Wednesday, May 13, 2020

What the hell? Trump says Chinese Americans are angry at China

SCREEN CAPTURE
CBS journalist Weijia Jiang confronts Donald Trump.

@#$%&*# Did Trump really say that? Did he say that Chinese Americans are angry at China because of the coronavirus? Sadly, he did.

Donald Trump just makes things up and his supporters take his words -- true or not -- at face value.

“Asian Americans are VERY angry at what China has done to our Country, and the World,” Trump wrote on Twitter Tuesday afternoon. “Chinese Americans are the most angry of all. I don’t blame them!”

Trump apparently is still bothered by the day before when he clashed with Chinese American journalist Weijia Jiang.  Near the end of Trump's Monday evening press conference, CBS reporter Jiang asked Trump why he continues to wrongly claim that the US is outperforming many countries in terms of testing for the coronavirus, according to NBC News.

“Why is this a global competition to you if every day Americans are still losing their lives and we’re still seeing more cases every day?” Jiang asked Trump.

Trump responded to Jiang, "Don't ask me. Ask China that question. OK? When you ask them that question, you may get a very unusual answer."

Trump tried to avoid answering Jiang's question by calling on the next reporter, but Jiang looked around to her fellow journalists with a quizzical look on her face, apparently not believing what she just heard. She interrupted Trump, “Sir, why are you saying that to me, specifically?” asked Jiang, who was raised in West Virginia after immigrating from China,

Trump said in response, ““I am not saying it specifically to anybody. I am saying it to anybody who would ask a nasty question like that.”


Trump offers no evidence or poll for his statement about Asian Americans hating China but he did draw some angry responses:



Seeking to deflect the blame for the impact the coronavirus has had on the US, Trump and the GOP are using an anti-China campaign in a series of ads and statements from senior administration officials who continue to repeat the unsubstantiated theory linking the origin of the outbreak to a possible accident at a Chinese virology laboratory. U.S. officials say they are still exploring the subject and describe the evidence as purely circumstantial. But Trump, aides say, has embraced the notion to further highlight China’s lack of transparency.

Last weekend, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos that there is “enormous evidence” that the virus began in the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

According to CNN, the still-secret findings of the Five Eyes intelligence agencies (the US, UK, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada) pour cold water on this claim. So too does Trump's top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci.


At the beginning, after acknowledging the presence of the virus in the US, Trump began referring to the coronavirus as the "Chinese virus," or the "Wuhan virug," which he has since backtracked on partially because of the alarming spike in anti-Asian or anti_Chinese attacks against Asian Americans by bigots who follow Trump's lead.

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