Michael Moore Booted From Trump Tower Waving ‘We Are All Muslim’ Sign
In his letter, he narrated an incident when he met Trump many years ago during a talk show where the now President candidate was all “jittery” and “nervous” about sharing the stage with Moore.
“… here we are in 2015, like many other angry white guys, you are frightened by a bogeyman who is out to get you”. In other words, we’re all everything – meaning, ultimately, nothing.
Some 200 protesters gathered outside Donald Trump’s New York City headquarters on Sunday, accusing the presidential hopeful of “fascism” and “racism” following his call for Muslims to be barred from entering the United States.
“I was raised to believe that we are all each other’s brother and sister, regardless of race, creed or color”, Moore writes in his Facebook letter to Donald Trump. That means if you want to ban Muslims, you are first going to have to ban me.
“Until we are able to determine and understand this problem and the unsafe threat it poses, our country can not be the victims of horrendous attacks by people that believe only in jihad, and have no sense of reason or respect for human life”, Mr Trump had said in a statement, which was widely condemned.
Moore also recommended that Trump “go to the time-out room in any one of [his] Towers, sit there, and think about what [he has] said”. Allegedly, according to Moore, Trump was scared to meet him out of fear that Moore might cause a scene.
“I would like to see the Republican Party come together, and I’ve been a little bit divisive in the sense of hitting people hard”, the GOP frontrunner said.
Trump wants to ban Muslims entering the US.
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas – who has surged to become Trump’s closest competitor in recent weeks, leading in some polls in the key early voting state of Iowa – did not directly answer a question about whether he opposes Trump’s plan. He also has a plan for building a wall in the south to keep illegal migrants out.
He told the crowd “these are people that want to kill us folks”.
Florida Governor Jeb Bush is at 10 percent, Ohio Gov. John Kasich is at 8 percent, Carly Fiorina at 6 percent and Ben Carson at 5 percent.