More questions emerge over Trump’s 9/11 celebrations claim
In his second major jab at Donald Trump in 24 hours, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie slammed the Republican front-runner for his apparent mocking of New York Times reporter Serge Kovaleski, who has a muscular disability.
After this declaration was over discussed and most people, including the authorities, said that there’s no exact evidence about this, things take a very interesting turn after an interview with a teenager, made days after the attack, by MTV, seems to confirm Trump’s theory.
US Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has threatened to change his jokey style and to skip a CNN Debate unless they pay him $5 million.
GOP presidential frontrunner Donald Trump claims he saw Muslim Americans celebrating after the terror attacks on September 11th in 2001, and now he’s getting heat from his own party.
In one brief segment from the minute-long video, former CBS News anchor Dan Rather spoke with “The Late Show” host David Letterman.
Black voters, he says, like Trump because he’s “speaking up” and “telling the truth”, and because he fights back when others go after him. They were about 13 years old and started hitting public property with sticks and rocks, chanting “Burn, America!” “Twelve. Thirty. Forty” people celebrated. And Guzmán said only that a source reported “cheering” and that police were called to a building in Jersey City to find “eight men celebrating” – far fewer than the thousands Trump claimed to see.
Guzman cited the report as an example of law enforcement checking every tip in the aftermath of the attacks. However, in a newly released video, MTV News went back to Avecedo who now says that the kids she saw weren’t doing anything out of the ordinary, and that she does not recall hearing anyone say “burn America”.
Even though there were a lot of rumors regarding Muslims cheering after the 9/11 attacks, various news organizations tried to confirm these but failed. A black pastor, meanwhile, says Trump doesn’t deserve the endorsement of black ministers.