
Trump calls LA a ‘trash heap' of ‘chaos and disorder' in Fort Bragg troop rally after sending Marines to quell protests
Speaking before a crowd of uniformed soldiers at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, Trump defended his decision to send National Guard soldiers and active duty Marines to quell protests against his anti-immigrant deportation operations in Los Angeles as necessary to prevent attacks on federal law enforcement from a 'violent mob.'
He claimed that had he not ordered the soldiers into federal service over the objections of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Los Angeles would be on fire, and compared the guardsmen's mission to past overseas battles in which the Army had fought over its 250 years.
'Generations of army heroes did not shed their blood on distant shores only to watch our country be destroyed by invasion and third-world lawlessness here at home, like is happening in California. As Commander in Chief, I will not let that happen. It's never going to happen,' Trump said, overstating the current state of affairs in LA by several degrees.
Trump told the soldiers that the protests and unrest in Los Angeles represented a 'full-blown assault on peace, on public order and on national sovereignty carried out by rioters bearing foreign flags, with the aim of continuing a foreign invasion of our country,' before segueing into a partisan attack on former President Joe Biden.
He accused 'stupid people or radical left people or sick people' in the previous administration of having allowed 'millions of people' to 'come into our country, totally unchecked and unvetted' and claimed those people were responsible for attacks on police in Los Angeles over the last few days.
'They're hurling bricks and cinder blocks at law enforcement ... they're breaking up the sidewalks and the curbs, breaking it up with big, strong hammers. These guys are professionals. These are not amateurs,' he claimed.
'These are animals, but they proudly carry the flags of other countries, but they don't carry the American flag. They only burn it.'
The president cast his effort to use military force to tamp down protests against his immigration policies as a battle against a foreign foe rather than repression of the free speech rights guaranteed to all by the U.S. Constitution, telling the soldiers who'd been ordered to attend his speech that his administration would 'not allow an American city to be invaded and conquered by a foreign enemy.'
'That's what they are. Lot of those people were let in here by the Biden administration. They just poured right in. They came from prisons. They came from jails from all over the world. They came from mental institutions. They were the leaders of gangs. They were drug lords, allowed to come into our country,' he said.
Trump's partisan commentary to the troops touched on many of the anti-immigrant tropes that have long been a staple of his political stump speech during his three campaigns for the presidency, including claims that other countries have deliberately sent criminals and mental patients to the United States to claim asylum with the consent of the Biden administration and the aid of Democrats in state and local governments.
He also praised the thousands of National Guard soldiers and Marines he has dispatched over the past two days for 'standing guard to protect federal property and personnel and uphold the supremacy of federal law' while accusing Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass of fomenting the violence against Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials.
'In Los Angeles, the governor of California, the mayor — they're incompetent and they paid troublemakers, agitators and insurrectionists, they're engaged in this willful attempt to nullify federal law and aid the occupation of the city by criminal invaders,' he said.
Continuing, the president praised his own election as a turning point when the country rejected Democratic rule and slammed Los Angeles as having 'gone from being one of the cleanest, safest and most beautiful cities on earth to being a trash heap with entire neighborhoods under the control of transnational gangs and criminal networks.'
Echoing the openly racist rhetoric of European far-right parties, Trump blamed 'uncontrolled migration' for the city's supposed condition of 'chaos, dysfunction and disorder' and suggested that European leaders should adopt his anti-immigrant stance.
'They have it in Europe too. It's happening in many of the countries of Europe. They don't like it when I say it, but I'll say it loudly and clearly. They better do something before it's too late,' he said.
The president's rabidly partisan denunciation of duly elected officials in the nation's most populous state came just hours after he made a chilling threat against free speech rights of Americans in the nation's capital ahead of the military parade he has ordered up to celebrate his own birthday on Saturday.
Speaking in the Oval Office following an impromptu event to discuss forest management ahead of the upcoming summer wildfire season, Trump was riffing on what he described as violent excesses by protesters who've been demonstrating against Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in Los Angeles when he was asked about the possibility of protests against the June 14 parade.
The president said it would be an 'amazing day' and cited the 'tanks ... planes ... all sorts of things' that will be on display during the spectacle, which is ostensibly meant to mark the Army's 250th.
He compared the parade, which breaks from the American tradition that largely eschews militaristic or jingoistic displays of the sort routinely seen in authoritarian countries, to European celebrations of the end of the Second World War.
'We won the war, and we're the only country that didn't celebrate it, and we're going to be celebrating big on Saturday. We're going to have a lot of and if there's any protest that wants to come out, they will be met with very big force,' Trump said.
He reiterated the explicit threat a moment later, telling 'those people who want to protest' that they would be 'met with very big force' once more.
He also opined further that any protest against the parade on Saturday would consist only of 'people who hate our country.'
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So I wanted to ensure that when people are receiving support, they're able to utilize it in a way that feels safest for them.' According to the Black Trans Travel Fund, the team utilized more than $385,000 over five years to allow hundreds of people to pay for Uber rides, train tickets or gas for their friends' cars through their bi-weekly ride sponsorship program. The flagship ride program was paused in 2024 due to a loss of funding. But with additional resources, Lowe and his team hope to restart it in the future. Altogether, Lowe said that the organization has donated more than $730,000 to help people around the world with travel, housing and medical costs since its inception. The group recently launched a $500,000 fundraising campaign to increase their mutual aid efforts and to make traveling more accessible for even more Black trans women. 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Over the past year, the group has provided 11 organizations with nearly $16,000. Some of the funding has gone toward rent, food, transportation and hygiene supplies for Black trans people affected by HIV and Aids at Devin's House of Hope, a shelter in Uganda named after Lowe. In Uganda, where an anti-LGBTQ+ law passed two years ago, trans people are arrested, detained and extorted for money by authorities. The harsh political climate has led to harassment and discrimination on the streets, Lowe said, and it's difficult for trans people to rent housing. 'Even though trans people [in the US] are navigating homelessness and joblessness as well, there are more protections here legally in terms of us at least being able to apply to housing if you have the money,' Lowe said, 'Whereas a lot of folks internationally are getting kicked out for 'homosexual behavior', like neighbors will tell people's landlords.' The Black Trans Travel Fund helped Ruthra Lubega, a Black trans man from Kampala, Uganda, escape from the nation and seek asylum in New York last year. Lubega met Lowe at a meeting of LGBTQ+ leaders in Nairobi, Kenya, in 2022. At the time, Lubega was homeless, and wanted to create a shelter for trans people living with HIV/Aids. Later that year, the Black Trans Travel Fund raised funds for rent and bedding supplies to launch Devin's House of Hope, where more than 180 trans people from throughout Africa have sought safety. The travel fund has also helped the shelter purchase a car and a motorbike for Lubega to distribute HIV medication and condoms throughout the community. 'During my work and advocacy I used to face many challenges,' Lubega told the Guardian. 'I was in prison many times because of my gender identity. I was beaten many times.' Then last summer, Lubega said that his photo appeared in a Ugandan newspaper's list of 'top human rights defenders that recruit young women to homosexuality'. Lubega's life was at risk due to the anti-LGBTQ+ law, so the Black Trans Travel Fund raised money for him to fly to New York. Now, Lubega lives in a New York shelter and is trying to attain his green card as he continues to run Devin's House of Hope from afar. Lubega said that ever since he learned of Black Trans Travel Fund, 'they have done a great job of changing the lives of Black trans women and men in Uganda.' In the face of global trans misogynoir, the Black Trans Travel Fund team also sponsors events for their community to celebrate their lives and experience joy. The group is now raising money to provide trans women with funding for rides following a Black trans women cookout at New York City's Socrates Sculpture Park on 24 August. And at in the fall, they plan to host a fundraising event to raise money for a ball in Kingston, Jamaica, in November.