Donald Trump has sparked the ire of Twitter users and mainstream media commentators once again. During a press conference, Donald Trump misspoke and said the Spanish Flu of 1917 helped bring an end to the Second World War.
24.07.2020 - 15:57 / foxnews.com
Rosie O’Donnell has joined the myriad celebrities placing blame for the deaths of Americans on President Donald Trump. The former talk show host is a vocal critic of Trump, having previously feuded with him prior to his presidential run in the 2016 election.
O’Donnell took to Twitter on Wednesday to throw her voice behind the chorus of celebrities who have accused the president of being to blame for deaths in the country. However, she didn’t specify exactly what she’s referring to.
Donald Trump has sparked the ire of Twitter users and mainstream media commentators once again. During a press conference, Donald Trump misspoke and said the Spanish Flu of 1917 helped bring an end to the Second World War.
Donald Trump has a bone to pick with Bill Maher.
Donald Trump was abruptly escorted by a US Secret Service agent out of the White House briefing room as he was beginning a coronavirus update, then returned minutes later, saying there had been a "shooting" outside that was "under control"."There was an actual shooting and somebody's been taken to the hospital," the president said.He added that the shots were fired by law enforcement officers and he believed the person who was shot was armed.
Donald Trump has officially signed an executive order to deliver more aid to the unemployed amid the coronavirus pandemic, Hot New Hip Hop has learned. The outlet said the president managed to bypass Congress this past Saturday to extend more benefits to American citizens.
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerPresident Donald Trump ended his press conference on Saturday after being pressed on the claim that his administration passed the Veterans Choice healthcare law.Trump was talking to reporters and supporters in the ballroom of the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey when he touched on the US coronavirus response.He was challenged by CBS News journalist Paula Reid when he repeated his claim that his administration signed into law the measure
Joe Biden is in trouble with black Americans once again. As it was previously reported, Joe Biden came under fire on social media and in the mainstream media after he suggested that black Americans were a monolith compared to Latino Americans.
Voters are once again asking Donald Trump to practice what he preaches after the president tweeted about reopening schools amid the coronavirus crisis. “Cases up because of BIG Testing! Much of our Country is doing very well. Open the Schools!” Trump tweeted on August 3, as the COVID-19 death toll in the United States continues to rise past 158,000. Twitter reminded the president that son Barron Trump‘s school is closed until October due to safety concerns.
Todd Spangler NY Digital EditorDonald Trump said he will move as soon as Saturday to ban TikTok from the U.S., several weeks after the administration first said it was considering taking such an action against the popular Chinese-owned social video app over concerns that it’s a threat to national security.“As far as TikTok is concerned, we’re banning them from the United States,” Trump said Friday, speaking to reporters on Air Force One.
Donald Trump is in hot water once again over posing with a brand of beans after his daughter, Ivanka Trump did the same despite the said brand, Goya, being boycotted by its Mexican buyers! But now, his niece, Mary L.
Donald Trump has been getting a lot of criticism over the way he’s been dealing with the COVID-10 pandemic in the United States but the current POTUS is now blaming someone else for what is happening! As far as he is concerned, Barack Obama and Joe Biden stopped the testing for the virus – 3 years ago! That’s right! Donald Trump got a lot of people confused when he claimed the previous president and his current opponent are to blame for America becoming the epicenter of a global pandemic even
Donald Trump never ceases to amaze the American public with his opinion. This week, the president sat down for an interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity where he was asked about the fact that three million one hundred sixty-five thousand fifty-eight people have been infected by the coronavirus, and 135,094 Americans have died.
President Donald Trump‘s tax returns are not immune from legal proceedings, the Supreme Court just ruled.
President Donald Trump's most vocal celebrity supporters — and now he could become his opponent. In an interview with on Tuesday, Trump was asked about what he thought of West announcing that he's running for president in 2020. West tweeted on the Fourth of July, «We must now realize the promise of America by trusting God, unifying our vision and building our future.
Neil Young has shared an open letter written to Donald Trump, as the US President continues to use the musician’s work without permission.Before Trump’s speech at Mount Rushmore last week, three of Young’s songs were heard blasting from the speakers – ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’, ‘Like a Hurricane’, and ‘Cowgirl in the Sand’.After initially taking to Twitter to once again voice his disapproval, Young has now written to the President, saying he won’t take legal action because he doesn’t want to
University of Manchester.The official White House Twitter account tweeted a quote attributed to Mr Trump, which read: "Americans harnessed electricity, split the atom, and gave the world the telephone and the internet."We settled the Wild West, won two World Wars, landed American Astronauts on the Moon—and one day soon, we will plant our flag on Mars!"His claim has angered Brits on the social media platform, who were quick to point on that the atom was split by a New Zealand scientist, who
Donald Trump has claimed that Americans were responsible for giving the world the telephone - despite the inventor being Scottish. Edinburgh-born Alexander Graham Bell is credited in history for inventing the first practical telephone during the late 19th century.