4 times in 7 seconds: Trump calls Somali immigrants 'garbage' | Fortune
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4 times in 7 seconds: Trump calls Somali immigrants 'garbage' | Fortune
"He said it four times in seven seconds: Somali immigrants in the United States are "garbage." It was no mistake. In fact, President Donald Trump's rhetorical attacks on immigrants have been building since he said Mexico was sending "rapists" across the border during his presidential campaign announcement a decade ago. He's also echoed rhetoric once used by Adolf Hitler and called the 54 nations of Africa "s--hole countries." But with one flourish closing a two-hour Cabinet meeting Tuesday, Trump amped up his anti-immigrant rhetoric even further and ditched any claim that his administration was only seeking to remove people in the U.S. illegally."
""We don't want 'em in our country," Trump said five times of the nation's 260,000 people of Somali descent. "Let 'em go back to where they came from and fix it." The assembled Cabinet members cheered and applauded. Vice President JD Vance could be seen pumping a fist. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, sitting to the president's immediate left, told Trump on-camera, "Well said.""
""What he has done is brought this type of language more into the everyday conversation, more into the main," said Carl Bon Tempo, a State University of New York at Albany history professor. "He's, in a way, legitimated this type of language that, for many Americans for a long time, was seen as outside the bounds.""
President Donald Trump repeatedly insulted Somali immigrants, calling them 'garbage' and urging their removal while invoking prior inflammatory language about Mexicans and African nations. The remarks came at the end of a Cabinet meeting and were met with applause from senior officials. ICE raids and deportations have intensified debates about who can be American and have broadened divisions over immigration policy and national identity. The rhetoric has normalized language that many previously considered outside acceptable public discourse and has prompted historians to note its legitimizing effect on xenophobic viewpoints.
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