Army veterinarian Donald Trump, who has been severely burned by the IED in Iraq, has been criticized by critics for using his criticism of the Atlantic as “propaganda” and claiming that the president called the military “suckers” and “losers.”
- Bobby Henline, 49, has been seen using his image by Trump critics on social media.
- Trump has been linked to his post posts on reported ‘lost’ remarks
- Henline, the veteran leader of the army, who was severely beaten, has called for a halt
- He says using it as a political prop is “ridiculous” and unjust
A veteran U.S. military leader on a fourth trip to Iraq has called on Donald Trump’s critics to stop using his similarities to explain the president’s recorded remarks about “losers” and “suckers.”
Bobby Henline, who spent 13 years in the military, was the only survivor of the five soldiers whose vehicle crashed into an IED in April 2007.
Henline, 49, received burns in 40 percent of her body, and her head was burned in the skull. He now works as a comedian and inspirational speaker.
Bobby Henley, 49, has objected to Trump using his image to discuss the ‘suckers’ story against critics.
A Facebook group, Military Veterans vs. Fascism, is one of the users of his photograph.
“Stop using my image,” he told Henline, making the ticket ok speaking against ‘publicity’.
But in the wake of the Sept. 3 Atlantic article controversy, in which Trump was accused of mocking veterans, Henline found that his image was used to display a post about the reported comments.
Said to Fox News, ‘I’m just so annoyed that they put my image there.
‘And they’re using it to sell something they believe in for their agenda.
‘It’s not fair to put us down [veterans] As the props between them all. ‘
He said the use of his image was “ridiculous”, and said he was convinced that Trump had not made him responsible.
Trump has never denied this comment.
Speaking to Fox, Hanley said he did not believe the president said the criticisms were due to him
Henline said: ‘That’s my image. And there should be no speaking for me. ‘
“I really believe the president didn’t say that,” Henley said.
‘They took that well-recognized photo and used it for their agenda and by changing the minds of retirees, it’s ridiculous to think the president is talking to them.
‘And I believe it worked. And that’s why I want to take it down because it doesn’t work.
‘People need to hear the truth. That is my image. And I shouldn’t speak for myself there, ‘
Henline said he was annoyed by being dragged into a political hurricane.
“Go with what you have with the facts,” said Hanley.
“If you don’t have the power to win on your own merits, you have to beat your opponent. There’s a problem.”
Hanley enlisted in the United States Army in 1989 at the age of 17
Henline retired, but re-entered after the 9/11 attacks
After her April 2007 accident, Henley spent two weeks in a medical-induced coma.
A report released by the Atlantic on Thursday, citing four different military sources, claims that Trump canceled a visit to the A Sne-Marne American cemetery near Paris in November 2018 because he was worried his hair would fall out of the rain.
In a conversation with senior staff before the planned visit, Trump asked aides: ‘Why should I go to that cemetery? It is full of losers. ‘
During the same trip, the president later alleged that more than 1,800 Marines, who had lost their lives in the Battle of Bellevue in France, had been killed as “suckers”.
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