WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump is leading his country to ruin by fomenting hatred, and by inciting those he describes as the wrongdoers in America, an American writer said.

Max Butte, a columnist for the Washington Post, wrote a letter to Trump asking him to work to end the violence.

Bout's article was a commentary on mass shootings that claimed the lives of large numbers of innocent people, especially last Saturday's incidents in the cities of El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio, in which 29 people were killed, apparently racially motivated.

In the opinion of the writer, this tendency towards mass fire intersects with another "scourge" is the spread of ideology beyond the white race. He cited examples in cities such as Charleston, South Carolina, where nine people were killed in a black American church in 2015, when eight people were killed in a Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018, and a shooting at the Garry Festival in Gailroy, California , In which four people were killed last week.

Max Bot thinks Americans are "lucky" because those attacks by far-right supporters in the United States could have been much worse.

The Washington Post article also referred to the Bernardino incident in California, where 14 people died in an attack by two Muslims on December 2, 2015.

But Trump said that Trump commented on the incident when he was a candidate for president, calling for "a total and total ban on Muslims entering the United States so that our congressmen know what is going on in hell."

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"Whether you're unknowingly or knowingly, you're raising your craziness for America's crazies ... and you refuse to address the easy possession of weapons of war in America," he wrote.
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The author compared Trump's position to his reaction to the recent shooting incident in El Paso, which he described as acts of hatred without showing any reaction towards it.

He suggested that the President should stop "completely and comprehensively racial incitement and rhetoric" and impose a "complete and comprehensive" ban on sales of offensive weapons such as those used by the perpetrator of the El Paso crime.

"President, if you are concerned with the welfare of the American people, you have to do what I say to you, but you continue to incite hatred."

In his article, Max Putt referred to Trump's talk last month when Congressional "melons" called for a return to their countries of origin and a May call to a Florida crowd to stop the influx of illegal immigrants.

On that occasion, one of Trump's supporters shouted at the crowd, "They were shot." Instead of punishing him - as Trump suggests - Trump smiled and shook his head, jokingly, "In Penhandl only you can escape such acts, in reference to the city of Florida.

"Whether you know it or not, Mr. President, you are baffling America's morons ... and you refuse to address the easy possession of weapons of war in America," the writer continued.

"Trump also refuses to ask Congress to ban the sale of offensive weapons, or even to buy all the weapons in the shops, as Australia did before, even though it has not witnessed a similar massacre in the United States. In contrast to Australia, the United States has been the scene of 249 mass shooting incidents this year alone.

Max Bot concluded his article by warning the US president that he would lead his country to destruction unless it stops to stop the violence of firearms, and stops hurting Hamas supporters with a hate speech.