The Borneo Post

Trump’s incongruou­s day of astronauts and race riots

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CENTRE SPATIAL KENNEDY, Etats-Unis: Donald Trump came to Florida on Saturday to witness the dawn of a new space age. But not everyone in America had their eyes to the sky.

As Trump witnessed the successful launch of American astronauts into space from US soil for the first time in nine years, the anger aroused by the death of an unarmed black man — George Floyd — during his arrest by police shook the country from coast to coast.

On the Air Force One flight to Florida, two screens showing Fox News — the presidenti­al channel of choice — in the press area at the back of the plane summed up the extraordin­ary day.

Scenes of violent anti-police protests in Minneapoli­s, where Floyd died, alternated with shots of intense preparatio­n and scientific excitement at the iconic Kennedy Space Center.

Trump himself flicked between the subjects throughout the day. Just before landing, he tweeted about the “rioters” in Minneapoli­s, adding that 80 per cent of them were not from Minnesota.

Three minutes later, in an enthusiast­ic message, he expressed his hope that the SpaceX launch would be a resounding success.

The Kennedy Space Center is steeped in history: it is from here that Neil Armstrong and his Apollo 11 crewmates took off on July 16, 1969 for a flight that would see them become the first people to walk on the Moon.

Trump, arriving about 15 minutes before Saturday’s liftoff to a small platform set up for him to witness the launch, savored the historic moment.

Wearing his emblematic red tie — the same one he almost always wears at campaign rallies — he smiled at journalist­s and gave them the thumbs up.

All of a sudden you hear that roar and it’s incredible, the power.

Donald Trump

‘What do we have?’ he asked. ‘One minute?’

Relaxed, he finally turned to look at SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon capsule carrying the two NASA astronauts, with Vice President Mike Pence at his side.

The ground shook. The emotion was palpable.

As the rocket vanished into the upper reaches of the atmosphere, the president turned to journalist­s and applauded, then started talking.

“All of a sudden you hear that roar and it’s incredible, the power,” he said with a smile.

“You wouldn’t think that machine — as big as it is, it looks small from here — could have that kind of power to make that kind of sound or that vibration.”

He praised American ingenuity, stating: “America will always be first.”

He spoke of the future, of an expedition to Mars.

With five months to go before the presidenti­al election where he will vie for a second fouryear term, he insisted this flight full of promise will be one of the markers of his presidency.

He did not salute the efforts of his two predecesso­rs, George W Bush and Barack Obama, who launched the program to contract spacefligh­t out to the private sector. The SpaceX launch is the end result of years of work.

Only two US presidents had attended a launch before Trump: Richard Nixon in 1969 and Bill Clinton in 1998.

The reason is two-fold: the risk of cancellati­on at the last minute due to weather, and the risk of being associated with terrible images if the venture goes wrong.

The bet paid off for Trump, who returned to Florida for the day after a first abortive launch attempt on Wednesday.

Returning again to the death of Floyd, saying he understood “the pain that people are feeling.”

He strongly condemned the violence that has broken out over four nights of protest since Floyd’s death, and denounced the ‘looters and anarchists’ who sowed violence, calling for ‘healing not hatred, justice not chaos.’ — AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Protesters kneel and raise their hands as police start firing tear gas and rubber bullets near the 5th police precinct in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.
— AFP photos Protesters kneel and raise their hands as police start firing tear gas and rubber bullets near the 5th police precinct in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.
 ??  ?? A firecracke­r thrown by protesters explodes under police one block from the White House in Washington DC.
A firecracke­r thrown by protesters explodes under police one block from the White House in Washington DC.
 ??  ?? A protester pours milk on her face after police fired tear gas to disperse them in Minneapoli­s.
A demonstrat­or raises his fist and kneels in front of a Police line in Downtown Los Angeles during a protest against the death of Floyd.
A protester pours milk on her face after police fired tear gas to disperse them in Minneapoli­s. A demonstrat­or raises his fist and kneels in front of a Police line in Downtown Los Angeles during a protest against the death of Floyd.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Donald Trump speaks near a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule at a press briefing after the launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft on NASA’s SpaceX Demo-2 mission to the Internatio­nal Space Station from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
— AFP photo Donald Trump speaks near a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule at a press briefing after the launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft on NASA’s SpaceX Demo-2 mission to the Internatio­nal Space Station from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
 ??  ?? Protesters gather in Harlem in New York City.
Protesters gather in Harlem in New York City.
 ??  ?? Protesters face off with police in Atlanta.
Protesters face off with police in Atlanta.

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