Donald Trump calls for ‘complete shutdown’ on Muslims entering United States
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said a “total and complete shutdown” of all Muslims entering the United States should be put into place until Congress can act.
In his six-page complaint, Cullen claims Trump must “present evidence that he is a registered member of the Republican Party because his views, expressed over decades, are inconsistent with the Republican Party platform and the Republican Party of New Hampshire’s statement of principles and bylaws”.
Donald Trump said there is “great hatred towards Americans by large segments of the Muslim population”.
“We can’t just say, we’re not going to look at it. Now, I made that statement a number of weeks ago”. In an appearance on Face the Nation on Sunday, Trump called for increased surveillance of Muslim communities, organizations and mosques by law enforcement and national intelligence agencies, as well as police profiling of Arab Muslims. Where this hatred comes from and why we will have to determine. So, everybody wants to be politically correct.
“We are having a problem with radicals in the Muslim group”.
Trump says some people “have to be tracked”, including people who happen to be Muslims.
Ben Carson told an ABC News reporter on Monday that he “saw the film” of American Muslims cheering after the World Trade Center fell on 9/11. Trump also stated that that he would go after the families and wives of terrorists and asserted that he does not believe in the innocent narrative of the sister of Syed Rizwan Farook, the Pakistani-origin USA citizen who along with Pakistani wife Tashfeen Malik massacred 14 people in California last week. “There are going to be people who respond inappropriately to virtually everything”.
Trump said even in the case of San Bernardino shooting, he sees everybody knew about the couple who are suspected to be behind the terrorist attack. The poll, released in June, also asserts that 51% of those polled “agreed that Muslims in America should have the choice of being governed according to shariah [law]”, a legal framework in which laws and personal conduct are dictated by Islamic religious teachings.