New York City Mayor Eric Adams recently appeared on “The View,” where he defended President-elect Donald Trump from an onslaught of criticism from the liberal panel. Following the results of the 2024 presidential election, “The View” and the rest of the mainstream media have lashed out against Trump.
When asked by the liberal panel about Trump’s cabinet pick for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the HHS, Adams indicated that he supports the agenda. “The executives will nominate and bring in those who they believe will move their vision forward, and everything from the fluoride issue, I believe we should have fluoride in the water based on what my experts are telling me, but let’s be clear, we have real problem with our food in our country, and we need to watch what we feed in our children.”
Adams proceeded to outline how “too much hormones” in our food supply are a major concern. “I almost lost my sight with diabetes. The doctor told my wife blind in the air, I was going to lose my fingers and toes, and it was my food. It wasn’t my DNA. It was my dinner,” he said.
After the panel continued criticizing Trump’s intent to shake up the federal government, pointing out that many civil servants will supposedly resign, Adams continued defending Trump. “If we love our country, then no one individual should take us away from our mission. If you dedicated your life to a particular place, I dedicated my life to law enforcement. So if a new commissioner came in that I disagreed with, I was not going to say I’m going to resign,” he said.
Adams maintained that love for the country should trump rhetoric. “Let’s love the country. Let’s love our cities. Let’s get away from the rhetoric of the professionalism that we know those are experts in this. They’re going to look at his proposal, do a real analysis and make these decisions. It happens every day,” he added.
After the panel touted the misleading claim that Trump will weaponize the government and law enforcement against the “enemies within” Adams refused to agree with the assertion. The New York City mayor also shot down the accusation that Trump is a fascist. “No, I defended the rhetoric that we use it across our country, and what our children are listening to, what we’re doing. We’ve reached a point in this country we no longer want to engage in conversation. They were even calling him Hitler. That’s an insult that,” he said.
Adams continued, “That was an insult to the millions of Jews and others who died. We know what Hitler did and what I said to our country when I’m on the streets talking to my young people who are protesting on college campuses wearing Hamas of signs and calling for the destructions of groups. I said, we have to bring down this rhetoric. We have to start engaging in conversation. You know, Obama said it right, and I agree. This is not the divided state. This is the United States. We’re the greatest country on the globe, and people are watching us and calling, name calling.”
Watch Adams below:
Note: The featured image is a screenshot from the embedded video.
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