So before you find Trump's take below, let's say excessively stringent, bear in mind Trump has to round up all the drug dealers and various other criminals Barry released from prison during his 8-year occupation. These were just a few of the headlines:
...and the list goes on and on.
Once we get the full story on the Clinton-financed Trump dossier with a whole host of co-conspirators he may be booked for a reservation instead of just visiting.
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President Donald Trump speaks at the White House on Friday.
President Donald Trump is pushing for his personal pilot to become the new head of the Federal Aviation Administration, and has talked of the appeal of executing drug dealers, according to a pair of reports by Axios on Sunday.
John Dunkin, who flew Trump on his private Boeing 757 during the presidential campaign, is on the FAA short list, Axios reported. The FAA chairman oversees a $16 billion annual budget and is in charge of all U.S. civil aviation.
A senior administration official told Axios that Dunkin had an impressive interview for the FAA job, and has prior managerial and administrative experience. “He’s on the list because he’s the president’s pilot, but if he gets the job it won’t be because he’s the president’s pilot,” the source said, according to Axios.
In a separate report, Axios cited multiple sources who said Trump has expressed admiration at how countries such as Singapore and China execute drug dealers.
“He often jokes about killing drug dealers... He’ll say, ‘You know the Chinese and Filipinos don’t have a drug problem. They just kill them,’” Axios quoted a source as saying.
In the Philippines, more than 12,000 drug dealers and users have been killed by police and death squads in the past two years under President Rodrigo Duterte, according to Human Rights Watch.
According to the sources, Trump has said drug dealers are as bad as serial killers, and he would love to change U.S. law to have them executed.
While that is unlikely to happen, Axios reported Trump may push for new mandatory-minimum sentences for drug traffickers and take inspiration from parts of Singapore’s “zero-tolerance” policy, such as increased anti-drug education in schools.
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