Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Trump news on Youtube Oct 4 2017

Donald Trump Applauds Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello For Not Playing Politics

or that a week after he had hoped to visit Puerto Rico to survey damage from

Hurricane ARMA president Trump touched down on the island to witness firsthand

the devastation of Hurricane Maria's knockout blow the president also had

high praise for Puerto Rico's governor Ricardo Rocio a progressive who aligns

with Democrats for putting politics aside so I said give me a general I

don't want to have any I don't want to have a general that plays games and

you've done a fantastic job the whole team has been amazing your governor has

been who I didn't know I heard very good things about him he's not even from my

party and he started right at the beginning appreciating what we did and

he was tremendously supportive and he knew the level of a problem that you had

at the beginning before and the level what happened with respect to the

tremendous storms that hit your beautiful island and to governor I just

want to tell you that right from the beginning this governor did not play

politics he didn't play it at all he was saying it like it was and he was giving

us the highest grades and I want to on behalf of our country I want to thank

the governor in turn expressed his appreciation to the president

President Trump also briefly shook hands with San Juan Mayor Carmen you lien

crews after the two exchanged words over the weekend Cruz told the president her

criticism of the federal response last week was not about politics as he was

leaving the White House this morning President Trump suggested Cruz was

changing her tune well I think she's come back a long way and you know I

think it's now acknowledged what a great job we've done and people are looking at

that the president heaping praise on the federal relief efforts as the president

met with federal first responders and local officials he joked that the twin

hits had stretched federal dollars a little thin now I hate to tell you Porto

Rico but you've thrown our budget a little out of whack because we've spent

a lot of money on Puerto Rico and that's fine we've saved a lot of lives

rebuilding Puerto Rico shattered infrastructure will take a lot of money

but the joke fell flat with Democrats on Capitol Hill where Senator Chuck Schumer

drew a line in his new relationship with the president mr. president enough stop

blaming Puerto Rico for the storm that devastated their shores I don't remember

the president telling Texas that they throw our budget out of whack the

president spent some time meeting people in the Guaynabo neighborhood of San Juan

then at a local church where he joined it a few selfies and help hand out some

of the daily necessities that have been in short supply since the storms hit

thank you god bless you and God bless america

For more infomation >> Donald Trump Applauds Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello For Not Playing Politics(VIDEO)! - Duration: 3:21.

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Trevor Noah's -Gun-owning Vegas real estate mogul to Trump: 'Enough is enough' - Duration: 4:54.

For more infomation >> Trevor Noah's -Gun-owning Vegas real estate mogul to Trump: 'Enough is enough' - Duration: 4:54.

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Trevor Noah's - Congressman's emotional response to Trump Puerto Rico visit - Duration: 4:17.

For more infomation >> Trevor Noah's - Congressman's emotional response to Trump Puerto Rico visit - Duration: 4:17.

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PRESIDENT TRUMP GETS A RATINGS BOOST DURING CRISIS - Duration: 4:32.

For more infomation >> PRESIDENT TRUMP GETS A RATINGS BOOST DURING CRISIS - Duration: 4:32.

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Trump Tours Damage From Hurricane Maria - Duration: 1:55.

For more infomation >> Trump Tours Damage From Hurricane Maria - Duration: 1:55.

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Las Vegas shooting: Donald Trump to visit Las Vegas to console victims - Duration: 4:17.

Las Vegas shooting: Donald Trump to visit Las Vegas to console victims

His trip to Las Vegas will be the first time he has had to deal directly with the tragic aftermath of deadly gun violence that has routinely claimed hundreds of lives in recent years.  "Its a very horrible thing even to think about," President Trump told reporters on Air Force One yesterday.

"Its really horrible."  Stephen Paddock, a 64-year-old pensioner with no criminal record, was identified as the gunman in Sunday nights mass shooting, spraying bullets from the window of his 32nd-floor room at the Mandalay Bay hotel in Las Vegas.  Authorities said 59 people were killed and more than 500 injured from a crowd of thousands gathered to watch an outdoor country music festival.

Paddocks motive remained a mystery. . "Hes a sick man, a demented man. A lot of problems, I guess.

We are looking into him very, very seriously. But were dealing with a very, very sick individual," President Trump said of Paddock on Tuesday.  President Trump has had mixed success in the traditional role of "consoler-in-chief".

He inflamed racial tensions in the aftermath of a white-supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and he has struggled to strike the right tone in responding to hurricane devastation in Puerto Rico.  Visiting Puerto Rico yesterday, President Trump said jokingly that the recovery from Hurricane Maria there was blowing the US budget "a little out of whack".

He spent most of his day meeting with people charged with responding to the crisis than with people affected by it.

  The Las Vegas shooting has reignited a debate in Washington and across the country about whether more gun control legislation might have prevented what happened.

  Republicans who control the US Congress have shown little inclination to respond to Democratic appeals for gun measures, although momentum appears to have slowed for legislation that would make it easier to buy gun silencers.

  On the campaign trail last year, President Trump aligned himself with gun rights advocates who consider the US Constitutions Second Amendment right to bear arms sacrosanct.

Asked yesterday whether it was time to debate gun control measures, President Trump said: "Perhaps that will come.

But thats not for now." President Trump has responded to the Las Vegas massacre by holding a moment of silence on the White House South Lawn and ordering flags lowered to half-staff.

He called the shootings "an act of pure evil."  In Las Vegas, the president will grieve with friends and family of the victims, offer support for the wounded and thank first responders, the White House said.  President Trump has some strong ties to the desert city.

He helped build the luxury Trump International Hotel, where he stays when he visits, and was a frequent visitor during the presidential campaign last year.  He lost the state to Democrat Hillary Clinton in the November 2016 presidential election. .

For more infomation >> Las Vegas shooting: Donald Trump to visit Las Vegas to console victims - Duration: 4:17.

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In Puerto Rico Trump talks up the weather & flings paper towels 10/4/17 - Duration: 6:00.

For more infomation >> In Puerto Rico Trump talks up the weather & flings paper towels 10/4/17 - Duration: 6:00.

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Breaking News Today 10/4/17, North Korea Blasts US 'Invasion Treaty' With South, Trump News Today - Duration: 3:13.

For more infomation >> Breaking News Today 10/4/17, North Korea Blasts US 'Invasion Treaty' With South, Trump News Today - Duration: 3:13.

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Trevor Noah's -San Juan mayor: Trump was insulting to the people of Puerto Rico - Duration: 7:38.

For more infomation >> Trevor Noah's -San Juan mayor: Trump was insulting to the people of Puerto Rico - Duration: 7:38.

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Trump's Puerto Rico event was way worse than his tweets - Duration: 6:18.

Trump's Puerto Rico event was way worse than his tweets

For more infomation >> Trump's Puerto Rico event was way worse than his tweets - Duration: 6:18.

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Tillerson doesn't deny calling Trump a "moron" - Duration: 0:27.

agreement.

[Inaudible question]

>> Can you address the main

headline that you call the

president the moron.

>> I won't deal with petty

stuff like that.

This is what I don't understand

about Washington

again I'm not from this place.

But the places I come from we

don't deal with that kind of

petty nonsense.

And it is intended to do

nothing but divide people and

For more infomation >> Tillerson doesn't deny calling Trump a "moron" - Duration: 0:27.

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Ivanka Trump attends event at Camp Lejeune - Duration: 1:47.

For more infomation >> Ivanka Trump attends event at Camp Lejeune - Duration: 1:47.

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Trump praises hurricane relief efforts in Puerto Rico amid criticism of a slow response - Duration: 5:55.

Brrushing aside criticism of his administration's response to Hurricane Maria, President Trump visited Puerto Rico on Tuesday,

hailing the recovery effort as an "amazing job" by first responders, telling officials they should be "proud" of a death toll that stood in double digits instead of thousands.

Nearly two weeks after the Category 4 storm raked the island, Trump, making his fourth visit to a hurricane zone in a month, lavished praise on local officials who spoke highly of him, while taking a veiled swipe at San Juan's mayor, who had previously characterized initial recovery efforts as ineffective.

In a televised meeting with officials in a hangar at Muniz Air National Guard Base, Trump struck an upbeat note about progress made since the storm struck on Sept. 20, knocking out the power grid,

snatching away cellphone service, isolating dozens of rural communities and leaving hundreds of thousands scrambling for food, water, medicine, cash and gasoline.

But as sometimes happens when Trump makes off-the-cuff comments, the tone of his arrival remarks seemed jarring at times.

He made an oddly jovial reference to the cost of the recovery effort, telling assembled officials: "I hate to tell you, Puerto Rico, but you threw our budget a little out of whack!"

The president, who has previously drawn attention to the island's crippling debt and faltering infrastructure, then added: "But that's fine."

Trump also referred favorably to the official death count on the island — 16, but expected to rise — by comparing it to the fatality toll when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005, killing an estimated 1,800 people.

"Sixteen people certified versus in the thousands," he said. "You can be very proud."

Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello later announced that the number of deaths connected to the storm had risen from 16 to 34. Nineteen of the 34 were a direct result of the storm, the rest indirectly connected to the hurricane.

Some residents welcomed Trump's visit as a sign that more aid was on the way, but were disturbed by earlier comments seen as disparaging of Puerto Ricans and their local leaders.

"He needs to see the devastation. He needs to put his own thoughts and politics aside," said Divinia Marin, 55, whose home flooded during the storm.

Earlier in the day, Rossello had pointed to nascent signs of recovery, but said he would seek to convey the enormous scope of the disaster to the visiting president.

"We need more help," the governor told reporters in San Juan as Trump was en route. "It's 3.4 million U.S. citizens who we need to get that water, that food — we still need to do a lot more."

At Calvary Chapel church, Trump handed out supplies, drawing some smiles when he lobbed packaged paper towels into a cellphone camera-wielding crowd. "The job that's been done here is really nothing short of a miracle," he said.

Some who hadn't gotten close to the president, though, worried whether he had gotten a message of urgent need.

Efrain Rivera, 43, employed by the public works department in the hard-hit coastal city of Yabucoa, said he knew of half a dozen elderly people whose deaths he considered an indirect result of the storm.

"We have received very little aid," he said. "We are working to recover ourselves. We need medicine, oxygen to take care of people."

Wrapping up his nearly eight-hour visit with an aerial tour, the president flew by helicopter to a Navy ship offshore, the Kearsarge, where he shook hands with service members and met with the governor of the neighboring U.S. Virgin Islands, Kenneth Mapp, before boarding Air Force One for the return flight.

Leaving Washington earlier Tuesday, Trump hailed his administration's recovery efforts in the territory, shrugging off criticism that the initial federal response was less robust than similar efforts when hurricanes struck Texas and Florida.

"It's now acknowledged what a great job we've done," Trump told reporters at the White House as he and First Lady Melania Trump prepared to depart for San Juan.

"In Texas and in Florida, we get an A-plus," the president said. "And I'll tell you what — I think we've done just as good in Puerto Rico."

During his visit, the president made a seeming attempt to back away from days of Twitter attacks on San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz — though upon arriving, he seemed to take a dig at her by praising Rossello, who has been careful to couple appeals for more aid with praise for the administration.

"Right from the beginning this governor did not play politics," Trump said in the hangar meeting, to applause.

Over the weekend, Trump derided the mayor's "poor leadership" and implied that Puerto Ricans were not doing enough to help themselves. He also indirectly slammed the mayor in a tweet decrying "politically motivated ingrates" who criticized the scope and scale of the initial relief effort.

Embarking on his trip, Trump said the mayor had "come back a long way," though without detailing what in Cruz's stance had changed.

The mayor, who has made no direct response to Trump's Twitter attacks, was among those who shook hands with the president on his arrival, but she was not invited to speak during his initial talks.

Cruz said she met with Trump, along with the mayors of Ponce and Guaynabo, but said she wished he had seen more of the island's devastation. She said FEMA was slow to respond and the agency expected those applying for assistance to use the internet, although many lack electricity.

"They need to adapt to the reality of the situation," Cruz said. "We're talking about life and death. It's an American value to come to the aid of those in need."

She urged Puerto Ricans to contact members of Congress to urge them to support an aid package for the island.

"This has to do with people who are hungry, who need dialysis … there is a moral imperative to help Puerto Rico."

Federally directed aid to Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands has dramatically picked up in recent days. But critics point to initial slowness in waiving the Jones Act, which restricts foreign-flagged shipping in U.S. waters, coupled with a delay in appointing an on-the-ground military commander to coordinate relief and a lag in dispatching a Navy hospital vessel, the Comfort.

On a San Juan street corner, a half dozen cab drivers awaiting fares debated the significance of Trump's visit. "He needs to see the mountain areas" where roads are still blocked and towns cut off, said Frankie Perez, 52. The others agreed. "He's not going to the bad areas," said Giovanni Maisonet, 39.

But Perez, whose own home was left darkened and sweltering by the power cutoff, was impressed that Trump come at all, especially given the mass shooting in Las Vegas that killed at least 59 people. "We're struggling," he said. "I'm for the military here -- they're doing a lot of good. But we need light. We're part of the US."

For more infomation >> Trump praises hurricane relief efforts in Puerto Rico amid criticism of a slow response - Duration: 5:55.

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CNN 10 | October 4, 2017 | Trump visits hurricane stricken Puerto Rico | Daily Listening - Duration: 10:01.

Reporting from CNN Center, I'm Carl Azuz.

It's good to have you watching our midweek broadcast of CNN 10.

U.S. President Donald Trump is scheduled Las Vegas, Nevada, on Wednesday, the scene of

the deadliest shooting in modern American history.

As

investigators pick up pieces of evidence there and try to figure out the suspect's motive,

residents of Puerto Rico are picking up the pieces left

by Hurricane Maria, the devastating storm made landfall there on September 20th.

That's where President Trump was Tuesday, surveying the damage, meeting with Puerto

Rican officials and discussing the U.S. government's aid to the

island.

Puerto Rico is a U.S. commonwealth.

The island's 3.5 million residents are American citizens, but they don't vote in U.S. presidential

elections.

They have no voting members in the U.S. Congress and most Puerto Ricans don't pay a federal

income tax.

Hurricane Maria left all of them without electricity and most still don't have it.

More than half of people there also don't have access to clean,

drinking water.

Some Puerto Ricans, like the mayor of the capital San Juan, have criticized the U.S.

federal government for making an inefficient

response to the hurricane.

Others like the island's government have praised the government for quickly addressing

the island's concerns.

The White House says thousands of members of the U.S. National Guard have been in Puerto

Rico since before the storm hit and thousands of containers

of food, water and medical supplies have been sent to Puerto Rico.

But with the shortage of truck drivers, diesel fuel and working phone lines,

officials have had trouble getting the aid to those who need it.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SANJAY GUPTA, CNN CHIEF MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The thing about Puerto Rico

is that it was already on the edge.

Many here are sick,

older and poorer than the mainland, with long waits and a severe shortage of specialists

and an economic recession.

There was no reserve here,

nothing to keep them from toppling off the edge.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The hurricane just causes a lot of stress.

You have people, you know, coming late from work, trying to get gas, and stress

builds up.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

AZUZ: That's just what's happening on one of the Caribbean islands that was struck

by Hurricane Maria.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

IVAN WATSON, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The approach to St. Croix reveals

a storm-tossed island still littered with

debris.

The airport, an improvised operation with a military presence.

Outside, civilians wait to be evacuated, joining the thousands now fleeing

to the U.S. mainland aboard what the authorities call mercy flights and mercy ships.

Among them, 19-year-old Taylor Thomson, her 11-year-old brother Alex, and their dog Whisky.

TAYLOR THOMSON, HOPING TO EVACUATE: Because everything is destroyed, homes, cars, businesses.

That's absolutely terrible, because you can't get

ahold of people you know.

I haven't talked to my friends since the storm passed.

I have no idea if they're OK, if their house is standing.

So, you

just don't know anything.

But it's awful.

WATSON: Hurricane Maria's devastating winds left a path of destruction, uprooting trees,

ripping down power lines, and according to federal

officials, damaging more than 2,000 structures.

Everywhere you look, people are cleaning up, including Dan Zebroski and his son's friend

Tyler, who are also hoping to make a little money collecting

scrap metal.

DAN ZEBROSKI, SAINT CROIX RESIDENT: Look at this, this is history.

This is hurricane season's history.

Nothing like this has ever happened.

WATSON (on camera): The U.S. Virgin Islands have long been an American tropical paradise,

but now, two back to back monster storms have devastated

the tourism industry which makes up the backbone of the island's economy.

(voice-over): The cruise ship currently docked here provides temporary housing for disaster

relief workers, instead of tourists.

Curfew sits in

at 6:00 p.m., an effort to stop looting that erupted after the storm.

YVETTE ROSS EDWARDS, ATTORNEY: Yes, this was blown up, a piece of it cracked off, kind

of a symbol as to where my officer is now.

WATSON: Attorney Yvette Ross Edwards shows me her office, soaked by rain after the storm

damaged the building's roof.

(on camera): Realistically, how long would it before you can get back to work?

ROSS EDWARDS: I am looking at not until January.

That's how long I'm looking.

WATSON (voice-over): Until then, she and her employees have to live without salaries, and

yet the island still is not out of the danger zone.

ROSS EDWARDS: And unfortunately, we're just getting passed the middle of the hurricane

season.

So, we have almost two more months to go, and that's

the sad part of that.

WATSON: Let's hope nature gives this battered corner of paradise some time to recover.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

AZUZ (voice-over): Ten-second trivia:

A century ago, Remington, Royal and Underwood were all famous brands of what?

Razors, watches, looms or typewriters?

All of these companies were famous for producing typewriters, machines that were invented in

the 1800s.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

AZUZ: Technology has certainly changed, but there are some classic typewriter characteristics

that endure today.

The QWERTY keyboard, for

example.

It was patented in 1878, and one theory is that the letters were laid out that way to

keep the typewriter's mechanical keys separated, so

they wouldn't jam up.

That hasn't been proven.

But the machine's popularity was.

Even now, some folks still have a special place in their hearts and livelihoods for

typewriters.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

PAUL SCHWEITZER, GRAMERCY TYPEWRITER CO.: In the '60s, and '70s and '80s, you

look in the New York yellow pages, there were six pages of typewriter

companies right here in Manhattan.

Now, if you look, there's only two or three or four of us left.

BILL WEIR, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Meet Paul, last of a breed.

SCHWEITZER: When I'm out on the service call --

WEIR (on camera): Yes.

SCHWEITZER: -- this is me.

WEIR: This is you.

SCHWEITZER: Going out.

I can carry some of my tools, screwdrivers, cleaning rugs, and some of my smelly chemicals.

WEIR (voice-over): His dad had the same kit back during the depression, going office door

to door.

When Paul came back from the Navy, his pop made him buy suit to give him a tryout.

Fifty-five years later, the little shop is his now.

His son

helping out, and it is a portal back in time.

SCHWEITZER: This is all steel.

I mean, this is a heavy duty machine.

WEIR (on camera): Can I feel the weight?

SCHWEITZER: Yes.

WEIR: Wow.

(voice-over): He revised models from the '30s that could anchor a vote.

(on camera): Would you mind if I took this for a little test run for old time's sake?

SCHWEITZER: Yes, no problem.

WEIR (voice-over): And models from the '70s, it will snap you right back to Mrs. Schmelinski's

(ph) 10th grade typing lab.

SCHWEITZER: Very good.

Good typing.

WEIR (on camera): Not bad, right?

SCHWEITZER: Yes.

WEIR: Did you notice my posture there?

SCHWEITZER: No, very good.

It's good to see some of the younger generation still knows how to type.

WEIR: It's good to hear you refer to me as the younger generation.

I'll take that.

(voice-over): To be honest, I came here to feel sorry for Paul -- one more refugee of

progress in a dying industry.

But --

SCHWEITZER: There's still a lot of younger people who are rediscovering typewriters.

WEIR (on camera): Come on, Paul.

Really?

SCHWEITZER: Door bell just rang.

Can I just get that for a minute?

WEIR: Yes, please do.

Yes.

Go right ahead.

SCHWEITZER: Can I help you?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I was wondering if you guys saw a correction tape.

I have an IBM Selectric and I refuse to use anything else.

SCHWEITZER: Hey, you want to tell these people that?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: These machines are more reliable than my computer.

WEIR: Is that right?

Is that why you use it?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And it also can't get distracted.

They do one thing.

They type.

You can't check your Facebook, can't do your email.

Or maybe

I'm a romantic at heart, but everything about the typewriter is just more fluid to

me.

WEIR: And how long will Gramercy Typewriter be around?

SCHWEITZER: No, this can go for many years to come.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

AZUZ: If we want robots to help us do things, it's not very efficient to have a different

one for each task.

That's a quote from the leader of this

MTI project on what you could call origami robots.

Basically, this involves a small machine that's able to position itself into a plastic exoskeleton.

When that exoskeleton is heated, it changes

into a predetermined shape.

Then, the robot is able to move, sail or even glide to a new place.

Now, there are many layers to this story and some heated questions.

What happens if it's cold?

Is this research gold?

Will it be put on hold?

Will the idea get old or do they intend for it to be sold?

Lastly, how do they keep the robot in the fold?

I'm Carl Azuz and it's time for CNN 10 to power down.

For more infomation >> CNN 10 | October 4, 2017 | Trump visits hurricane stricken Puerto Rico | Daily Listening - Duration: 10:01.

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'Very Sad Day': Trump Arrives In Las Vegas - Duration: 1:52.

For more infomation >> 'Very Sad Day': Trump Arrives In Las Vegas - Duration: 1:52.

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Las Vegas shooting: Trump claims 'now NOT the time' for gun control debate after attack - Duration: 5:54.

Las Vegas shooting: Trump claims 'now NOT the time' for gun control debate after attack

Sunday's Las Vegas shooting which left at least 59 people dead and 527 more injured has renewed calls for the to introduce tighter gun control.

Stephen Paddock opened fire on crowds attending a music festival from his 32nd-floor room at the Mandalay Bay hotel and casino.

Police searches found the , including 23 guns in his Mandalay Bay hotel room.  But when asked whether a debate over gun laws would come at some point in time, responded, Perhaps that will come, but added it was not for now".

The President did, however, blast Paddock as "sick and demented" and later tweeted: "It is a 'miracle' how fast the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police were able to find the demented shooter and stop him from even more killing!" It comes after it was revealed the Republican.

Shortly after his inauguration, Trump signed a bill which would roll back an Obama-era regulation demanding gun checks for people with mental illnesses in February this year.

The law, which was first finalised in December, aimed to add people receiving Social Security checks for mental illnesses and people deemed unfit to handle their own financial affairs to the national background check database.

The rule was hotly contested by gun rights advocates who said it infringed on Americans' Second Amendment rights.

The .the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.  As a result, Trump rolled back the bill at the end of February, after both the House and Senate passed the new bill to revoke the Obama-era regulation.

The National Rifle Association said it "applauded" the action, while Everytown For Gun Safety president John Feinblatt said he hoped for more gun control from the Trump administration.

After the Las Vegas shooting President Trump was roundly criticised for failing to touch on the topic of gun control as he addressed US citizens after the attack.

On his way to Puerto Rico yesterday, Trump said: The police department has done such an incredible job, and well be talking about gun laws as time goes by." And when pressed on the issue of gun control, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters: "I think there will be, certainly time for that policy discussion to take place.

"But that's not the place we're in at this moment.". However, in the past Trump has not been shy in expressing his views on the Second Amendment and, as with many of his other views, he is perceived to have.

Throughout the 1990s and 2000s the star of The Apprentice spoke out in favour of a partial ban on assault weapons, criticising Republicans who "walk the NRA line" and "refuse even limited restrictions" on gun laws in his 2000 book 'The America We Deserve'.

However, he also claimed that the Democrat's desire to "confiscate guns" was "a dumb idea", and instead struck a middle ground.

In an extract from the 304-page policy book, Mr Trump told readers: "I generally oppose gun control, but I support the ban on assault weapons and I support a slightly longer waiting period to purchase a gun.

"With today's internet technology, we should be able to tell within seventy-two hours if a potential gun owner has a record." In April 2015, just before he announced his bid, Trump told the National Rifle Association of America (NRA), who would later endorse him: "I love the NRA.

I love the Second Amendment." Throughout his election campaign, Trump vilified rival Hillary Clinton for attempting to subvert the Second Amendment, in a move intended to gain support from the mainstream of the Republican party.

Since the shooting in Las Vegas on Sunday night, Trump has given little indication of what potential policy changes are to come next, despite widespread calls for action.

During his speech yesterday, he said: "In times such as these, I know we are searching for some kind of meaning in the chaos, some kind of light in the darkness. "The answers do not come easy.".

For more infomation >> Las Vegas shooting: Trump claims 'now NOT the time' for gun control debate after attack - Duration: 5:54.

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Can Trump strike right tone on upcoming trips MSNBC - Duration: 5:39.

For more infomation >> Can Trump strike right tone on upcoming trips MSNBC - Duration: 5:39.

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trump puerto rico [ Trophy [ Towel [ trump in puerto rico [ donald trump puerto rico ] - Duration: 3:01.

Brushing aside criticism of his administration's response to Hurricane Maria, President Trump visited Puerto Rico on Tuesday, hailing the recovery effort as an "amazing job" by first responders, telling officials they should be "proud" of a death toll that stood in double digits instead of thousands.

Nearly two weeks after the Category 4 storm raked the island, Trump, making his fourth visit to a hurricane zone in a month, lavished praise on local officials who spoke highly of him, while taking a veiled swipe at San Juan's mayor, who had previously characterized initial recovery efforts as ineffective.

In a televised meeting with officials in a hangar at Muniz Air National Guard Base, Trump struck an upbeat note about progress made since the storm struck on Sept. 20, knocking out the power grid, snatching away cellphone service, isolating dozens of rural communities and leaving hundreds of thousands scrambling for food, water, medicine, cash and gasoline.

But as sometimes happens when Trump makes off-the-cuff comments, the tone of his arrival remarks seemed jarring at times. He made an oddly jovial reference to the cost of the recovery effort, telling assembled officials: "I hate to tell you, Puerto Rico, but you threw our budget a little out of whack!"

The president, who has previously drawn attention to the island's crippling debt and faltering infrastructure, then added: "But that's fine."

Trump also referred favorably to the official death count on the island — 16, but expected to rise — by comparing it to the fatality toll when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005, killing an estimated 1,800 people.

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