Trump backers baffled by criticism of his Muslim proposal
That only goes toward USA citizens.
Citing Tashfeen Malik, the woman who with her husband Syed Rizwan Farook killed 14 people during a shooting rampage at a San Bernardino developmental center this month, Trump said the USA needs to “get its hands around the problem” of radical followers of the religion and the threat they create.
Trump has been dealing with the current backlash on his comments of requesting a ban on Muslims entry to the United States.
It appears that Anonymous has had enough of Donald Trump’s anti-Muslim polemics-and they’ve started taking action.
“I think it’s been made into something it wasn’t meant to be”.
“When my friends call me up, and they call me up very strongly, and they say – these are Muslims – and they say, ‘It’s something, Donald, that has to be talked about, ‘” he told CNN yesterday.
Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump waves to the crowd at the conclusion of a presidential forum in Aiken, South Carolina on December 12, 2015.
“How can we let these people in our country until we vet them properly?”
Only 31 percent of Republican voters think Trump is at least somewhat compassionate, and 43 percent say he is at least somewhat likable.
Sherry acknowledged that she can not cite any case involving immigration to support her view, and that a Supreme Court decision to uphold bans on Chinese laborers in the late 1800s points in Trump’s favor. “They all act like Trump; now they can look like him too”. Bush also contended that Trump is neither a “serious person” nor a “serious candidate”.
“Under the circumstances, I think it’s a good idea”.
Trump’s call last Monday for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States” drew anger in the USA and around the world.
While voters like Wilson admire Trump’s willingness to wade into controversy, he also acknowledged that Trump is “a little rough around the edges”. “We need someone who is going to speak up for us”.
As for Trump’s claim that he saw video of “thousands” of Muslims in New Jersey celebrating on September 11, Dabkowski said she writes it off as hyperbole and does not see it as a knock on his honesty.
“I think he’s pretty much right on track actually on that”. “I think there were people who did celebrate but it’s an exaggeration, exaggeration gets attention”.