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Global Statistics

All countries
695,781,740
Confirmed
Updated on September 26, 2023 9:06 pm
All countries
627,110,498
Recovered
Updated on September 26, 2023 9:06 pm
All countries
6,919,573
Deaths
Updated on September 26, 2023 9:06 pm

Global Statistics

All countries
695,781,740
Confirmed
Updated on September 26, 2023 9:06 pm
All countries
627,110,498
Recovered
Updated on September 26, 2023 9:06 pm
All countries
6,919,573
Deaths
Updated on September 26, 2023 9:06 pm
Home Blog Page 1340

911 call before Rayshard Brooks’ fatal shooting by police is released

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911 call before Rayshard Brooks’ fatal shooting by police is released

A Wendy’s employee who called 911 before the fatal police shooting of Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta told the dispatcher that a customer who appeared to be intoxicated was asleep in his car in the restaurant’s drive-thru, according to a record of the call.

“I tried to wake him up, but he’s parked dead in the middle of the drive-thru, so I don’t know what’s wrong with him,” the caller says. “He woke up, looked at me and I was like, ‘You got to move out of the drive-thru.’ Because people can’t, they’re going around him.”

The employee tells the dispatcher in a call released Monday that they asked the man to pull to the side and go to sleep. When the 911 operator asks if the man had any weapons visible, the caller responds, “No, no. I think he’s intoxicated.”

Rayshard Brooks.Stewart Trial Attorneys / via AFP – Getty Images

Brooks, a Black man, was killed Friday night in the parking lot of the Wendy’s after two officers with the Atlanta Police Department responded to the 911 call. His death has been ruled a homicide, and the officer who shot Brooks, Garrett Rolfe, has been fired.

The second officer, Devin Brosnan, was placed on administrative leave. And police Chief Erika Shields resigned from her post less than 24 hours after the shooting.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation, which is investigating the shooting, said Saturday that Brooks failed a field sobriety test and struggled with the officers as they tried to arrest him.

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“During the course of that confrontation, Mr. Brooks was able to secure from one of the Atlanta officers, his Taser,” said GBI Director Vic Reynolds at a news conference on Saturday.

The incident was captured on video and shows Brooks, 27, appearing to run from the officers with a stun gun in his hand, Reynolds said. After running a short distance, Brooks appeared to turn around and point the stun gun at the officer, according to the director. At that point, the officer fatally shot Brooks.

The shooting sparked protests in the city and was condemned by Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms.

“This interaction with these police officers was such, almost a pleasant interaction. It did not have to end this way, and that’s what’s so frustrating,” Bottoms said Tuesday on NBC’s “TODAY.”

“It leaves us asking so many questions because we do so many things in Atlanta, we thought, to get it right, and this went so terribly wrong.”

In police body- and dash-camera video, Officers Rolfe and Brosnan are seen questioning Brooks for more than 25 minutes.

Brooks tells the officers that he visited his mother’s gravesite earlier in the day and went out drinking with a friend who dropped him off at Wendy’s because he was hungry. Brooks said he planned to reunite with his friend at a hotel.

During the questioning, Brooks struggles to remember how many drinks he’s had. At one point, he asks if he can walk home. “I just don’t want to be in violation of anybody,” Brooks says, adding, “Let me go, I’m ready to go.”

As officers begin to take him into custody, Brooks jerks away and the three grapple with one another on the ground. He was shot twice as he ran and died at a hospital after undergoing surgery.

A lawyer for Brooks’ family said he had three daughters and a stepson. Attorney L. Chris Stewart said Brooks shouldn’t have been killed over his appearing to have a stun gun.

“Of extreme concern in the murder of Rayshard Brooks is the fact that he was shot in the back multiple times while fleeing,” Stewart and law partner Justin Miller said in a statement Saturday.

Bottoms said Brooks’ death was personal because “that could have been any one of us.”

“That could be any of our kids or brothers. In this case it was: It was someone’s father,” she said on “TODAY.”

Neither Rolfe nor Brosnan has been charged.

Image: Minyvonne BurkeMinyvonne Burke

Minyvonne Burke is a breaking news reporter for NBC News.

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Fact-checking Trump and Barr’s attacks on John Bolton’s book

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Fact-checking Trump and Barr’s attacks on John Bolton’s book

Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr slammed former Trump national security adviser John Bolton on Monday over the book Bolton intends to publish next week about h…
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India-China border dispute explained in 400 words

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India-China border dispute explained in 400 words

A Chinese soldier and an Indian soldier stand guard at the Chinese side of the ancient Nathu La border crossing between India and China in 2008

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

India and China have accused each other of encroaching on their territory in the Himalayan region

A military stand-off between India and China on their disputed border in the Himalayas has escalated into deadly clashes.

In 400 words, here is all the important background to help you understand what is going on.

What happened in the clash?

Three Indian soldiers were killed in a “violent face-off” with Chinese forces on Monday night. The confrontation happened in Galwan Valley in Ladakh, a disputed area in the Kashmir region.

China accused Indian troops of crossing the border twice, “provoking and attacking Chinese personnel”. This resulted in a “serious physical confrontation”.

Both sides insisted no shots were fired. There were reports of Chinese casualties, but no official confirmation.

Military officials from both countries were meeting to “defuse the situation”, the Indian army said.

Why are they fighting?

The military superpowers have been arguing for decades over territory in the high-altitude, largely uninhabited region.

Their armies come face to face at many points along the 3,440km (2,100-mile) shared border.

Monday’s confrontation came after tensions bubbled up in recent months over a new road India built in Ladakh, along the Line of Actual Control which divides the sides.

That angered China, which deployed troops and built infrastructure of its own in disputed territory, bringing the two sides’ forces in closer proximity and heightening the risk of clashes.

Why does it matter?

Both sides see the area as strategically important, economically and militarily.

If neither gives way, the stand-off could have destabilising consequences for the region.

The loss of life raises the stakes. Those deaths are believed to be the first in 45 years in a border confrontation between India and China.

They have fought only one war, in 1962, when India suffered a humiliating defeat.

How dangerous could this be?

Potentially very, if efforts are not made to reduce tensions.

On Tuesday, India’s army said a de-escalation process was under way. And in recent days, army generals from India and China have been involved in talks aimed at resolving the border row.

However, it remains to be seen if the talks are successful, as similar reconciliation attempts have stalled in the past.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Chinese soldiers guard their side of the border at Nathu La, to the east of Ladakh

If they are not, some analysts believe there is a risk of further clashes between their militaries.

“This is extremely, extremely serious, this is going to vitiate whatever dialogue was going on,” former Indian army commander DS Hooda said, commenting on Monday’s clash.

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Supreme Court rules landmark federal civil rights law protects LGBTQ workers from discrimination

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Supreme Court rules landmark federal civil rights law protects LGBTQ workers from discrimination














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Published on Jun 16, 2020

The Supreme Court has ruled it is illegal for employers to fire workers because they are gay or transgender. LGBTQ Americans and their supporters are celebrating what they see as a monumental victory. Jan Crawford reports.

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Who’s Mary Trump? Here’s Everything We Know About The President’s Niece.

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Who’s Mary Trump? Here’s Everything We Know About The President’s Niece.

TOPLINE

Long mostly out of the public eye, Donald Trump’s 55-year-old niece Mary Trump disapproved of her uncle’s behavior and treatment of her late father for decades before leaking family tax documents to The New York Times, according to a report based on a new tell-all book she’s written that’s scheduled to be published August 11, a few weeks before the Republican National Convention.

Police Athletic League Benefit Dinner Honoring Donald Trump

Businessman Donald Trump, his wife Ivana Trump and his mother Mary Anne Trump MacLeod attend the … [+] Police Athletic League dinner honoring Donald Trump at the Plaza Hotel in May 1989 in New York, New York. (Photo by Tom Gates/Getty Images)


Getty Images

KEY FACTS

Mary Trump is the daughter of Donald Trump’s older brother, Fred Trump Jr., who died in 1981 at age 42 from a heart attack caused by alcoholism, leaving behind Mary and her brother, Fred III. 

The death of Mary’s father has been an ongoing source of tension in the family, surfacing publicly when Fred Jr.’s children brought a court case against Donald and his siblings in 2000, contesting the division of assets of their grandfather’s real estate empire in his will.

A subject that will be explored in further detail in the book, Mary gave an uncharacteristic interview to the New York Daily News in 2000, saying her “aunt and uncles should be ashamed of themselves” for their handling of the will and treatment of family members, including her father, alleging Donald, Maryanne and Robert Trump also cut off funds needed to treat their nephew’s cerebral palsy. 

Mary earned a bachelor’s and master’s in English Literature from Tufts University and Columbia University, respectively, and then completed a master’s degree and Ph.D in clinical psychology at Adelphi University, later contributing to a 2002 book about schizophrenia. 

According to a LinkedIn profile that has since been disabled, Mary Trump works as a certified professional life coach and served as the chief executive officer of The Trump Coaching Group, a New-York based life coaching company she started in 2012; her level of involvement in the coaching group today is not immediately clear. 

On November 9, after her uncle was elected president, Mary took to Twitter to voice her discontent, writing “This is one of the worst nights of my life” and expressing her support for Hillary Clinton, “an extraordinary human being and public servant.” 

On Twitter—where Mary frequently shows support for Democratic policies, particularly increased gun control—her bio is #blacklivesmatter, “she/her/hers.”

news peg

Simon & Schuster is publishing Mary’s book, Too Much and Never Enough, which sources familiar to the project told the Daily Beast will include “harrowing and salacious stories” about her uncle, as well as the revelation that Mary leaked tax returns and other highly confidential financial documentation to The New York Times for their Pulitzer-winning 2018 investigation of Trump’s wealth origins and tax dodges. Though details are being kept under wraps, the book will also include “intimate and damning thoughts” from the President’s sister, Maryanne Trump Barry. 

key background

President Trump has spoken repeatedly about how his brother’s death impacted his life. In a 2019 interview with The Washington Post, he expressed regret about pushing his brother into the family business. “I do regret having put pressure on him,” the President said. “I think the mistake that we made was we assumed that everybody would like it. That would be the biggest mistake.” 

further reading

“Revealed: The Family Member Who Turned on Trump” (The Daily Beast) 

“Trump’s Niece Becomes First Relative To Speak Out Against Family In Forthcoming Tell-All Book” (Forbes) 

“INSIDE TRUMPS’ BITTER BATTLE Nephew’s ailing baby caught in the middle” (New York Daily News)

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President Trump: ‘We take historic action to deliver a future of safety, security for Americans’

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President Trump: ‘We take historic action to deliver a future of safety, security for Americans’

©2020 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. All market data delayed 20 minutes. New Privacy PolicyNew Terms of Use (What’s New)FAQ

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Trump signs police reform executive order in Rose Garden ceremony

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Trump signs police reform executive order in Rose Garden ceremony

President Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order on law enforcement reform and said “chokeholds will be banned except if an officer’s life is at risk” as the nation reels from the death of George Floyd in the custody of the Minneapolis Police Department and the ensuing unrest — which has sparked calls for changes in policing nationwide as drastic as dismantling entire departments.

The president made comments in the Rose Garden in which he struck a conciliatory tone while also expressing strong support for police before officially signing the order, which he characterized as promoting “the highest professional standards.” He also said, “These standards will be as high and as strong as there is on Earth.”

“We’re united by our desire to ensure peace and dignity and equality for all Americans,” Trump said, noting that he met with the family of Ahmaud Arbury, who died at the hands of two white men earlier this year in a high-profile case in Georgia, and families of other victims of racially-charged violence.

President Donald Trump speaks during an event on police reform, in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Donald Trump speaks during an event on police reform, in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

TRUMP TO SIGN EXECUTIVE ORDER ON POLICING TO ‘BUILD TRUST’ IN LAW ENFORCEMENT

“These are incredible people … and it’s so sad. Many of these families lost their loved ones in deadly interactions with police … All Americans mourn by your side, your loved ones will not have died in vain,” Trump said. “I can promise to fight for justice for all of our people and I gave a commitment to all of those families … We are going to pursue what we said we will be pursuing it, and we will be pursuing it strongly.”

White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, Sen Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Attorney General William Barr were among a number of dignitaries in attendance at the signing ceremony. There were also representatives from a number of law enforcement organizations present.

According to the White House, Trump’s order touches on use of force best practices, information sharing to track officers who have repeated complaints against them and federal incentives for police departments to deploy non-police experts on issues like mental health, homelessness and addiction.

Trump said law enforcement officers would only be allowed to use chokeholds if their lives are in danger.

“As part of this new credentialing process, chokeholds will be banned except if an officer’s life is at risk,” the president said.

President Donald Trump speaks during an event on police reform, in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Donald Trump speaks during an event on police reform, in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

GEORGIA LIEUTENANT GOV SAYS STATE MUST ‘BUILD TRUST’ AFTER ‘VERY DISTURBING’ RAYSHARD BROOKS DEATH

The White House on Monday said that the president “stands behind our dedicated law enforcement all the way” but that the executive order would help “uphold clear and high policing standards, promote accountability in law enforcement, and help equip police officers for constructive community engagement.”

Trump went out of his way to underscore his support for police in his comments Tuesday, quoting statistics about the number of arrests made by local law enforcement for severe crimes like rape and murder.

“I strongly oppose the radical and dangerous efforts to defund, dismantle and dissolve our police departments. Especially now when we’ve achieved the lowest recorded crime rates in recent history,” Trump said, while acknowledging a “tiny” number of bad police officers. “Without police there is chaos, without law there is anarchy and without safety there is a catastrophe.”

Trump added: “When you remove the police, you hurt those who have the least, the most.”

The details Trump revealed about the order Tuesday tracked with the outlines that White House had released previously.

Trump said the Department of Justice would provide grants to police departments seeking independent credentialing for use of force and de-escalation training that holds them to high standards and that the federal government would provide funding for “co-responders” like social workers to help police officers deal with issues like homelessness, mental illness and substance abuse.

The order would also help departments secure less-than-lethal weapons that can help reduce the number of fatal encounters with police, and mandate that departments share information on officers who are accused of abusing power “so that officers with credible issues do not simply move from one police department to the next.”

The National Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), the largest law enforcement union in the U.S., praised Trump’s order on Tuesday.

“It strikes a great balance between the vital need for public and officer safety, and the equally vital need for lasting, meaningful, and enforceable police reform,” the organization said. “In our view, President Trump and Congressional leaders are working constructively with law enforcement and community stakeholders to undertake earnest law enforcement reforms that will make our officers and the public they protect safer.”

Police unions have long been resistant to reform efforts.

PROS AND CONS OF TRUMP’S SAFE POLICING FOR COMMUNITIES EXECUTIVE ORDER

Trump on Tuesday also touted the economic numbers under his administration before the coronavirus pandemic, said that former Presidents Bush and Obama didn’t take up the police reform issue because they were not capable and said he is optimistic about a coronavirus vaccine

Trump also Tuesday said he is “committed to working with Congress on additional measures.”

But it’s unclear whether and when Congress will step in to address law enforcement reform. Both parties have expressed strong interest in doing so, but appear to have already hit obstacles.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., said on CBS Sunday that addressing qualified immunity — a judicial doctrine that often protects officers accused of misconduct from liability — is a “poison pill” for Republicans. Minutes later Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., who has led calls to roll back qualified immunity in Congress, said he had received different signals from other Republicans.

A source familiar with Scott’s police reform proposal — he is spearheading GOP efforts on the issue — told Fox News Tuesday that qualified immunity will not be included.

Trump’s order signing event Tuesday comes as he tries to balance the image he has cultivated as both an ally of black voters and as a “LAW & ORDER!” president. The president has regularly touted the passage of the First Step Act — a criminal justice reform bill — in 2018 and his campaign has aggressively courted black voters in swing states. Tuesday’s order could add to that record.

AFTER YEARS OF UNION OBJECTIONS, POLICE REFORM LEGISLATION ADVANCES

But his handling of the unrest in the wake of Floyd’s death has been controversial.

Trump is currently threatening to step in with federal forces to clear out protesters from a six-block area of downtown Seattle, named the “Capitol Hill Organized Protest,” or CHOP, which has been declared “cop-free” by its occupants.

“Radical Left Governor @JayInslee and the Mayor of Seattle are being taunted and played at a level that our great Country has never seen before,” Trump said last week. “Take back your city NOW. If you don’t do it, I will. This is not a game. These ugly Anarchists must be stopped IMMEDIATELY. MOVE FAST!”

He also made other comments decried as racist or supportive of police brutality during the height of the riots and protests, particularly one tweet in which the president said “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

MIKE PENCE HITS BACK AT JOE BIDEN, RIPS 50 YEARS OF FAILED LEADERSHIP IN BLACK COMMUNITIES

Fox News’ Harris Faulkner challenged the president on the comments in an interview in Dallas last week.

“‘When the looting starts, the shooting starts,’ why those words?” Faulkner asked Trump.

“That’s an expression I’ve heard over the years,” Trump replied.

“Do you know where it comes from?” Faulker asked.

“I think Philadelphia, the mayor of Philadelphia,” Trump said.

“It comes from 1967… It was from the chief of police in Miami, he was cracking down and he meant what he said. And he said ‘I don’t even care if it makes it look like brutality, I’m gonna crackdown. When the looting starts the shooting starts.’ That frightened a lot of people,” Faulkner said.

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Trump replied that he also heard the saying from former Philadephia police commissioner Frank Rizzo.

“It means two things,” Trump replied. “One is if there’s looting, there’s probably gonna be shooting. And that’s not as a threat that’s really just a fact because that’s what happens. And the other is if there’s looting there’s going to be shooting. There’s very different meanings.”

Despite the president’s order and Congress’ desire to get something done on law enforcement, police reform is largely a local issue, with states, cities and towns overseeing departments and holding significant power in the area under the Constitution. That means most tangible reforms are likely to come due to political will on the local level.

Fox News’ John Roberts and Hillary Vaughn contributed to this report. 

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Sen. Scott: If you want anarchy, more crime.. defund the police

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Sen. Scott: If you want anarchy, more crime.. defund the police

©2020 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. All market data delayed 20 minutes. New Privacy PolicyNew Terms of Use (What’s New)FAQ

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Seattle reaches deal with ‘CHOP’ to remove temporary roadblocks, replace with concrete barriers

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Seattle reaches deal with ‘CHOP’ to remove temporary roadblocks, replace with concrete barriers

The city of Seattle and protesters occupying the “Capitol Hill Organized Protest” have reached an agreement that will remove temporary roadblocks put in place by protesters and replace them with concrete barriers, Fox News has been told.

The Seattle Department of Transportation is installing concrete barriers in the middle of Pine Street, running East and West, which will split the road for both pedestrian and vehicle traffic. This will allow for emergency service vehicles to pass through the area.

SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL BANS POLICE USE OF CHOKEHOLDS, CROWD CONTROL DEVICES AMID PROTESTS

The agreement will reduce the area protesters previously called Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone, or CHAZ, from about six or seven city blocks to just three. This is the first time in weeks traffic will be able to pass by the shuttered East Police Precinct.

Fox News has confirmed the agreement to replace the wooden barrier set in place by the protesters with concrete barriers with Seattle Fire Chief Harold Scoggins, the Seattle Department of Transportation and Seattle Public Utilities. The Seattle Police Department is not overseeing the concrete barrier being put in place.

The development comes after the Seattle City Council on Monday voted unanimously to ban police from using chokeholds, and crowd-control devices like tear gas and pepper spray.

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Fox News’ Dan Springer and Jon Rule contributed to this report.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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Trump signs executive order on policing, urges nation to find ‘common ground’

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Trump signs executive order on policing, urges nation to find ‘common ground’

President Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday aimed at reducing fatal encounters between police and minorities, after the nationwide outcry and violent protests over police brutality in the deaths of George Floyd and others.

“Though we may all come from different places and different backgrounds, we’re united by our desire to ensure peace, dignity and equality for all Americans,” Mr. Trump said in the White House Rose Garden. “We have to find common ground.”

The action, among other steps, bans police “choke-holds” unless an officer’s life is in danger. As the president signed the order, he was flanked by the leaders of several national law-enforcement groups.

Mr. Trump injected the presidential campaign into his announcement, declaring that “President Obama and Vice President Biden never even tried to fix this during their eight-year period.” Mr. Obama convened a task force on policing during the emergence of the Black Lives Matters movement to address similar tensions, but the panel’s recommendations were largely ignored by police departments nationwide.

Before the announcement, Mr. Trump met with families of several people who died in encounters with police, including Ahmaud Arbery of Georgia, who was shot and killed by a white resident as he jogged through a neighborhood earlier this year.

He told the families, “Your loved ones will not have died in vain.”

But Mr. Trump reiterated that he vehemently disagrees with a movement by some Democrats to defund police departments in the wake of the tragedies. He said the nation doesn’t need “more stoking of fears and division.”

“Americans know the truth without police — there is chaos without law, there is anarchy, and without safety there is catastrophe,” the president said. “We need to bring law enforcement and communities closer together, not to drive them apart. Violence and destruction will not be tolerated.”

The order encourages police departments to adopt best practices in de-escalating confrontations with suspects, establishes a system for sharing information to track officers who have repeated complaints against them for excessive force, and and creates federal incentives for police departments to deploy social workers on issues like mental health and addiction.

The president said a strong economic recovery from the coronavirus shutdowns “is probably the best thing we can do to help the black, Hispanic and Asian communities.” He noted that retail sales jumped a largest-ever 17.7% in May, calling it “a great thing, because ultimately it’s about jobs.”

“Unless my formula is tampered with, we will soon be in a stronger position than we were before the plague came in from China,” the president said. “We’re way ahead of schedule.”

He also recounted his administration’s achievements for blacks, including record levels of funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

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