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Trump claims he was unaware that Hitler had made the “poisoning the blood” statements, saying he “never knew that Hitler said it.”

In defense of his use of the phrase “poisoning the blood” to bemoan the effects of immigration on the US, former US President Donald Trump has said that he was not aware that Adolf Hitler had previously used it in his book “Mein Kampf.”

Trump said he did not want to replicate the racist beliefs of the Nazi leader, who maintained that Jewish blood was incompatible with German blood. Trump has used the word several times in recent speeches and interviews.

When Trump used the word, Hugh Hewitt questioned him whether he meant the same thing as Hitler in a Friday radio interview.

“No, and I was unaware that Hitler had said it as well,” Trump said.

Furthermore, I never read Mein Kampf. According to them, I read Mein Kampf. We are dealing with terrible individuals who spread false information. “I have never read Mein Kampf,” he continued.

“I do not know Hitler.”
“Dear, no,” the former president said when asked whether his remarks were motivated by racism.

To begin with, I had no knowledge of Hitler. Hitler is not a pupil of mine. He went on, “I never read his books.

They claim he made a comment about blood. It is a totally different type of remark, and he didn’t express it the way I did either.

Insisting that he was speaking of the threats posed by illegal immigration, Trump said that it was sending in terrorists, criminals, and mentally ill individuals who were “poisoning the blood of our country.”

He said, “They are poisoning the blood of our country.”

“Moreover, I’m not referring to any particular organization, I’ve never read “Mein Kampf,” and my only knowledge of Hitler’s words comes from what I’ve seen in the news. And what I’m saying is completely different from that. They’re flooding in and ruining our nation. We have no clue who these people are or what they stand for, and they are arriving from every continent. Do they come from prisons? Do they come from jails or prisons? And I’ll tell you, a significant portion of those entering are terrorists who are released from jails and mental hospitals. We can’t allow it to happen. and that is contaminating our nation.

“We are contaminating our nation.”
Trump was really referring to “terrorists, criminals, and people from insane asylums crossing the border, which is true since individuals on the terror watchlist and members of transnational gangs have illegally crossed,” according to campaign spokesman Steven Cheung.

Additionally, Trump bemoaned the impact of immigration on the educational system, claiming that classrooms were overflowing with non-English speaking students. They are also filling up our classrooms. We’re overcrowding our school courses with non-native speakers of the language,” he remarked.

“They don’t communicate in our language, and nobody is aware of the situation. No, we are contaminating our nation.

In a September interview with the conservative website The National Pulse, Trump used the phrase “poisoning the blood” for the first time. The previous weekend, he repeated it at a rally in New Hampshire, where he was criticized and likened to Adolf Hitler. He did not back down, either, and a few days later he used it again at an Iowa rally.

Additionally, he released a video message on Thursday on his Truth Social platform, stating, “The blood of our country is being poisoned by illegal immigration.” They are arriving from all around the globe, including psychiatric hospitals and jails. A nation cannot exist without its boundaries and free and fair elections. Restore greatness to America. We will not exist as a country if we do not succeed in 2024. I’m grateful.

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