He remained remarkably cheating throughout his presidency

Trump makes 66 false or misleading claims 3 days this week

  • The US President does not wear masks, and attendees at election festivals do not wear masks either.

    Father

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US President Donald Trump has been remarkably bluffing throughout his presidency, filling his speeches and tweets with lies and other false statements.

And his lies and allegations accelerate during the election campaign season when he makes a barrage of inaccurate phrases written in the texts of his speech.

The period from Friday to last Sunday was one of the most deceptive times of his entire presidency: he made at least 66 false or misleading claims during the three-day period.

In other words: He made 66 false or misleading claims without counting the times in which he repeated some of the same 66 claims over the course of the three days.

Crowded schedule

His schedule was busy on Friday, and on Saturday he gave a speech in Florida, held rallies in Florida and Georgia, and held rallies in Wisconsin and Michigan;

And on Sunday he held a rally in Nevada.

Below is a list of the false and misleading allegations that we counted for him:

In Georgia, Trump continued to suggest that voting by mail was riddled with fraud, saying that "junk" ballots - where states send a ballot card to every eligible registered voter - is a "big hoax."

Trump said in Michigan, “Did you know that they found 50,000 ballot papers dumped in the riverbed?” Trump said previously that ballot papers were found lying in rivers, but he did not mention that the number was 50,000, and after he said in Georgia that they were done Finding these cards, he added, "Yes, they found them in Virginia, and I think it's 500,000 cards."

Trump continued to warn voters in Michigan to "be careful" with the Democratic Michigan governor and attorney general, saying: "You know that they are responsible for the polls, so how do I put my political life in the hands of party men like these?"

The truth is that the Secretary of Michigan, not its Governor or Attorney General, is responsible for the elections there.

Trump claimed in Florida, that "even without a vaccine, the epidemic will end, take its course, and then end, without the vaccine."

The truth is that the numbers - newly confirmed cases, hospitalized cases, and test-positive rate - are getting worse, not the other way around, at the time Trump speaks.

There was no basis for his vague claim that we were "nearing the end."

Gags lie

Trump responded in a television interview in Wisconsin about his decision to hold gatherings during the high incidence of Coronavirus, referring to the organization of outdoor events, and then claiming that the crowds at the three events he held the previous day were "largely" wearing masks.

The truth is, it is not true that Trump's events the day before - one in Georgia and two in Florida - had crowds wearing masks "largely", as Trump claimed.

One of the Florida events, a speech for the elderly, was at home.

While there were a large number of people wearing masks at an elderly event, the vast majority of those present at his sermons at rallies in Georgia and Florida were not masked, according to CNN correspondents at the scene, as pictures of the events show.

In his events in Michigan, Georgia and Florida, and in an interview with Wisconsin, Trump claimed that there were supposed to be 2.2 million American deaths due to the epidemic, or that this is the number that the United States "was expected" to lose.

In fact, Trump was citing a report published in March by scientists from Imperial College London, which predicted that a total of 2.2 million Americans could die from "Covid-19" if no preventive measures were taken by any American government or individual to try. Stop the spread of the virus.

- Trump claimed in Florida, that "even without a vaccine, the epidemic will end, take its course, and then end, without the vaccine."

Friday to Sunday was one of the most unpredictable times of the entire Trump presidency.

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