International The U.K wants to ban Donald Trump for saying they're trying to disguise their massive Muslim problem

Donald Trump's statements about what's happening in the U.K and Germany is...

  • Absolutely true!

  • Completely false!


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This is the left in a nutshell.

"Yeah that's true, but Trump said it, so it can't be true.

The guy is a proven liar. One would have to be mentally retarded* to accept anything he says as "absolutely" true.







*Trump supporters in a nutshell
 
Yes ban Trump, then when the UK needs help with terrorist actions by some of those radicals;don’t come asking for the US’s help
 
I hope the Don insists on stopping by London, which should provide us as much entertainment as the time he toured California. :D

Sherdoggers in the U.K: please keep us posted with the latest action on the ground comes July, like that special report I did two years ago. Especially if there are "Code Pink" topless protesters involved. :cool:


British PM Theresa May to urge Donald Trump to skip London during visit to avoid protesters
MAY 29, 2018​

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BRITISH PM Theresa May will this week urge Donald Trump to avoid central London protesters and meet her at her country residence instead.

Britain’s ambassador to Washington DC, Sir Kim Darroch, will present the PM’s plan to the White House for the US President’s first visit to Britain in July.

As well as keeping him away from Downing Street, No10 will also propose he takes tea with the Queen in Windsor Castle instead of Buckingham Palace, reports The Sun.

It is hoped the American leader will not be able to resist being snapped at the site where Prince Harry married Meghan Markle on May 19.

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Theresa May reportedly wants Donald Trump to visit her country residence in case of large protests in London.​


A third out-of-town attraction is also being lined up to entertain Mr Trump — a visit to his hero Winston Churchill’s birthplace, Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire.

The president has told Mrs May he wants to pay homage to the legendary World War II Prime Minister during his three day visit to Britain.

It comes as Mr Trump sent out a tweet for Memorial Day in the US, which commemorates fallen soldiers.

Before laying a wreath at Arlington National Cemetery, Mr Trump tweeted that “those who died for our great country would be very happy and proud at how well our country is doing today”.

Meanwhile, thousands of protesters have vowed to take to London’s streets if Mr Trump comes to the nation’s capital, potentially plunging the visit into a diplomatic disaster.

The trip — from July 12-14 — is seen by Downing Street as very high stakes, as upsetting the volatile property billionaire could lead to another setback in the PM’s strained relations with him.

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Theresa and Philip May hosted Malcolm and Lucy Turnbull at Chequers last month.​


Chequers, Windsor Castle and Blenheim Palace are all on large estates where protesters can be kept away.

All three locations are also west of London, and a short hop from each other in the President’s Marine One helicopter.

A senior British government source told The Sun: “Two proposals are going to be put to the White House by Sir Kim with the PM’s approval — one for a Downing street visit, and one to base it around Chequers.

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Demonstrators protest against US President Donald Trump outside Downing Street in London in 2017.​


“We have full programs for both, but it will be made very clear that we would very much prefer it if the president chooses the Chequers option.”

Talks at the PM’s country retreat in the Buckinghamshire countryside will be sold to Mr Trump as one of the most “presidential” things he could do while in the UK.

A host of US presidents have been there, from Dwight D. Eisenhower to Richard Nixon and George W. Bush, as well as other world dignitaries, including Russian leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

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Theresa May wants to meet Donald Trump away from the British Houses of Parliament.​


A military component to Mr Trump’s visit to cement the Transatlantic security alliance is also being planned for the Friday, after dinner with Mrs May on Thursday night and a round of golf in Scotland with a celebrity on Saturday.

It is expected to involve a joint inspection with the PM of the RAF’s brand new US-made F-35B Lightning jets, or a visit to the giant new HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier, moored in Portsmouth.

An earlier plan for her to take him to GCHQ’s famous “doughnut” HQ in Cheltenham has now been scrapped.

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Theresa May and Donald Trump next to a bust of his hero, former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.​


London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who has fought a running feud with Mr Trump, told him he will see that “Londoners hold their liberal values of freedom of speech very dear” if he comes to the capital.

http://www.news.com.au/world/europe...s/news-story/55d05782008bb1c857acee43edbf3cfd
 
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U.K. Plans Show of Special Forces, Black-Tie Dinner for President Trump
By Kitty Donaldson and Jess Shankleman | July 11, 2018



President Donald Trump will watch a demonstration of how British and U.S. special forces would jointly tackle a terrorist attack during his visit to the U.K., as Prime Minister Theresa May seeks to reinforce the idea of a special military alliance between the two countries.

Trump arrives Thursday after a NATO summit in which he suggested other Western nations double their arms budgets to 4 percent of gross domestic product. After leaving the U.K., Trump will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki -- with whom Britain has a strained relationship following the poisoning of a double agent and subsequent murder of a civilian who later ingested the same nerve agent.

By virtue of NATO leaders being sat in alphabetical order of their countries, Trump and May -- who have also had an awkward relationship -- spent over three hours sitting next to each other during a meeting and dinner at the summit in Brussels on Wednesday. At the meal, May said she welcomes Trump’s meeting with Putin, as communication between the U.S. and Russia is “key to managing the risks of confrontation.”

When he arrives, Trump will be taken to Blenheim Palace, the 300-year-old birthplace of World War II leader Winston Churchill. Tuxedo-clad government ministers and representatives of fund managers BlackRock Inc and Blackstone Group LP, as well as Arup Ltd and drinks manufacturer Diageo Plc, will join him for a dinner of Scottish salmon, beef and strawberries and clotted cream ice-cream to discuss post-Brexit trade.

On Friday, Trump will meet May and her newly-appointed Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt at the prime minister’s countryside retreat, Chequers. Over Dover sole, lamb and lemon meringue pie, the leaders will discuss Russia, trade, Brexit and the Middle East.

“There is no stronger alliance than that of our special relationship with the U.S. and there will be no alliance more important in the years ahead,” May said in a statement ahead of the visit. “This week we have an opportunity to deepen this unique trading relationship and begin discussions about how we will forge a strengthened, ambitious and future-proof trade partnership.”

Later, Trump will take afternoon tea with Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle, a family home to the royals for 1,000 years -- part of a tour of prime real estate designed to keep him away from protesters.

Separately his wife, Melania, will visit war veterans and schoolchildren in a London visit accompanied by Philip May, the prime minister’s husband.

As she does so, a giant helium-filled, baby-shaped effigy of the president will be inflated in front of Parliament, as nationwide protests take place against Trump’s perceived racism, sexism and foreign policy.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-of-special-forces-black-tie-dinner-for-trump
 
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Thousands joined Trump protest as US leader played golf in Scotland



Thousands took to the streets of Edinburgh in a third day of protests against Donald Trump's UK visit.

They demonstrated as the US president played golf during a visit to his Turnberry resort on the Ayrshire coast.

Mr Trump is in Scotland on a private visit with his family ahead of a summit with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki.

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No protesters were arrested in Scotland, but the Met Police said 12 people were detained following pro-Trump processions in London.

During his Saturday afternoon golf game he was booed by demonstrators gathered at the perimeter of the Turnberry complex.

Earlier, Police Scotland confirmed that they were investigating how a paraglider was able to fly over the resort hotel with a banner criticising Mr Trump.

The president's visit to Scotland has been accompanied by a major security operation.

Police snipers are positioned on tiers of temporary scaffolding overlooking the golf course, with a large number of other officers patrolling the grounds and surrounding area.

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Mr Trump travelled north of the border for the weekend after meeting Prime Minister Theresa May at Chequers and The Queen at Windsor on Friday.

Speaking after talks with Mrs May, the president said a US-UK trade deal "will absolutely be possible". That came just hours after he told The Sun Theresa May's Brexit plan could kill an agreement.

Mr Trump has often spoken of his love for Scotland and its people and had been a regular visitor to the country for many years, but this is his first trip since becoming the US leader.

Secretary of State for Scotland David Mundell greeted Mr Trump after his Air Force One jet landed at Prestwick Airport in Scotland on Friday evening.

The American president did not meet Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, however, she denied she had refused to see him.

At a gay pride event in Glasgow on Saturday, she told the BBC: "If the opportunity arises to meet the president I will do that and I'm sure if the opportunity arises in the future we will have lots to talk about, including the close and very important links between our two countries.

"In democracies, it's also important to be able to focus also on where we perhaps disagree, and lots of people disagree with the policies of the Trump administration."

While Mr Trump was at Turnberry, police estimated that about 9,000 protesters walked from the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh to the Meadows for a "carnival of resistance".

The event featured the giant Trump Baby balloon, which was banned from both Turnberry and Holyrood.

Tens of thousands of people - organisers claim up to 250,000 - protested in London on Friday against Mr Trump's UK visit.

Demonstrators also filled George Square in Glasgow ahead of his arrival in Scotland.

However, the UK government's International Trade Secretary Liam Fox told the BBC that the anti-Trump campaigners were "an embarrassment to themselves".

He believed that the large scale protests in London and other cities "did not reflect the genuine good manners and hospitality of the British people".

As well as the protests in Edinburgh and at Turnberry, there were supporters of Mr Trump at London's "Welcome Trump" and "Free Tommy Robinson" processions.

English right-wing activist Robison is currently serving a 13 month jail sentence for potentially prejudicing a court case.

The Met Police said that there were clashes during those processions and 12 people were arrested for a range of alleged crimes, including violent disorder, assault and and public order offences.

Mr Trump - whose mother was Scottish - and members of his family are spending the weekend at the hotel he bought in 2014 before departing on Sunday for the meeting with Russian leader Mr Putin in Finland the following day.

The paraglider stunt, which happened shortly after Mr Trump and his entourage arrived at Turnberry, was reportedly staged by Greenpeace.

Ben Stewart, a spokesman for the organisation, told the BBC: "It wasn't dangerous at all. We let the police know about 10 or 15 minutes before that we were coming in.

"We phoned them, we had someone on the police line who informed them. We thought it was important that the president actually saw a real-life protester.

"There's tens, maybe hundreds of thousands of people on the streets around the UK."

The police said no arrest had been made.

Police insisted they wanted to strike a balance between "protection and public safety and the public's right to peacefully protest".

However, Assistant Chief Constable Mark Williams said officers were committed to tracing the person who flew the aircraft.

He added: "There are armed assets protecting the president - both from the US Secret Service and ourselves and the Met Police, who offer a close protection function as well.

"And there's no doubt anybody who breaches security around him puts themselves in grave danger.

"On this occasion we could assess the situation and we realised there was no direct threat to the president however it's absolutely something that is very serious."

As well as playing host to one of the world's most powerful men, Turnberry was the venue for a wedding on Saturday afternoon.

It is understood that the bride and groom - as well as their guests and the humanist celebrant who conducted the service - had to be security checked ahead of their big day.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-44829539
 
London mayor Sadiq Khan says Donald Trump is 'not in the same class' as previous presidents who were given state visits

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The London Mayor reignited his feud with Trump yesterday, saying that while we should have a 'close relationship' with the U.S., there should not be a state banquet.

Speaking on LBC radio, he said: 'History tells us only two presidents have had a state visit. I think President Trump is certainly not in the same class as those two.'

George W. Bush visited the UK in 2003, and Barack Obama made the trip in 2011.

He also blasted the American leader for his treatment of women, saying it gives a 'green light' to sex pests, and added he would refuse to attend a state banquet.

Mr Khan, who allowed a 'Trump Blimp' portraying the president as a baby to fly in London during the president's visit last summer, was asked about Trump's treatment of women during the show.

He replied: 'The impression is given you can get away with it, it's like a get out of jail card.

'There's a boasting and bragging, it's almost a green light for others to behave badly.'

And he urged Theresa May to tell the president when she disagrees with his behaviour.

'We're their closest mates, that give us a responsibility to call people out,' the London mayor said.

'We should say to President Trump when he's here - listen, we may have a special relationship, we may agree on most things but I think you're wrong on A, B, C, D, E.

'The Prime Minister has an opportunity to meet President Trump and she can use the opportunity to call him out on some of these things.'

The stormy relationship between the American leader and the London Mayor ran into fresh trouble last July when Mr Trump accused him of failing to stop a wave of terror attacks.

And Mr Khan was criticised for letting an offensive blimp depicting the US President as a baby fly over Parliament Square when Mr Trump was on his controversial visit.

But speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show at the time, Mr Khan defended giving the green light to the controversial protest saying he was not going to curb free speech.

He was quizzed over whether he thinks Mr Trump has launched a volley of attacks on him because he is Muslim.

Mr Khan said: 'That's for President Trump... I didn't start this feud, it takes two to tango. He is the president who tweets about me voluntarily.'

He said that while he does not personally think Mr Trump is racist, he can understand why others do after he reweeted fake anti-Muslim propaganda posted by the far-right group Britain First.

He said: 'When you amplify messages of hate, when you use the language that President Trump does in relation to immigrants, infestation is I think the word he used, (you) can understand why people draw the conclusion that he's racist.'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...s-previous-presidents-given-state-visits.html
 
He was right about the Germany incident. What disgusting disrespect that was. Imagine if that were white tourists in a foreign land.. IT WOULD STILL BE TALKED ABOUT EVERY DAY lol. Seriously, is that not true? It would have been a #neverforget hashtag. Mass rapes in the country that let you in and gave you money? Dude, if you're a lefty, you have to understand that the reaction still should have probably been worse than what it was.
 
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