invoke the people who jumped from the towers while defending his fake claim.

And there were people that were very, very happy. And those people, not good people.

So, nobody believed me. Some people believed me. By the way, thousands of people believed me, because they saw it. But the media was going crazy, they were having a field day, and one of my people came in… 'Mr. Trump, I have a story in the Washington Post.' Washington Post? Washington Post? How good is that? That's good. Because they do us no favors. They're one of many, but they do us… and I have to tell you, and I say it a lot, among the most dishonest people I've ever dealt with are the media.

Among the most dishonest. Unbelievable! The level of dishonesty is unbelievable — not everybody, I've met some incredible people. Those people right there, with all the cameras going. And some are very good. In all fairness, I've dealt with some really fair people, I've dealt with some really treacherous, horrible human beings, that will quote you totally wrong, things that you never even said. I said I never said that… but they're very dishonest people.

Trump is citing the 15th paragraph of this Washington Post story dated Sept. 18, 2001. The story reads like this:


That's it. That's the entire story. It does not describe "thousands and thousands" of people.

Back to Trump:

So, one of my people comes in, and this is a story from the Washington Post on Sept. 18, a week later, 2001: 'In Jersey City, within hours of two jetliners plowing into the World Trade Center, law enforcement authorities detained and questioned a number of people who were allegedly seen celebrating the attacks and holding tailgate-style' — tailgate, know what that means? Tailgate! That means football games, Ohio State, thousands of people in parking lots, on roofs, tailgate is a lot of people, tailgate's not two people — 'and holding tailgate-style parties on rooftops while they watched the devastation on the other side of the river.'

Tailgate-style does not mean "thousands and thousands" of people. And this one paragraph of this one piece in the days after the attack notes that this was "alleged." This was not a first-person account.

At the time, the mayor and police in Paterson, New Jersey, which has a large Muslim population, dismissed the rumors that there were celebrations.

Back to Trump:

OK? The Washington Post. Washington Post. So they've come in and we've received hundreds of phone calls to my office, because it's become sort of a big subject, and they want to try and deny it, but you can't deny it. Many people in this room heard about it, probably saw it, and you know the sad part is… we're all sort of on the same side. Whether you're liberal or conservative or Democrat or Republican — we're sort of on the same side. We want our country to be great again. That's what the whole thing is, right?

It really doesn't make sense. But fortunately, somebody in the Washington Post wrote that, and they'll try to deny it, they'll probably say, 'We made a mistake.' Which I almost like that better. Then I can show you how dishonest they all are. I might like that better. Let them say that. But they'll find some reason to deny it. They'll call it a typo. It was a very long and winding typo. They'll try and deny it. But I don't think they'll be able to, not with the smart people.

I love you too, darling.

Donald Trump said "thousands and thousands" of people celebrated something, and he said he saw it himself on television. There is no video of this. There are no reports of this.

And his proof that this happened is one paragraph of an article about "a number of people" who had been "questioned" for "allegedly" celebrating the attacks.

Hillary Clinton Love And 18 Other Yuge Moments From Donald Trump’s Blogging Career

$
0
0

When he wasn’t praising Obama, The Donald blogged about current events on his Trump University “Trump Blog.” The highlights are below.

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Trump had some thoughts on steroid use in baseball:

Trump had some thoughts on steroid use in baseball:

Via web.archive.org

Trump wrote in 2005 that there was no housing bubble.

Trump wrote in 2005 that there was no housing bubble.

Via web.archive.org

Trump had fun performing at the Emmy's.

Trump had fun performing at the Emmy's.

Via web.archive.org


View Entire List ›

As Marco Rubio And Ted Cruz Rise, Hispanic Evangelical Leaders See Courtship Intensify

$
0
0

AP images

Conservative evangelical voters are a key bloc in the Republican primary — that's not new.

But the presence of two rising Cuban-American candidates, Sen. Marco Rubio and Sen. Ted Cruz, as well as former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, has invigorated another segment of this crucial bloc of voters: conservative, Hispanic evangelicals. The growing bloc voters (19% of Hispanics and counting) is more conservative and more strongly pro-life than other Latinos.

And as Cruz and Rubio spar over their records — especially on national security and immigration — these voters who are passionate about immigration, an issue at the nexus between their culture and their faith, are watching.

And in the case of Rubio, engaging. The Florida senator is "slowly but surely" increasing outreach to Hispanic evangelicals, a source close to the campaign said, not wanting to wait until May or June 2016.

Rubio's campaign has increasingly reached out to faith leaders since the last Republican debate on Nov. 10, according to pastors who have been contacted. Many Hispanic evangelicals have also been calling his campaign unprompted, the source close to the campaign said.

"We’ve had pastors who’ve come to us saying 'We really like Marco, Marco is a guy who is acceptable to us, he hasn’t made any anti-Hispanic remarks to the point that Donald Trump or Ted Cruz have,'" the source said.

The Hispanic evangelical community is "very key for the Republican party," said Florida GOP spokesman Wadi Gaitan. "Being able to garner the support of these pastors is key and as more and more candidates try to gain the support of this community they’re going to the churches."

Those in Rubio's campaign orbit believe a key leader — Rev. Samuel Rodriguez of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference (NHCLC), which includes 40,000 congregations nationwide — already supports Rubio behind the scenes. A separate Republican source who works with Hispanic pastor groups and is unaffiliated with Rubio's campaign confirmed they heard the same thing.

"The grapevine is crazy," Rodriguez told BuzzFeed News by phone. "Sam Rodriguez has yet to formerly endorse, but I can tell you he's not supporting Donald Trump."

Rodriguez described Rubio as an "amazingly attractive candidate — he gets it." He called Jeb Bush and Rubio his "two preferable choices as individuals."

In an extensive New Yorker profile of the Florida senator released Monday, Rodriguez was also critical of Rubio on immigration, because he no longer supports the bipartisan bill he helped craft and usher through the Senate.

"Marco Rubio’s de-facto one-eighty on immigration after the Gang of Eight failed was nothing other than a mistake. It was a serious mistake, and, I would argue, an ethical miscalculation,” he said.

Bush and Mike Huckabee were the only candidates to go to the NHCLC's April national conference in Houston.

Hispanic pastors in Florida have viewed Rubio and Bush as their top two choices for a while, and say there is an appetite for a candidate that makes traditional values, national security, and uniting the country a priority.

Marilyn Lopez, who serves on the board of the Hispanic Association of South Florida, which includes 600 pastors and ministers, said she likes Rubio and Bush and wishes Huckabee was doing better in the race.

But the subject of Ted Cruz is a little different for her and others.

Lopez and other members of her church routinely pile into a coach bus and head to the state capitol in Tallahassee to lobby for pro-life bills, but also for driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants, which she says would "help the economy and keep roads safe." Immigration is also a matter of faith for her — and the reason Cruz doesn't crack her top three.

"Cruz talks really bad about immigration and that upsets me," she said.

If Rubio is questioned by the Latino evangelicals for how he's handled immigration since 2013, Cruz's sharper edges and more strident language have made him more polarizing on the issue.

"Sen. Ted Cruz is an amazing, brilliant individual and a wonderful Christian, a great brother in Christ," Rodriguez said. "But I would like to see Sen. Cruz, for his rhetoric to reflect more of his heart," he added, pointing to private conversations he has had with him that he believes more accurately reflect his views.

Publicly, Cruz has instead backed away from parts of immigration he used to support. In April, at a forum with the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, Cruz said the economy is the issue Latinos care about the most, not immigration. He repeated his oft-used line that he is the biggest champion of legal immigration. But he sounded a different tone months later, in the days after the last debate, when the fight between he and Rubio on immigration broke out into the open.

Cruz, who used to support increasing the number of high-skilled immigrant H-1B visas by up to 500%, said he now wanted to suspend the program for six months to "complete an audit of pervasive allegations of abuse" and would "halt any increases in legal immigration so long as American unemployment remains unacceptably high."

Frank Lopez, a board member of several pastor and minister organizations in Florida, said he likes Carson, Rubio, and Cruz — Bush is a "great man and a great governor," yet doesn't make the cut — but acknowledged that Cruz is the more polarizing of the group.

"I think we’re reaching a point where we’re going to have to make harder measurements on immigration but at the same time we need a candidate that deals with them with compassion and gives them a fair opportunity to stay here," he said.

The pastors said compassion is wholly missing from Trump's rhetoric, and point to Cruz's chumminess with the frontrunner as a problem.

"Cruz at times, because of the nature of the campaign and Donald Trump, the pressure Trump is exerting to move further right — no further wrong — on immigration, has presented the issue not as nuanced as it is," Rodriguez said.

San Antonio Pastor Marcus Burgos, who has worked with the conservative LIBRE Initiative in his church, favors Rubio and Cruz and made a distinction between them and Trump, but framed deporting undocumented immigrants as a community issue.

"As a Hispanic living in Texas, you can’t say everybody has to go," he said. "Everybody has a face and a name, in the grassroots, there is a relationship involved. If you believe everybody has to go you’re sending friends away, you’re sending family away."

Even Rubio supporters acknowledge that Cruz has been the candidate most aggressively courting evangelical voters, though. His father, Rafael Cruz, a Spanish-speaking pastor, is said to be reaching out to Hispanic evangelicals, known as evangélicos, but it is unclear how well it is going and how much of a priority it is for him. The campaign did not respond to a request for comment before publication.

And if Cruz's immigration rhetoric and policy turns off some, Hispanic pastors say they love his strong support for Israel. It's one area where Cruz appears to have a high-profile supporter. Mario Bramnick, president of Hispanic Israel Leadership Coalition and the NHCLC's southeast director, has appeared at multiple events with Cruz including the rally to stop the Iran Deal, which also featured Trump. Bramnick declined repeated requests to comment, though a source who works with him said he likes Rubio, too.

Even the pastors who haven't always supported Republicans have received an entreaty or two from the campaigns.

Rev. Luis Cortés Jr., president of the Philadelphia based Esperanza, a group of 13,000 Hispanic faith and community-based organizations, was part of a White House delegation to Honduras and Guatemala, and has not ruled out supporting Republican candidates. Reached while on vacation, he said he has to return a call from the Rubio campaign when he gets back.

Like many of the other pastors, he said Syrian refugees should be properly screened after the Paris ISIS attacks but their religion should not be a factor. But he said candidates fall short when they fail to classify immigrants coming from Central America as refugees, too.

"One of the issues we have as Hispanic leaders, is that black lives matter, but maybe brown ones don’t," he said, annoyed that the only time Latinos are talked about during debates for each party is on immigration.

But even though the pastors listed many issues they care about: poverty, religious freedom, traditional marriage, and others, they all ultimately returned to Trump and immigration — and a warning for Cruz.

"I am extremely disappointed in Donald Trump’s positions," Cortés Jr. said. "I am also disappointed that he hasn’t been thoroughly denounced by the other candidates running. Candidates who don't want to go against him so they can eventually get his supporters." Anyone who won't denounce him, he said, "is willing to do anything to become president" and disqualifies themselves.

Marilyn Lopez said she wishes Republicans would adjust their rhetoric. "This is why I get upset, Democrats speak so nice. They draw the people that really need immigration reform," she said.

"It's sad Republican candidates don’t have that kind of heart," she said. "If we don’t talk about these issues we’re going to lose them to Hillary and to liberals because they seem to be more welcoming and that scares me."


Ted Cruz: "Of Course" ISIS Is Already Here "And More Are Coming"

$
0
0

“Just 3% of the Syrians this administration has let in are Christians. He’s ignoring the genesis [sic] directed at Middle Eastern Christians and it is wrong. That’s what’s offensive.”

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

w.soundcloud.com

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said ISIS is already in the United States and more are coming.

"Well look, you're right, eight Syrians were picked up in Texas trying to cross over illegally, and this is the consequence of the president refusing to enforce the law," Cruz told radio host Glenn Beck last week. "We have a serious national security risk because our southern border is not enforced."

Contrary to Cruz's statement, the eight Syrian reference presented themselves seeking asylum at the border.

Cruz added he believed ISIS was already in the United States and more were coming.

"Do you believe they're already here?" Beck asked the Texas senator.

"Of course they are," said Cruz. "Of course they are and more are coming. And ISIS has made clear their intention to carry out terror attacks just like the one in Paris here in America and to try and murder hundreds, or if they have their way, thousands of innocent Americans"

"As president, number one: I will secure the border. We will — I will build a wall that works," he continued. "We will triple the border control. We will increase fourfold the fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft. We will deport the criminal illegal aliens. We will put in place a strong biometric entry exit system. We will put in place a strong e-verify."

Cruz noted he recently released an immigration plan to secure the border.

"I rolled out just a week ago a detailed immigration plan laying out exactly how we will secure the border, by the way I wrote that in close consultation with Jeff Sessions and Steve King, designed to get the job done," he said. "But beyond that, as we discussed a minute ago, we will defeat ISIS."

Cruz noted "there are are Syrian Muslim refugees who are facing a humanitarian crisis," and he felt sympathy for their plight but said the refugees couldn't be vetted and therefore should be resettled in Middle Eastern countries.

Still, Cruz said Christian refugees should be admitted to the United States from the region.

"And then with respect to the christians which are a small minority, which are facing persecution and genocide — Christians are being crucified right now Glenn, they're being beheaded, and the president says it offensive and un-American to want to provide safe haven," he said. "Just 3% of the Syrians this administration has let in are Christians. He's ignoring the genesis [sic] directed at Middle Eastern Christians and it is wrong. That's what's offensive. And as president my first priority will be keeping this nation safe, securing our borders, and defending against radical Islamic terrorists who want to murder innocent Americans."

Wisconsin Lt. Governor: Hillary Clinton “Ignored The Cries Of Women” Who Felt “Victimized” By Bill

$
0
0

“I think that you are going to see a lot of people come forward with a lot of irritation about Hillary Clinton and how she has in the past ignored the cries of women who feel like they were victimized by her husband.”

Darren Hauck / Getty Images

w.soundcloud.com

Wisconsin Lt. Governor Rebecca Kleefisch says many people will come forward during the campaign who are irritated at Hillary Clinton for ignoring women who said they were "victimized by her husband."

Kleefisch was asked on WTMJ last week if former President Bill Clinton was going to keep a "low profile" while in Madison, Wisconsin for a private fundraiser.

"As far as I know, and you know what," Kleefisch responded. "That's probably wise, and I get it. Because they want him to keep a lower profile, they want her to be the star and they want him kind of in the background as, just a part of the chorus. I get that mentality, but at the end of the day, when she is the nominee, this will become an issue.

"Because you've seen his past paramores come back into the media who want to talk about this, who want to make this a campaign issue because they feel that Hillary Clinton, by simply looking the other way, as she kind of publicly did — there was no public outrage there was no, even expression of frustration, I think that publicly a lot of women were looking for about his past indiscretions."

"I think that you are going to see a lot of people come forward with a lot of irritation about Hillary Clinton and how she has in the past ignored the cries of women who feel like they were victimized by her husband," Kleefisch concluded.

Jeb Bush: Christian Refugees Are Identifiable By Name, Birth Certificate

$
0
0

“There are ample means by which to know this.”

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said in a radio interview Tuesday that "you can tell when someone is a Christian in the Middle East" based on indicators such as their name and birth certificate.

"I can promise you that," Bush told New Hampshire radio host Jack Heath. "By name, by where they're born, their birth certificates. There are ample means by which to know this."

In the interview, Bush reiterated his call for pressing "the pause button" on accepting Syrian refugees to ensure that refugee screening processes are "proper."

Bush said last week that he would ultimately be willing to admit some refugees, such as orphans or Christians, to the U.S. When asked how to prove that someone is Christian, he said then, "You're a Christian — I mean, you can prove you're a Christian. You can't prove it, then, you know, you err on the side of caution."

On Tuesday, Bush also repeated that he feels the country has a "moral obligation" to support Syrian Christians.

"I've used the example of Syrian Christians that are — but for the United States and but for the world community, they'll be slaughtered, beheaded, raped, pillaged, because of their faith," Bush said. "I think we have a moral obligation to support them."

w.soundcloud.com

Attack At Trump Rally Raises Concerns For Black Lives Matter Movement

$
0
0

Marvin Gentry / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Black Lives Matter organizers who have disrupted politicians on the campaign trail in 2016 have heard the call, mostly from Democrats: Why not protest Republicans, too?

The one-sidedness of the protesters' confrontations has been a source of consternation inside campaigns and among Democrats watching the movement closely. Some Black Lives Matter activists have argued that their movement is better served by keeping their Democratic allies accountable.

Enter Donald Trump.

On Saturday, an Alabama man identified by multiple news outlets as Mercutio Southall Jr., was reportedly punched, tackled and kicked Saturday during a Trump rally in Birmingham, Alabama. Southall had been chanting, "Black lives matter!" Trump, as he's done before when disrupted at rallies, called for the protester's removal. "Throw him out!” the Republican presidential candidate said from the podium.

Inside the Black Lives Matter movement, activists said the melee in Alabama strengthened a closely-held belief that confronting Republican candidates at rallies attended by hundreds, sometimes thousands of people, could be dangerous.

"Roughed up? Maybe he should have been roughed up," Trump said on Fox News Sunday when asked about the incident. “I had 10,000 screaming people in the room yesterday. Because it was absolutely disgusting what he was doing.”

“This was not handled the way Bernie Sanders handled his problem, I will tell you that," Trump continued.

Marissa Johnson, one of the organizers who protested Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders in Seattle this past summer, said the danger she and another activist, Mara Willingford, encountered at the Sanders rally did not compare to what Trump's supporters seemed ready to dish out.

“It’s legitimately like showing up to a KKK rally,” she said.

“Look at their base,” Johnson continued. “It’s nothing new. Just an escalation in the political climate that has brought a lot of stuff to light.”

Avery Jackson, a Morehouse College student and a protester with the Atlanta-based #AUCShutItDown, which disrupted a Hillary Clinton event at Clark Atlanta University last month, said the people who engage in disruption and similar tactics “are not disposable" and the Trump incident was evidence that those who engage in protest are putting themselves at risk.

“It’s crazy that at a presidential campaign rally this would go down and there would not be any sanctions or statements on the behalf the party that he wants to represent as the nominee," Jackson said. "There’s not any sort of large outcry besides the one coming from the people who support the guy who was victimized."

Jackson said he’s heard the calls for Black Lives Matter to protest Republicans — but even if he'd considered that before, he and others are probably thinking twice now.

“I think this shows what kind of risk that is,” Jackson said. “I think it’s important for people to recognize that the people who involve themselves in protest and disruption on behalf of this movement have to be strategic about the way in which we do things.”

DeRay Mckesson of Campaign Zero said Trump's campaigning is built on ideas of bigotry and encourages violence. You don't remember his tax plan for instance, Mckesson said what's remembered is not Trump's tax plan, for instance, but his talk about building a border wall or creating a database on Muslim citizens.

"There's this impact to the language of bigotry, and we saw that impact be physical violence at the Trump rally," Mckesson said. "If Trump is not espousing the values of the Republican party, and if his supporters with his endorsement are physically assaulting a black man at a rally, then I wonder why then no one in the party is condemning it."

On Monday, the Washington Post reported that there would be not yet be charges filed against either Southall or the rally-goers who reportedly assaulted him.

Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz shared in the activists' sentiment in a statement released Tuesday, saying Trump, without mentioning him by name, contributed to hostility when he said the protester "maybe ‘should have been roughed up."

"There is no place for violence in our public discourse and certainly no place for irresponsible leadership in presidential campaigns more worried about playing to the ugliest elements of their party’s base than about doing what’s right," she said. "Every Republican presidential candidate ought to speak out against violence against protesters if they’re serious about wanting to lead America."

Kentucky Governor Provides For Voting Rights After Felony Sentences Served

$
0
0

Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear

Via youtube.com

On Tuesday, Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear issued an executive order immediately providing for automatic restoration of voting rights for many people convicted of a felony after completing their sentences.

The three-page executive order will affect an estimated 180,000 people in the state previously convicted of a felony who have completed their sentence. It would also restore their right to hold public office, but it does not alter restrictions on jury service and firearm possession.

The order came two weeks before Beshear, a Democrat, will be leaving office — due to be replaced by Gov.-Elect Matt Bevin, a Republican. Both have stated their support for automatic restoration of voting rights.

Bevin's spokesperson told BuzzFeed News, however, that the order would have to be reviewed in coming days before a definitive statement could be given as to whether Bevin supports the order because, the spokesperson said, Bevin's office was only notified of the order minutes before it was announced.

Prior to Beshear's order, only a gubernatorial pardon could restore voting rights to those convicted of a felony. Legislation aimed at addressing the issue has passed the state's House, but not the state's Senate.

Now, the state will automatically restore voting rights to those who complete their sentence, face no further criminal charges, and whose charges did not include violence, sexual assault, bribery, or treason.

"Corrections is prepared and ready to go," Beshear said of the process for approving the restoration of the rights for those who already have completed their sentences.

In explaining why he was issuing the order, Beshear cited Brennan Center data that more than 180,000 people are estimated to have completed their sentences but remain without voting rights in the state.

"We're one of four states in the country," Beshear said on Tuesday, "where this is not automatic."

Florida and Iowa are among the states with bars on voting rights restoration; Virginia does as well, but recent governors have taken executive actions similar to Beshear's to facilitate restoration of voting rights.

Beshear's order takes effect immediately.

From Gov. Beshear's order:

From Gov. Beshear's order:

Beshear, who is in his last month in office, did not consult with or provide much notice to his successor, according to Bevin's spokesperson.

"Governor-Elect Bevin has said many times that the restoration of voting rights for certain offenders is the right thing to do," Jessica Ditto, the communications director for Bevin's transition office, said. "We were notified of the Executive Order by Governor Beshear’s staff only a few minutes before the announcement and were not provided a copy of the Executive Order until after the press conference. The Executive Order will be evaluated during the transition period."

At his 10 a.m. news conference on Tuesday, asked about consultation with Bevin's office, Beshear said only, "We communicated our plan to his new general counsel, who is coming in, this morning."

Read the order:

Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images