Trump said he knew how deadly the coronavirus was, but externally “toned down” it – VG



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CONSCIOUS DECEPTIONS: In the forthcoming Washington Post-affiliated Bob Woodward book on Donald Trump, it appears that Trump, in a telephone interview between the two, has said that he deliberately led Americans behind the light. He himself knew how deadly he was. Here’s Trump at an election campaign event in Winston-Salem, North Carolina on Tuesday. Photo: Evan Vucci / AP

“You just breathe air and that’s how it spreads. It is more deadly than severe flu. These are fatal cases,” Trump is said to have said in a telephone conversation with Bob Woodward.

A forthcoming book by journalist Bob Woodward in the Washington Post claims that the President of the United States was already ten days after a top-secret report on the coronavirus in late January, fully aware that the United States was facing a pandemic in line with the Spanish flu in 1918.

Woodward is one of two journalists behind the revelations of the 1974 Watergate scandal.

“Senses”

Woodward’s next book is called “Rage” and touches on topics such as Trump’s handling of the crown pandemic and relations with North Korea, among others. The relationship with former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is also a topic of the book, writes the Washington Post.

The book is based on 18 open telephone interviews Bob Woodward has had with Trump between December 2019 and July this year. Also, Woodward must have had access to “deep background sources.”

Ten days after the briefing in the Oval Room, Trump called Woodward and revealed that he thought the situation was much more dire than what he told the people of the country.

Deliberately minimized the danger

At the same time that he had the knowledge, Trump told the people of the United States, with many listeners around the world, that the coronavirus was no worse than the usual seasonal flu and that it would “go away” immediately.

Trump repeatedly declared that the situation was under control.

In a conversation with Woodward on March 19, Trump is said to have admitted that he deliberately downplayed the danger of the virus in his remarks.

“I always wanted to take it off, I didn’t want to panic,” he told Woodward.

The audio recording of the conversation is available on CNN.

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No management

In the book, Woodward writes that Trump did not seem to want to fully mobilize the government to deal with the pandemic.

“There was no real leadership or initiative to deal with one of the most complex dangers the United States has ever faced,” Woodward wrote, according to the Washington Post article.

In the book, Woodward also addresses the president, the widespread protests in the United States in recent months.

“We’ll get ready to send some of those miserable bastards, who don’t know what they’re doing, these miserable radical leftists to the military and the National Guard,” he said.

During another conversation, he says, according to the book:

“I have done a colossal job for black communities and I honestly don’t feel a special love.”

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Cohen: thinks Trump is going to jail

It’s not just Woodward who writes books about Trump.

This week, Michael Cohen, President Trump’s former personal attorney, published the book “Disleyal: A Memoir,” “fundamental proof” that Trump is guilty of a crime.

A central theme in the book is the so-called secret money of the porn actor Stormy Daniels.

Cohen writes that the payment to Daniels was made at Trump’s request, and that the current US president “knows very well that he is guilty of the same crimes” that led to Cohen’s conviction.

“Without the immunity from prosecution that comes with being president, Trump will undoubtedly face trial in New York State. He will likely be convicted on federal and state charges and receive a severe prison sentence,” Cohen says.

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