Trump 2024 Run Thread

the Migrants are now more well armed than the US Military​




Trump Warns Hostile Migrants Have Machine Guns Beyond 'Military Scope'


Donald Trump has made further allegations against migrants in Springfield, Ohio, and in Aurora, Colorado, where he said they have "massive machine gun-type equipment."

"Kamala should have closed the border years ago and we wouldn't have hostile takeovers of Springfield, Ohio, and Aurora, Colorado, where they're actually going in with massive machine gun-type equipment that are beyond even military scope," The Republican presidential candidate said, during his Wednesday speech in Mint Hill, North Carolina.


He identified some alleged migrants as: "People from Venezuela. Young street gang members that were sent here by the Venezuelan government."

The comments are based on a widely-circulated video which showed alleged Venezuelan gang members armed with rifles and handguns in an apartment building.

Newsweek emailed Trump's campaign to ask whether he believes that such weapons "beyond even military scope" should be restricted. Trump has shown adamant support for the Second Amendment.

In response, Anna Kelly a spokesperson for the Republican National Committee (RNC) told Newsweek that Vice President Kamala Harris was to blame for the situation in Aurora.

"The residents of Aurora, Colorado, whose neighborhoods are being destroyed by Venezuelan gangs, know best that under Border Czar Kamala Harris, every state is a border state, and no one is safe in Harris' America."


Aurora Police Department said earlier in September that it had identified 10 members of the Venezuelan gang known as Tren de Aragua (TdA) in the city of more than 400,000 people. Eight alleged members have been arrested. One of the suspected gang members has been in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody since July 28.

The former President has repeatedly made allegations that Venezuelan criminals had taken control of two apartment buildings in Aurora, but the mayor of the town, Republican Michael Coffman, has continually said that gangs are not in control of either complex.

Coffman, who formerly served as a representative in the U.S. Congress for ten years, initially believed that TdA was in control and taking rent from residents. But what actually happened was that the property managers had vanished, and tenants simply were not paying anybody, Coffman explained.


The two complexes on Dallas Street and Helena Street are both facing maintenance issues and a lack of management, but the mayor said this has been the case for some time.

As for Springfield, Ohio, a group representing Haitian immigrants in the town has now filed criminal charges against Trump and JD Vance for repeatedly pushing false claims about them, including that they entered the country illegally, and that the have been eating their neighbors' cats and dogs.

The Haitian immigrants did not undertake a "hostile takeover" of Springfield, as Trump alleged on Wednesday, but rather entered the U.S. legally under the Biden administration's Humanitarian Parole and Temporary Protected Status programs.

The programs allow migrants from Haiti, as well as Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela, to enter the U.S. legally if they have a sponsor and meet strict vetting criteria. Those who are eligible can wait within the U.S. while their longer-term immigration status is decided on.

Jamie McGregor, the chief executive of the family-owned business McGregor Metal, said his company did not have enough workers to meet the production demands that came after an investment boost.

"The Haitians were there to fill those positions," McGregor told The New York Times. "They come to work every day. They don't cause drama. They're on time."

Between 15,000 and 20,000 Haitian migrants have moved to the city, which had a population of just under 60,000 in 2020, over the space of four years, city officials say.
 

'Not accurate': The Republican mayor in Aurora is pushing back at Trump's migrant depictions


AURORA, Colo. — The Republican mayor of Colorado’s third-largest city doesn’t think former President Donald Trump will follow through on his promise to visit the mountain community, which has become embroiled in the national debate over immigration that the GOP nominee is helping fuel.

'Not accurate': The Republican mayor in Aurora is pushing back at Trump's migrant depictions

“I kind of doubt it by now,” Mike Coffman said in an interview this week. “The fact that we’re not a battleground state and the fact that you have a mayor who’s a Republican with a different view of the conditions of the city I think probably would cause him to hold back.”

But unlike Springfield, Ohio where the mayor has asked Trump not to visit, Coffman would welcome him.


“I want the former president to come because I want to show him this city,” he said. “I want to show him that the narrative is not accurate by any stretch of the imagination."

Despite Aurora becoming a regular talking point at his rallies, a Trump campaign spokesperson declined to specify when or if the former president would visit the city.

Fierce backlash over immigrants is unfolding in several towns across the country, including Springfield, Ohio, and Charleroi, Pa. But Aurora has some important differences: It has a much larger population and has long been diverse.

The issues here — like they so often are when it comes to immigration — are complex. Social media posts quickly amplified false rumors. There has been crime, but it’s not clear how much of it is gang-related or directly attributed to increased migration. Coffman, a moderate former congressman who lost his seat in 2018 at least partly due to the rise of Trump, acknowledges that politics has lost all nuance.

And Trump continues to talk about places like Aurora.

“They’re going in with guns that are beyond even military scope and they’re taking over apartment buildings,” Trump said Wednesday in North Carolina. “They’re literally taking over those towns."

A viral video

Cindy Romero didn’t expect the video to explode

“This was terrifying,” Romero said. “And I don’t wish it on anybody.”

She’d moved to the apartment building at 12th Avenue and Dallas Street in Aurora about four years ago and has seen waves of migrants move in and out. This was the third, she said, and they hadn’t had any problems with the previous two.

But this time was different. The young men spent hours outside partying. They kicked in the doors of empty apartments. She regularly heard gunshots. Then she saw the bullet holes in her car. One had pierced the passenger side and exited the other side of the trunk. People carried guns around the property. She soon feared for her life.



“I was not intimidated by them with the guns,” she said. “Until I saw the bigger guns.”

So, she set up security cameras to capture the activity outside. One night in August, she was monitoring her door camera on her phone when she saw several armed men enter a neighboring apartment.

“It was never meant to be political when I released it,” Romero said. “It was meant to bring awareness so the people in my building could get help.”

It’s not clear whether any of the men seen in Romero’s video were indeed gang members. But the story quickly ricocheted across conservative media.

Romero and her husband finally decided to move.

“I’m incredibly angry,” she said. “I’m very frustrated with the system.”

Stretched thin

The wild claims about migrants overrunning Aurora threaten to obscure a more mundane yet still troubling reality: The Denver area has seen an influx of thousands of immigrants in the past few years.

Many of them were bused inland from the southern border by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. Resources in Denver have been stretched thin — and migrants have sought housing in neighboring Aurora, where rent is cheaper.


“I think a lot of cities have been impacted by increased immigration,” said Emily Goodman, housing assistance campaign senior manager for the East Colfax Community Collective, an advocacy organization. “But the anti-immigrant narrative that has come out of all of this is completely unjustified.”

For more than a year, Aurora officials have been trying to get an out-of-state landlord to fix up three delipidated apartment buildings in the East Colfax Corridor, which connects the cities of Denver and Aurora. This past summer, the landlord said it couldn’t because Venezuelan gangs had taken over the buildings. City officials, including the mayor, dispute that and the embattled property manager is facing charges in municipal court because of years of unresolved health and safety code violations. Last month, the city shut down one of the apartment complexes and evicted hundreds of people.


“The problems with the landlord really go back prior to the migrant crisis,” Coffman said.

Goodman and her colleagues argue the city should be doing more to ensure residents have adequate living conditions — and that the focus on crime is distracting from underlying issues such as poverty and lax code enforcement.

“There is gang violence everywhere,” Goodman said. “But immigrant gang violence is not as significant as it’s painted out to be.”

Trump and his allies have highlighted a Venezuelan prison gang, Tren de Aragua, or TDA. Homeland security officials tell NBC News they’ve currently launched more than 100 criminal investigations nationwide into TDA, including for sex trafficking and shooting police officers. But Aurora police have said that it’s been challenging to determine whether crime suspects in the city are part of the notorious gang — and they downplay any link to immigration status.


At a press conference last Friday, Aurora’s police chief, Todd Chamberlain, said several of the armed suspects captured on the viral video forcing their way into the Aurora apartment have been identified and one man is in custody. He did not confirm any of them were TDA members.

“This is not an immigration issue,” Chamberlain said. “It’s a crime issue.”

A changing narrative

Coffman said he dreaded the presidential debate between Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris and was disappointed to hear Trump bring up Aurora.

“I kind of sank in my sofa,” he said.

Still, Coffman himself initially fanned the right-wing firestorm. In an interview on Fox News, he said that the apartment complexes had “fallen” to gang members. He has since backtracked and now says that his initial comments were a “snapshot in time” and based on police reports he’d been given at the time — claims that gang members had run off the property management and were collecting rent.


“I’m not sure how accurate that is, clearly,” Coffman said. “I’ve held meetings with the residents. And the reality is none of them are paying rent, period. They’re not paying it to a gang. They’re just not paying it. And I can’t fault them because of the fact that there is no property management there to pay the rent to.”

Carlos Ordosgoitti lives in one of the three embattled complexes — the one where the viral video was captured. He’s from Venezuela and now works installing fiber cables after coming to the U.S. two years ago.

“This is all politics,” Ordosgoitti said in Spanish. He acknowledged there is some violence in the area, but said claims of a gang takeover are exaggerated and that most Venezuelans were here to work. He wishes Trump would indeed visit to see for himself.

“You can’t generalize an entire community,” he said.
 

Trump Media co-founders unload nearly all their DJT stock worth $100 million


The co-founders of Trump Media & Tech Group – the alleged brains behind Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform – have sold almost all their stock in the company, worth a reported $100m.

According to a regulatory filing, United Atlantic Ventures has disposed of nearly all its 5.5 percent stake in Trump Media – traded under the ticker DJT – which owns Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform.


United Atlantic Ventures is an investment firm owned by Andrew Litinsky and Wesley Moss, who were also former contestants on series two of The Apprentice.

The duo sold most of their stake in the company after a lockup agreement that stopped large investors, including the former president, from selling any shares ended on September 19.

Trump is yet to offload any of his stock with the Republican presidential nominee insisting he would not be selling his shares and reaffirming his commitment to Truth Social when the lockup agreement ended.

“A lot of people think that I will sell my shares, you know, they’re worth billions of dollars, but I don’t want to sell my shares. I don’t need money,” he said earlier this month. “I love it. I use it as a method of getting out my word.”

After Trump was banned from Twitter – now Elon Musk’s X – following the January 6 Capitol riot, Litinsky and Moss pitched the former president the idea of launching Truth Social, according to the BBC. They then helped facilitate a merger that took Trump Media public in March.


But relations between the company and Litinsky and Moss turned sour.

Attorneys for Trump Media had argued that UAV was not entitled to shares in the company alleging mismanagement by the former Apprentice contestants.

But earlier this month, a federal judge in Delaware ruled in the firm’s favor in a lawsuit filed against Odyssey Transfer and Trust, a securities transfer agent. The court’s summary judgment in the case came in response to UAV seeking assurance from the judge that it would be able to sell its minority stake in Trump Media.

DJT’s stock price has been particularly volatile over the last few months.

The share price hit a high of $79.38 on its first day of trading as a public company in March but closed Thursday at $13.98 per share. Trump, who owns 114.75 million shares, has seen his stake drop from being worth $6.2bn in May to $1.6bn based on Thursday’s closing price, CNN reported.


Following the presidential debate against rival Kamala Harris, the company saw another dip in the share price.

The Independent is the world’s most free-thinking news brand, providing global news, commentary and analysis for the independently-minded. We have grown a huge, global readership of independently minded individuals, who value our trusted voice and commitment to positive change. Our mission, making change happen, has never been as important as it is today.
 
Didn't Trump meet with Zelenskyy today?
Trump ally RFK Jr. says he knew "what Donald Trump was thinking" when he met with Zelenskyy, saying Trump wanted to "turn this guy over and hold him by his legs and shake all the money out of his pockets."

 
Trump is desperately trying to get the crowd to believe an off-the-wall story about Kamala Harris flying in thousands of undocumented immgrants from the jails of foreign countries.

“Can you imagine they fly them in these people?”

 
Trump spells out his plans for dealing with Iran:
Reporter: Would you try to do a deal with Iran if you were re-elected?
Trump: “Sure, I would do that. I believe, I believe in getting, you know. It doesn’t. It doesn’t matter. I have a great memory but it’s a memory that wants to serve the people”
 
Trump: "And then I have to sit there and listen to her bullshit last night. And who puts it on? Fox News. And they shouldn't be allowed to put it on."

 
Trump: "Disgusting illegal alien who was let into the United States by Kamala and her lax law-- she, they, every one of my killer -- we had the, she had the, he had the, he would've never been able to get in. She stopped every single one of them."

 
Trump: Oh, there's a fly. Oh, I wonder where the fly came from. See, two years ago, I wouldn't have had a fly up here. You’re changing rapidly. We can’t take it any longer

 
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