PHOTO: See some of the ‘fatal terror attacks’ on US, carried out by citizens of Countries not affected by Trump’s executive order on Muslims
The Trump's executive order seems to be selective or it is selective, in the sense that, it favours those countries he has good relationship with (super-rich Muslims and Countries), where he has business interest...
But should President Trump's personal interest override that of the United State or her citizens? ...sometimes I feel, Trump just love to trend on twitter, as he enjoys fiddling with his phone tweeting on irrelevant things...like 'banning is hair cut'....
See the 'small statistics' released by CNN on terror attacks on United State by some of the exempted countries in Trump's executive order on 'Muslims'...
San Bernardino attacks
Farook, 28, was an
American citizen born in Chicago. Malik, 29, was born and raised in Pakistan,
and later lived in Saudi Arabia.
Trump's executive
order bans travel from seven countries -- Libya, Sudan, Yemen, Somalia, Syria,
Iraq and Iran -- but it does not ban travel from residents of Pakistan or Saudi
Arabia.
New York and New Jersey explosions
Ahmad Khan Rahimi
who is being charged for bombing, weapons and attempted in on September
17, 2016, incidents. He is accused of detonating bombs in New Jersey and in New
York's Chelsea neighborhood. The explosion in Chelsea injured 29 people.
Rahimi was born in
Afghanista to the United States in n1995, following several years after
his father arrived seeking asylum. Rahimi became a naturalized US citizen in
2011.
Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting
Omar Mateen, the
man who shot and killed 49 innocent people in a gay nightclub in
Orlando, was an American citizen living in Fort Pierce, Florida. He was born in
New York, and his parents were from Afghanistan.
Boston Marathon bombings
Tamerlan and
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who carried out the Boston Marathon bombings in 2013...
World Trade Center, September 11,
2001
Where 19 persons
hijacked four planes on September 11, 2001, 15 of them hailed from Saudi
Arabia. Two were from the United Arab Emirates, one was from Egypt, and one was
from Lebanon.
None of those
countries is included on the list of banned countries.
data source: cnn.com
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