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Trump lashes out at political opponents and judges in Memorial Day post

Trump lashes out at political opponents and judges in Memorial Day post

CNN7 days ago

In a Memorial Day post to his Truth Social platform Monday, President Donald Trump marked the solemn occasion honoring America's war dead by blasting his political opponents and perceived enemies as 'scum,' members of the federal judiciary as 'USA hating' as well as 'monsters,' and his predecessor, former President Joe Biden, as 'incompetent.'
The all-caps message, posted just before 7:00 a.m. ET, sees the president wishing a 'Happy Memorial Day to all, including the scum that spent the last four years trying to destroy our country through warped radical left minds,' which he writes were responsible for illegal immigration into the country under Biden.
Trump went on to suggest that 21 million people entered the US illegally under the previous administration — a figure not borne out by US Customs and Border Protection data, as previously reported by CNN.
He blamed 'an incompetent president' for the influx of migrants and 'judges who 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,' for stymying his deportation agenda, claiming criminal migrants are 'protected by these USA hating judges who suffer from an ideology that is sick, and very dangerous for our country.'
In the United States, Memorial Day honors those who died while serving in the armed forces — due to the holiday's grave significance, it's largely considered taboo to wish someone a 'Happy Memorial Day.'
Later Monday, the president is scheduled to observe the holiday in a more traditional setting, traveling to Arlington National Cemetery in northern Virginia. There, he'll lay a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier before delivering remarks from the cemetery's amphitheater.
During his first term, Trump largely kept to prepared speeches when delivering his Memorial Day remarks — he participated in the ceremony at Arlington for the first three years of his presidency before it moved to Fort McHenry during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.
Trump's Memorial Day message came two days after a politically inflected commencement address at the US Military Academy at West Point, where the president combined traditional advice to graduates with more overtly partisan themes.
In the speech, Trump touted his election victory last year and veered into litigating some of his grievances about investigations into him. He wore a red 'Make America Great Again' hat during the speech.
He also told the graduating cadets they would be the first to serve in the 'golden age' of the military, touting at length his efforts to rid the military of diversity initiatives and criticizing his predecessors for entering what he deemed to be wars of choice.
'The job of the US armed forces is not to host drag shows, to transform foreign cultures (and) spread democracy to everybody around the world at the point of a gun,' he said. 'The military's job is to dominate any foe and annihilate any threat to America, anywhere, anytime and any place.'
In his speech, Trump also offered somewhat off-key advice about not marrying 'trophy wives,' citing as an example a friend who moved to Monte Carlo with a younger bride, only to later suffer financially when he lost his 'momentum.' Trump offered the story as a point of guidance to graduates.
Trump has previously drawn criticism for inserting political messages into traditionally apolitical occasions and settings.
During his first term, he took to then-social media platform Twitter in 2018 to wish Americans a 'Happy Memorial Day!' writing, 'Those who died for our great country would be very happy and proud at how well our country is doing today,' highlighting his own policy wins instead of the sacrifice made by America's armed services.
And in August 2024, the US Army issued a rare rebuke after Trump's campaign recorded a video while visiting the Arlington National Cemetery gravesites of some of the service members killed during the US's chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan. In a statement, the Army wrote that Trump and his staff 'were made aware of federal laws, Army regulations, and DoD policies, which clearly prohibit political activities on cemetery grounds.'
At the time, the Trump campaign pointed to a statement from the Gold Star families he accompanied, saying they gave his videographer and photographer permission to be there, although some imagery from the visit showed the graves of other US service members who families did not give permission.
The president originally posted a different version of Monday's Memorial Day post but appears to have deleted the original version (which had some minor grammatical errors) and reposted it again.

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