Trump Suddenly Cares About ‘Insurrectionists' and Protecting Cops

moe

Sophomore
May 29, 2001
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Marines better hurry for their photo op before it's over.

Trump Suddenly Cares About ‘Insurrectionists' and Protecting Cops

Insurrectionists beat cops with flag poles, crushed them with riot shields, tased them in the neck, and spat on them during the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But when President Donald Trump claimed on Monday that he has no tolerance for "insurrectionists" who clash with police officers, he wasn't talking about the 1,500 rioters he pardoned upon assuming office earlier this year; he was talking about people in Los Angeles, California, protesting his administration's anti-immigration actions.

Speaking to reporters outside of the White House on Monday, the president claimed that demonstrators opposing sweeping ICE raids in L.A. were "professional agitators, they're insurrectionists, they're bad people," and that "they should be in jail."

It's clear that while there is public unrest in Los Angeles, the city is not in the throes of an active insurrection against the federal government - a claim Trump and his allies have repeatedly made since protests began on Friday. "An insurrection against the laws and sovereignty of the United States," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller wrote on X in response to videos of protesters blocking a highway. The president added on Sunday that "a once great American City, Los Angeles, has been invaded and occupied by Illegal Aliens and Criminals […] now violent, insurrectionist mobs are swarming and attacking our Federal Agents to try and stop our deportation operations."

Unless the president invokes the Insurrection Act - an 1807 law that allows the president to deploy the military or the National Guard for the purpose of domestic law enforcement - members of the guard would be restricted largely to the protection of federal buildings.

Local and state lawmakers have also stated unequivocally that the tensions in the city increased severely after Trump federalized National Guard troops for deployment in L.A. without the request or consent of California officials. Local officials in Los Angeles say that while there have been instances of protesters clashing with police, vandalizing property, and burning vehicles, the majority of such confrontations have been isolated, taken place at night, and - according to L.A. Police Chief Jim McDonnell - are not exemplary of "the people that we see during the day who are legitimately out there exercising their First Amendment rights to be able to express their feelings about the immigration enforcement issue."

Trump, who resisted activating the National Guard on Jan. 6 to quell the violence being carried out by his supporters against law enforcement, has now warned that disrespect toward law enforcement will be met with a show of force. "Nobody's going to spit on our police officers. Nobody's going to spit on our military," the president told reporters Monday, before posting on Truth Social: "IF THE SPIT, WE WILL HIT."

The administration's top law enforcement officials are also warning against aggression toward law enforcement. "Hit a cop, you're going to jail… doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what movement speaks to you," FBI Director Kash Patel wrote. "If the local police force won't back our men and women on the thin blue line, we @FBI will."

Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino added that the agency would "be investigating and pursuing all available leads for assault on a federal officer."

"We will not forget. Even after you try to," Bongino added.

The statements ring a little hollow when one remembers that just a few months ago the president pardoned not only individuals who spit on cops, but who outright assaulted them. Miller, Patel, Bongino, and other administration figures have largely excused their actions and demonized the Biden administration for pursuing legal action against the rioters.

The Los Angeles Police Department has reportedly treated five LAPD officers for minor injuries across several days of protest, while arresting dozens. On Jan. 6, in the span of just a few hours, at least 140 members of law enforcement were injured, and over a dozen hospitalized.

What's the difference between the protests in Los Angeles and the Capitol riot on Jan. 6? Well, the former consists of people protesting Trump's agenda, and the latter was an attempted coup carried out in Trump's name. The Jan. 6 rioters, including those who assaulted cops, have been recast in MAGA history not as criminals, but as martyrs to the cause.

It's not about protecting cops. It's about protecting Trump.

 

atlkvb

All-Conference
Jul 9, 2004
79,550
1,342
113
Marines better hurry for their photo op before it's over.

Trump Suddenly Cares About ‘Insurrectionists' and Protecting Cops

Insurrectionists beat cops with flag poles, crushed them with riot shields, tased them in the neck, and spat on them during the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But when President Donald Trump claimed on Monday that he has no tolerance for "insurrectionists" who clash with police officers, he wasn't talking about the 1,500 rioters he pardoned upon assuming office earlier this year; he was talking about people in Los Angeles, California, protesting his administration's anti-immigration actions.

Speaking to reporters outside of the White House on Monday, the president claimed that demonstrators opposing sweeping ICE raids in L.A. were "professional agitators, they're insurrectionists, they're bad people," and that "they should be in jail."

It's clear that while there is public unrest in Los Angeles, the city is not in the throes of an active insurrection against the federal government - a claim Trump and his allies have repeatedly made since protests began on Friday. "An insurrection against the laws and sovereignty of the United States," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller wrote on X in response to videos of protesters blocking a highway. The president added on Sunday that "a once great American City, Los Angeles, has been invaded and occupied by Illegal Aliens and Criminals […] now violent, insurrectionist mobs are swarming and attacking our Federal Agents to try and stop our deportation operations."

Unless the president invokes the Insurrection Act - an 1807 law that allows the president to deploy the military or the National Guard for the purpose of domestic law enforcement - members of the guard would be restricted largely to the protection of federal buildings.

Local and state lawmakers have also stated unequivocally that the tensions in the city increased severely after Trump federalized National Guard troops for deployment in L.A. without the request or consent of California officials. Local officials in Los Angeles say that while there have been instances of protesters clashing with police, vandalizing property, and burning vehicles, the majority of such confrontations have been isolated, taken place at night, and - according to L.A. Police Chief Jim McDonnell - are not exemplary of "the people that we see during the day who are legitimately out there exercising their First Amendment rights to be able to express their feelings about the immigration enforcement issue."

Trump, who resisted activating the National Guard on Jan. 6 to quell the violence being carried out by his supporters against law enforcement, has now warned that disrespect toward law enforcement will be met with a show of force. "Nobody's going to spit on our police officers. Nobody's going to spit on our military," the president told reporters Monday, before posting on Truth Social: "IF THE SPIT, WE WILL HIT."

The administration's top law enforcement officials are also warning against aggression toward law enforcement. "Hit a cop, you're going to jail… doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what movement speaks to you," FBI Director Kash Patel wrote. "If the local police force won't back our men and women on the thin blue line, we @FBI will."

Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino added that the agency would "be investigating and pursuing all available leads for assault on a federal officer."

"We will not forget. Even after you try to," Bongino added.

The statements ring a little hollow when one remembers that just a few months ago the president pardoned not only individuals who spit on cops, but who outright assaulted them. Miller, Patel, Bongino, and other administration figures have largely excused their actions and demonized the Biden administration for pursuing legal action against the rioters.

The Los Angeles Police Department has reportedly treated five LAPD officers for minor injuries across several days of protest, while arresting dozens. On Jan. 6, in the span of just a few hours, at least 140 members of law enforcement were injured, and over a dozen hospitalized.

What's the difference between the protests in Los Angeles and the Capitol riot on Jan. 6? Well, the former consists of people protesting Trump's agenda, and the latter was an attempted coup carried out in Trump's name. The Jan. 6 rioters, including those who assaulted cops, have been recast in MAGA history not as criminals, but as martyrs to the cause.


It's not about protecting cops. It's about protecting Trump.

You do realize when Trump called on Capitol police to call in the National Guard on Jan 6 Pelosi stopped it? Fact.

Also before the "insurrection" on Jan 6 even turned violent, Trump told his supporters to "go home" . Twitter censored the tweet.

How many Democrats have told these protesters to go home, even less so to stop interfering with ICE carrying out legal deportation orders of violent illegal immigrants?

You are beyond deranged. You are hallucinogenic. 🤨
 

Airport

All-Conference
Dec 12, 2001
80,991
1,069
113
Marines better hurry for their photo op before it's over.

Trump Suddenly Cares About ‘Insurrectionists' and Protecting Cops

Insurrectionists beat cops with flag poles, crushed them with riot shields, tased them in the neck, and spat on them during the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But when President Donald Trump claimed on Monday that he has no tolerance for "insurrectionists" who clash with police officers, he wasn't talking about the 1,500 rioters he pardoned upon assuming office earlier this year; he was talking about people in Los Angeles, California, protesting his administration's anti-immigration actions.

Speaking to reporters outside of the White House on Monday, the president claimed that demonstrators opposing sweeping ICE raids in L.A. were "professional agitators, they're insurrectionists, they're bad people," and that "they should be in jail."

It's clear that while there is public unrest in Los Angeles, the city is not in the throes of an active insurrection against the federal government - a claim Trump and his allies have repeatedly made since protests began on Friday. "An insurrection against the laws and sovereignty of the United States," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller wrote on X in response to videos of protesters blocking a highway. The president added on Sunday that "a once great American City, Los Angeles, has been invaded and occupied by Illegal Aliens and Criminals […] now violent, insurrectionist mobs are swarming and attacking our Federal Agents to try and stop our deportation operations."

Unless the president invokes the Insurrection Act - an 1807 law that allows the president to deploy the military or the National Guard for the purpose of domestic law enforcement - members of the guard would be restricted largely to the protection of federal buildings.

Local and state lawmakers have also stated unequivocally that the tensions in the city increased severely after Trump federalized National Guard troops for deployment in L.A. without the request or consent of California officials. Local officials in Los Angeles say that while there have been instances of protesters clashing with police, vandalizing property, and burning vehicles, the majority of such confrontations have been isolated, taken place at night, and - according to L.A. Police Chief Jim McDonnell - are not exemplary of "the people that we see during the day who are legitimately out there exercising their First Amendment rights to be able to express their feelings about the immigration enforcement issue."

Trump, who resisted activating the National Guard on Jan. 6 to quell the violence being carried out by his supporters against law enforcement, has now warned that disrespect toward law enforcement will be met with a show of force. "Nobody's going to spit on our police officers. Nobody's going to spit on our military," the president told reporters Monday, before posting on Truth Social: "IF THE SPIT, WE WILL HIT."

The administration's top law enforcement officials are also warning against aggression toward law enforcement. "Hit a cop, you're going to jail… doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what movement speaks to you," FBI Director Kash Patel wrote. "If the local police force won't back our men and women on the thin blue line, we @FBI will."

Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino added that the agency would "be investigating and pursuing all available leads for assault on a federal officer."

"We will not forget. Even after you try to," Bongino added.

The statements ring a little hollow when one remembers that just a few months ago the president pardoned not only individuals who spit on cops, but who outright assaulted them. Miller, Patel, Bongino, and other administration figures have largely excused their actions and demonized the Biden administration for pursuing legal action against the rioters.

The Los Angeles Police Department has reportedly treated five LAPD officers for minor injuries across several days of protest, while arresting dozens. On Jan. 6, in the span of just a few hours, at least 140 members of law enforcement were injured, and over a dozen hospitalized.

What's the difference between the protests in Los Angeles and the Capitol riot on Jan. 6? Well, the former consists of people protesting Trump's agenda, and the latter was an attempted coup carried out in Trump's name. The Jan. 6 rioters, including those who assaulted cops, have been recast in MAGA history not as criminals, but as martyrs to the cause.


It's not about protecting cops. It's about protecting Trump.

Only one person was hurt, Babbitt. Shot by a DEI hire
 

SoCo

Sophomore
May 29, 2001
35,600
134
63
She learned her lesson.
Yep. She knew she shouldn't be there and what she was doing was wrong. I have no sympathy for her. Just like George Floyd, Mike Brown, Rashard Brooks, and all the idiot BLM morons. They are learned their lessons the hard way. Fight a cop, you die. Fine with me.

Hope to see some illegals in the LA riots get Ashley Babbitt'd too!
 

WVUALLEN

Senior
Aug 4, 2009
67,738
606
113
Marines better hurry for their photo op before it's over.

Trump Suddenly Cares About ‘Insurrectionists' and Protecting Cops

Insurrectionists beat cops with flag poles, crushed them with riot shields, tased them in the neck, and spat on them during the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But when President Donald Trump claimed on Monday that he has no tolerance for "insurrectionists" who clash with police officers, he wasn't talking about the 1,500 rioters he pardoned upon assuming office earlier this year; he was talking about people in Los Angeles, California, protesting his administration's anti-immigration actions.

Speaking to reporters outside of the White House on Monday, the president claimed that demonstrators opposing sweeping ICE raids in L.A. were "professional agitators, they're insurrectionists, they're bad people," and that "they should be in jail."

It's clear that while there is public unrest in Los Angeles, the city is not in the throes of an active insurrection against the federal government - a claim Trump and his allies have repeatedly made since protests began on Friday. "An insurrection against the laws and sovereignty of the United States," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller wrote on X in response to videos of protesters blocking a highway. The president added on Sunday that "a once great American City, Los Angeles, has been invaded and occupied by Illegal Aliens and Criminals […] now violent, insurrectionist mobs are swarming and attacking our Federal Agents to try and stop our deportation operations."

Unless the president invokes the Insurrection Act - an 1807 law that allows the president to deploy the military or the National Guard for the purpose of domestic law enforcement - members of the guard would be restricted largely to the protection of federal buildings.

Local and state lawmakers have also stated unequivocally that the tensions in the city increased severely after Trump federalized National Guard troops for deployment in L.A. without the request or consent of California officials. Local officials in Los Angeles say that while there have been instances of protesters clashing with police, vandalizing property, and burning vehicles, the majority of such confrontations have been isolated, taken place at night, and - according to L.A. Police Chief Jim McDonnell - are not exemplary of "the people that we see during the day who are legitimately out there exercising their First Amendment rights to be able to express their feelings about the immigration enforcement issue."

Trump, who resisted activating the National Guard on Jan. 6 to quell the violence being carried out by his supporters against law enforcement, has now warned that disrespect toward law enforcement will be met with a show of force. "Nobody's going to spit on our police officers. Nobody's going to spit on our military," the president told reporters Monday, before posting on Truth Social: "IF THE SPIT, WE WILL HIT."

The administration's top law enforcement officials are also warning against aggression toward law enforcement. "Hit a cop, you're going to jail… doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what movement speaks to you," FBI Director Kash Patel wrote. "If the local police force won't back our men and women on the thin blue line, we @FBI will."

Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino added that the agency would "be investigating and pursuing all available leads for assault on a federal officer."

"We will not forget. Even after you try to," Bongino added.

The statements ring a little hollow when one remembers that just a few months ago the president pardoned not only individuals who spit on cops, but who outright assaulted them. Miller, Patel, Bongino, and other administration figures have largely excused their actions and demonized the Biden administration for pursuing legal action against the rioters.

The Los Angeles Police Department has reportedly treated five LAPD officers for minor injuries across several days of protest, while arresting dozens. On Jan. 6, in the span of just a few hours, at least 140 members of law enforcement were injured, and over a dozen hospitalized.

What's the difference between the protests in Los Angeles and the Capitol riot on Jan. 6? Well, the former consists of people protesting Trump's agenda, and the latter was an attempted coup carried out in Trump's name. The Jan. 6 rioters, including those who assaulted cops, have been recast in MAGA history not as criminals, but as martyrs to the cause.


It's not about protecting cops. It's about protecting Trump.

@moe on full retard mode.

 

roadtrasheer

Junior
Sep 9, 2016
16,581
223
63
Yep. She knew she shouldn't be there and what she was doing was wrong. I have no sympathy for her. Just like George Floyd, Mike Brown, Rashard Brooks, and all the idiot BLM morons. They are learned their lessons the hard way. Fight a cop, you die. Fine with me.

Hope to see some illegals in the LA riots get Ashley Babbitt'd too!
What moe cant see is that Republicans didn't start riots or burn down our cities because we disagreed with the unlawful use of force. The cops who killed Floyd who had a criminal past for years went to jail .... babbitts killer received a metal. She had know criminal record . Yes she was doing wrong and shouldn't have been there .
 

SoCo

Sophomore
May 29, 2001
35,600
134
63
What moe cant see is that Republicans didn't start riots or burn down our cities because we disagreed with the unlawful use of force. The cops who killed Floyd who had a criminal past for years went to jail .... babbitts killer received a metal. She had know criminal record . Yes she was doing wrong and shouldn't have been there .
The way I see it, I stop caring about what happens to these idiots the moment they start fighting law enforcement.

Just like the Palestinians. I stopped caring about the fate of any Palestinians the moment hostages were taken.
 

WVUALLEN

Senior
Aug 4, 2009
67,738
606
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Seems to me they have made it easier to wrap their asses up and send them back.
 

roadtrasheer

Junior
Sep 9, 2016
16,581
223
63
The way I see it, I stop caring about what happens to these idiots the moment they start fighting law enforcement.

Just like the Palestinians. I stopped caring about the fate of any Palestinians the moment hostages were taken.
I see your point.
Need to set a standard of what a peaceful protest is and is not . Common sense tells me whats going on is not peaceful.
 

atlkvb

All-Conference
Jul 9, 2004
79,550
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So....let me get this straight. "Mexican" nationalists decide to take up residence in this country (illegally) because their own country sucks. They come here to live among Americans, eat among Americans, and work among Americans.

then....

They go out and protest because many of those same Americans demand they be deported if they came here illegally and now they're destroying property and attacking Law enforcement hired to deport them or keep them from destroying public & private property.

I honesty just don't get it.

Hey "Mexican" nationals...if ya'll don't like it here...guess what?
 
Last edited:

Airport

All-Conference
Dec 12, 2001
80,991
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113
So....let me get this straight. "Mexican" nationalists decide to take up residence in this country (illegally) because their own country sucks. They come here to live among Americans, eat among Americans, and work among Americans.

then....

They go out and protest because many of those same Americans demand they be deported if they came here illegally and now they're destroying property and attacking Law enforcement hired to deport them or keep them from destroying public & private property.

I honesty just don't get it.

Hey "Mexican" nationals...if ya'll don't like it here...guess what?
That Mexican president says she can’t stand for a tax on remittances to her country from the US. Put a 25% tax on them, *****
 

atlkvb

All-Conference
Jul 9, 2004
79,550
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113
That Mexican president says she can’t stand for a tax on remittances to her country from the US. Put a 25% tax on them, *****
I'll go 'ya one better. Cut off all "remittances" to Mexico and use the money to deport anyone here illegally!

Who the Hell is keeping all the Mexican "Nationals" here against their will if they think it's so jacked up here? Can't they go wave their Mexican flags in Mexico City?
 

DvlDog4WVU

All-Conference
Feb 2, 2008
46,623
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Go moe go ...keep on gagging it all down
Recall early in 2021 when I cautioned people to keep their powder dry. They were baiting the right into stupid action because they controlled the response and could crack down on their terms. Now, we’re in control, make their crazies act out and we can respond appropriately.
 

SoCo

Sophomore
May 29, 2001
35,600
134
63
Recall early in 2021 when I cautioned people to keep their powder dry. They were baiting the right into stupid action because they controlled the response and could crack down on their terms. Now, we’re in control, make their crazies act out and we can respond appropriately.
The response won’t yield any different result.
 

Gunny46

Senior
Jul 2, 2018
50,128
486
83
The response won’t yield any different result.

They are going to get their *** kicked. The more they ramp it up the more Military that will be sent to put a stop it. They better learn to protest peacefully.
 

roadtrasheer

Junior
Sep 9, 2016
16,581
223
63
The response won’t yield any different result.
I hope you are wrong. If the response is as it seems to be with force of hand then with federal laws it might stop some of it . If they can find who is backing it then its a game changer.
 

BigLickMountee

Redshirt
Nov 10, 2003
26,693
6
0
Marines better hurry for their photo op before it's over.

Trump Suddenly Cares About ‘Insurrectionists' and Protecting Cops

Insurrectionists beat cops with flag poles, crushed them with riot shields, tased them in the neck, and spat on them during the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But when President Donald Trump claimed on Monday that he has no tolerance for "insurrectionists" who clash with police officers, he wasn't talking about the 1,500 rioters he pardoned upon assuming office earlier this year; he was talking about people in Los Angeles, California, protesting his administration's anti-immigration actions.

Speaking to reporters outside of the White House on Monday, the president claimed that demonstrators opposing sweeping ICE raids in L.A. were "professional agitators, they're insurrectionists, they're bad people," and that "they should be in jail."

It's clear that while there is public unrest in Los Angeles, the city is not in the throes of an active insurrection against the federal government - a claim Trump and his allies have repeatedly made since protests began on Friday. "An insurrection against the laws and sovereignty of the United States," White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller wrote on X in response to videos of protesters blocking a highway. The president added on Sunday that "a once great American City, Los Angeles, has been invaded and occupied by Illegal Aliens and Criminals […] now violent, insurrectionist mobs are swarming and attacking our Federal Agents to try and stop our deportation operations."

Unless the president invokes the Insurrection Act - an 1807 law that allows the president to deploy the military or the National Guard for the purpose of domestic law enforcement - members of the guard would be restricted largely to the protection of federal buildings.

Local and state lawmakers have also stated unequivocally that the tensions in the city increased severely after Trump federalized National Guard troops for deployment in L.A. without the request or consent of California officials. Local officials in Los Angeles say that while there have been instances of protesters clashing with police, vandalizing property, and burning vehicles, the majority of such confrontations have been isolated, taken place at night, and - according to L.A. Police Chief Jim McDonnell - are not exemplary of "the people that we see during the day who are legitimately out there exercising their First Amendment rights to be able to express their feelings about the immigration enforcement issue."

Trump, who resisted activating the National Guard on Jan. 6 to quell the violence being carried out by his supporters against law enforcement, has now warned that disrespect toward law enforcement will be met with a show of force. "Nobody's going to spit on our police officers. Nobody's going to spit on our military," the president told reporters Monday, before posting on Truth Social: "IF THE SPIT, WE WILL HIT."

The administration's top law enforcement officials are also warning against aggression toward law enforcement. "Hit a cop, you're going to jail… doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what movement speaks to you," FBI Director Kash Patel wrote. "If the local police force won't back our men and women on the thin blue line, we @FBI will."

Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino added that the agency would "be investigating and pursuing all available leads for assault on a federal officer."

"We will not forget. Even after you try to," Bongino added.

The statements ring a little hollow when one remembers that just a few months ago the president pardoned not only individuals who spit on cops, but who outright assaulted them. Miller, Patel, Bongino, and other administration figures have largely excused their actions and demonized the Biden administration for pursuing legal action against the rioters.

The Los Angeles Police Department has reportedly treated five LAPD officers for minor injuries across several days of protest, while arresting dozens. On Jan. 6, in the span of just a few hours, at least 140 members of law enforcement were injured, and over a dozen hospitalized.

What's the difference between the protests in Los Angeles and the Capitol riot on Jan. 6? Well, the former consists of people protesting Trump's agenda, and the latter was an attempted coup carried out in Trump's name. The Jan. 6 rioters, including those who assaulted cops, have been recast in MAGA history not as criminals, but as martyrs to the cause.


It's not about protecting cops. It's about protecting Trump.

He cares about you!
 

DvlDog4WVU

All-Conference
Feb 2, 2008
46,623
1,536
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The response won’t yield any different result.
Honestly, I’m worried some people are going to get killed. Their crazies don’t know how to moderate and Trump doesn’t need to worry about reelection.
 

roadtrasheer

Junior
Sep 9, 2016
16,581
223
63
Honestly, I’m worried some people are going to get killed. Their crazies don’t know how to moderate and Trump doesn’t need to worry about reelection.
If he truly loves this country and I believe he does he will have to worry about his predecessor.
 

atlkvb

All-Conference
Jul 9, 2004
79,550
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If he truly loves this country and I believe he does he will have to worry about his predecessor.
I think you probably mean his successor. Biden was Trump's predecessor and I 100% gurantee he doesn't give a flip about that corpse who's half dead anyway.