Former President Donald Trump Assassination was crazy and he said he believes in heaven and opened up about what he prays for on. The Ingraham Angle. The 2024 Republican nominee spoke to The News host Laura Ingraham about how the United States has “lost” so much because the country does not practice religion to the extent it used to.
Trump Assassination Attempt
Trump said after the trump assassination attempt at his Butler, Pa., rally — which resulted in his ear being wounded — that he had “God on his side” while speaking at the Republican National Convention.
“I think one of the reasons that our country has lost, sort of, everything — it’s lost so much — is we don’t have religion to the same extent,” Trump told Ingraham. “I mean, you look at those charts. They’re so sad. I mean, it’s just going bad, and the Democrats were violent and ruthless to religion during COVID. What they did during COVID — people weren’t even allowed to meet outside, and they were 10 feet apart in some big field.”
“They’d arrest everybody. They were fascists. They were horrible,” he continued. “That was a very bad time for organized religion — but religion, you know, it gives you some hope. Gee, if I’m good, I’m going to heaven.”
Donald Trump said he prays for his family, for the United States and for the world.
“I pray for our country,” he said. “I pray for the same thing you pray for — our family and our country… We have a family, we have a country, and I guess we have a world. I pray for the world too. I stopped what could have been world wars. He added that a world war could be “very close.”
“When you look at what’s going on with Russia-Ukraine, we’re spending billions of dollars. Now they want offensive weapons so we can go in and hit Moscow. Let me tell you, we’re very close to a world war. The Middle East is ready to blow up. The Russia-Ukraine thing is much more serious than you even know.” Ingraham asked Trump whether he believes in heaven. “I do. If I’m good, I’m going to heaven,” he said. “If I’m bad, I’m going to someplace else.”
Fox News host Jesse Watters reacts to the U.S. Secret Service’s first press conference since the trump assassination attempt on former President Trump, suggesting that the entire Pittsburgh field office should be put on administrative leave.
JESSE WATTERS: On Trump Assassination Attempt
The Secret Service held its first press conference since Donald Trump was nearly executed on live TV. After stonewalling the media and congressional investigators for three weeks, Director Ronald Rowe made a shocking admission… The former President of the United States and the nominee as the Republican, the man who the Democrats and the media have been labeling as a clear and present danger to democracy, Hitler and a dictator, wasn’t given Secret Service counter-sniper teams at his campaign rallies for the last two years.
That means when they put Trump on trial in Manhattan every day when he returned from court to Trump Tower, there were no Secret Service counter-snipers. The whole world knew Trump’s schedule and location for six weeks. In a city with thousands of windows and high rises, no Secret Service counter-snipers. That means when Trump was in the Bronx, no Secret Service counter-snipers. Anyone could have climbed onto a tree, could have gone onto a rooftop with a gun.
What about when he went to the bodega in Harlem after court? He’s enveloped by buildings, hundreds of windows, any one of which a rifle could have fired from. No Secret Service counter-snipers. So why all of a sudden, after two years of no Secret Service counter-snipers, have they showed up in Butler? And that was the rally where there was an attempt on his life.
After the trump assassination attempt, the intelligence community leaked an exclusive to their friends at CNN, saying the reason they added counter-snipers to Butler was because of an Iranian threat to Trump’s life. But that doesn’t make any sense, because there’s been an Iranian fatwa out for Trump since he whacked Soleimani. That was over four years ago.
And when the feds were pressed about this, they admitted there wasn’t any new intelligence from Iran. What a coincidence. The Secret Service surrounding Trump has been an illusion. We believe these agents were in constant communication with each other using the latest technology that we didn’t even know about. Turns out the Secret Service counter-sniper team and Butler never had radios that day.
Secret Service Takes ‘Full Responsibility’ in Trump Assassination Attempt
The chief of the Secret Service said at a press briefing Friday that agents on the ground in Butler, Penn. did not know Thomas Crooks had a weapon until he fired his first shot at former President Donald Trump from the roof of a nearby building on July 13.
Acting Director Ronald Rowe Jr. said the agency took “full responsibility” for the law enforcement failings that day, when one of the bullets fired by Crooks grazed Trump’s ear and nearly took his life. Corey Comperatore, a former volunteer fire chief from Pennsylvania, was killed in the gunfire. Also injured in the shooting were 57-year-old David Dutch, of New Kensington, Pennsylvania, and 74-year-old James Copenhaver, of Moon Township, Pennsylvania.
“This was a Secret Service failure,” Rowe said. “There should have been better security to prevent anyone from getting up on that roof.” “We should have had better coverage on that roofline.”The Butler rally was the first time Secret Service counter-snipers were deployed to support Trump’s detail, Rowe revealed. It was a member of that team that fired the single shot that killed Crooks and likely stopped more bloodshed.
Roovet New Media On Trump Assassination Attempt
“It is my understanding that personnel were not aware that the assailant had a firearm until they heard gunshots,” Rowe said.There will now be counter-sniper coverage for trump assassination, his running mate JD Vance, President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate once they are announced. Crooks was identified as suspicious because he was initially loitering the perimeter of the rally in Butler.
Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner Col. Christopher Paris previously told lawmakers that Crooks pointed his rifle at an officer “seconds” before the first shot was fired. That incident evidently did not make it to the Secret Service detail on site in time. Rowe said there could have been radio communication about it that the Service was not aware of.
Jeff James, a retired Secret Service special agent in charge, told News after the press conference that the agent who relayed the concerns on the radio could have also been “stepped on” with other messages, and that spotty cell service in Butler may have also played a role. “These outdoor events are a monster,” James said. Rowe said his team is also reanalyzing where they post agents.
Reanalyzing Where They Post Agents: After The Trump Assassination Attempt
“We want to deter people from even thinking of doing something like this again,” he said. “Whether it’s an indoor site or an outdoor site, it’s on the Secret Service to ensure that we create a safe environment.” Rowe said the agency will start deploying drones to rallies and other events going forward. He previously told Congress that cell issues delayed the Secret Service from launching a drone it planned to use to help secure the site in Butler.
“One of the changes that I implemented when I became the acting director is we are now going to leverage the use of unmanned aerial systems and sights now,” Rowe said. “We are putting those assets out. We should have had better line of sight on some of those high ground concerns. We thought we might have had it covered with the human eye. Clearly we are going to change our approach now and we are going to leverage technology and put those unmanned aerial systems up.”
The information provided at the press release today was what Rowe knows with “certainty” as the Secret Service’s investigation continues. Rowe, who has been part of the Secret Service for almost 25 years, took on the position as acting director after Kimberly Cheatle resigned in the wake of the failed trump assassination. Unlike Cheatle, Rowe traveled to the site in Butler.
“It definitely raised a lot of questions in my mind,” Rowe said of his visit. “We’re at such a heightened environment that we’re making sure that we’re putting everything that we can so that we don’t have a mission failure…We all understand the gravity of this situation.”Rowe said no agents had been fired or disciplined for the events of July 13, but that the investigation into the incident was ongoing.