Bangkok Post

Protests irk Trump ahead of holiday

PRESIDENT REFUSES TO BE ‘SILENCED’

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>>WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump bemoaned protests demanding racial justice as “violent mayhem” on Friday, but said little about an alarming resurgence of coronaviru­s cases as he attended a crowded, fireworks-studded Independen­ce Day celebratio­n beneath majestic Mount Rushmore.

Mr Trump, under fire for his response to America’s spiralling coronaviru­s caseload four months before the presidenti­al election, spoke on the eve of the July 4th celebratio­ns before thousands of closely-packed people — many of whom chanted “Four more years;” few of whom were wearing masks.

In the shadow of four notable predecesso­rs — George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln, whose likenesses are carved into a granite cliff in South Dakota’s Black Hills — the president called on supporters to defend America’s “integrity”.

He accused protesters calling for racial justice of “a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values, and indoctrina­te our children”.

“The violent mayhem we have seen in the streets and cities... is the predictabl­e results of years of extreme indoctrina­tion and bias in education, journalism and other cultural institutio­ns,” he added.

The US has been engulfed by a once-in-a-generation reckoning on racism and police brutality since George Floyd, an African American man, was killed by a white police officer in Minneapoli­s on May 25.

That has included a rethink of how America venerates symbols of the pro-slavery Civil War South, from removing statues of Confederat­e generals to retiring the Mississipp­i state flag, which featured the Confederat­e emblem.

Mr Trump — who has also been criticised for his response to the protests — promised Mount Rushmore would never be defaced, and that he would never abolish the police or the right to bear arms.

“They want to silence us — but we will not be silenced,” he said to cheers, adding later that it was time to “speak up loudly, strongly, powerfully and defend the integrity of our country”.

“The best is yet to come,” he said, promising to establish “a vast outdoor park that will feature the statues of the greatest Americans who ever lived”.

Mr Trump did briefly thank those “working tirelessly to kill the virus” during his comments on Friday.

But, otherwise, he has had little to say about the shocking increase in US virus cases. On Friday more than 57,000 new infections were recorded, the third day in a row that the US has broken its own record for new cases.

The pandemic has claimed nearly 130,000 American lives, and the recent resurgence “puts the entire country at risk”, top infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci has said.

The surge, especially in the south and west of the country, has cast a pall over Independen­ce Day and seen US residents blackliste­d by Britain and Europe, who have opened their borders to others.

Mr Trump did tweet on Thursday the rise was because “our testing is so massive and so good”, calling that “great news”.

He added: “Even better news is that death, and the death rate, is DOWN.”

US testing has risen sharply, but health experts say it still lags on a per capita basis behind many other countries and does not fully explain the case rise. They also note that deaths tend to increase a few weeks after cases rise.

 ??  ?? AMID GREATNESS: President Donald Trump is seen in front of Mt Rushmore ahead of Independen­ce Day fireworks.
AMID GREATNESS: President Donald Trump is seen in front of Mt Rushmore ahead of Independen­ce Day fireworks.

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