With a powerful speech, the president celebrated the anniversary of the nation, which he described as "the most exceptional in history."
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With Mount Rushmore in the background, President Donald Trumpcelebrated the 250th birthday of the United States, calling it the "most exceptional nation that has ever existed," and promised to never allow communism to ruin the country and endanger its freedoms.
"Communism is the greatest threat to our country, including World War I, World War II, Pearl Harbor, or even September 11," Trump commented at the anniversary event held in South Dakota on Friday night. "We are not going to allow this to happen to us. Believe me, we are not going to let it happen, because communism is the enemy of free people."
"Communism is exactly the opposite of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; it is death, tyranny, and the pursuit of evil," Trump summarized.
Trump celebrated the 250th birthday of the USA at Mount Rushmore and promised to stop the advance of communism in the country
A patriotic and anti-communist message
In his speech, President accused extreme left militants -mostly sheltered by the current Democratic Party- of trying to change the ideals of the United States for those of Karl Marx and putting the future of the nation at risk.
"As for those who spread Marxist lies about our heritage, who tell our children that we live on stolen land or that our heroes were oppressors, they are doing something much worse than slandering our past," the president indicated.
“At 250 years, the United States is the oldest republic on Earth,” the president stated. "We are the freest people on Earth. We have the fairest and most enduring Constitution on Earth. We are the strongest and most powerful country on Earth. And by the grace of God, the United States of America is the most successful, most accomplished, and most exceptional nation that has ever existed in the history of mankind," the Republican concluded.
At the end of his speech, Trump stayed at the site to witness a fireworks display with the granite figures of former presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln in the background.
The president celebrated the 250th birthday of the nation