
Donald Trump slams ‘USA-halting judges' in fiery Memorial Day post — says they are letting criminals stay
On Memorial Day, US President Donald Trump posted a provocative message on Truth Social, blending holiday greetings with a scathing attack on his political opponents, immigration policy, and members of the judiciary.
'HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY TO ALL, INCLUDING THE SCUM that spent the last four years trying to destroy our country,' Trump began, directing his ire at what he described as 'warped radical left minds.'
Trump accused President Joe Biden's administration of facilitating mass illegal immigration and endangering national security by failing to secure the border.
'They allowed 21,000,000 million people to illegally enter our country, many of them being criminals and the mentally insane,' Trump claimed, blaming an 'open border that only an incompetent president would approve.'
He continued: 'Judges...are on a mission to keep murderers, drug dealers, rapists, gang members, and released prisoners from all over the world in our country so they can rob, murder, and rape again.'
The President's post harshly criticised members of the judiciary, accusing them of enabling violence through ideological bias.
'All protected by these USA-hating judges who suffer from an ideology that is sick, and very dangerous for our country,' he wrote.
Trump expressed hope that the US Supreme Court and other 'good and compassionate judges' would intervene, saying they 'will save us from the decisions of the monsters who want our country to go to hell.'
Despite the blistering rhetoric, Trump ended on a note of optimism, claiming progress over the past four months.
'Fear not, we have made great progress... and America will soon be safe and great again!' he declared.
Trump closed his message with a repeat of his holiday greeting: 'Again, HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY, and GOD BLESS AMERICA!'
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Economic Times
26 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Why RBI will hit a hattrick of 25 bps rate cut tomorrow
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The Hindu
26 minutes ago
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Time of India
27 minutes ago
- Time of India
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Officials have raised red flags over entities funded by George Soros Open Society Foundation , Pierre Omidyar's Omidyar Network, and the Ford Foundation—all of which are now under tight these foundations continue to operate via intermediary organisations, channelling funds toward media groups and advocacy platforms critical of the Indian government.A representative of NGO Monitor, speaking anonymously, said, 'Soros has a very clear political philosophy—open society. He funds education and universities because he believes change must rise from the grassroots.'According to them, Soros-backed initiatives have influenced politics in Ukraine, Hungary, Croatia, and attempted similar tactics during the Arab Spring. 'When you examine the work of Soros-funded organisations, their commitment to democracy rings hollow,' the source foundations offer fellowships to Indian students, shaping a future network of academics, journalists, and policymakers who echo liberal narratives critical of nationalist Soros has not hidden his views. At the Munich Security Conference in 2023, he declared, 'Adani is accused of stock manipulation and his stock collapsed like a house of cards. Modi is silent on the subject, but he will have to answer questions from foreign investors and in parliament. This will significantly weaken Modi's stranglehold on India's federal government and open the door to push for much-needed institutional reforms. I may be naive, but I expect a democratic revival in India.'External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar responded sharply, calling Soros 'an old, rich, opinionated, and dangerous billionaire.' Smriti Irani, then Minister for Women and Child Development, labelled the speech 'an attack on India.'Chellaney's critique, rooted in these long-running debates, suggests that the Trump administration's actions are shaped more by covert interests than by principled policy. The deliberate omission of Pakistan from the ban list, despite its terror links, highlights what he sees as a return to American strategic hypocrisy—one that India has been increasingly vocal the US doubles down on 'vetting' and migration control, critics warn that these decisions often mask more calculated moves. Ones that have little to do with security—and everything to do with influence.