JosephZ
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- Mar 25, 2017
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Puerto Ricans in New York City furious over comedian's remarks at Trump rally at MSG
Outrage is building on Monday after Donald Trump's rally at Madison Square Garden on Sunday featured a comic and several other speakers making racist comments.
Approach a Puerto Rican in New York and play the video of Sunday night's incendiary comments about their homeland, then watch the fire ignite.
The joke bombed but the explosive fallout reverberated across the country to the 5-million-plus stateside Puerto Ricans - many of them registered voters - and more than 3-million American citizens on the island.
"He made a calculated error yesterday. Basically he said goodbye to PA. to Pennsylvania..."
"This is about human rights, civil rights, and this is about my people, mother, my grandmother who died after Hurricane Maria. This is about our people who have suffered for way too long," Frankie Miranda, of the Hispanic Federation, said.
José Acevedo, a 48-year-old health worker from San Juan, [said] "What humiliation, what discrimination!" he said early Monday as he waited to catch a public bus to work.
Acevedo said he immediately texted relatives in New York, including an uncle who is a Republican and had planned to vote for Trump.
"He told me that he was going to have to analyze his decision," Acevedo said, adding that his relatives were in shock. "They couldn't believe it."
Outrage is building on Monday after Donald Trump's rally at Madison Square Garden on Sunday featured a comic and several other speakers making racist comments.
Approach a Puerto Rican in New York and play the video of Sunday night's incendiary comments about their homeland, then watch the fire ignite.
The joke bombed but the explosive fallout reverberated across the country to the 5-million-plus stateside Puerto Ricans - many of them registered voters - and more than 3-million American citizens on the island.
"He made a calculated error yesterday. Basically he said goodbye to PA. to Pennsylvania..."
"This is about human rights, civil rights, and this is about my people, mother, my grandmother who died after Hurricane Maria. This is about our people who have suffered for way too long," Frankie Miranda, of the Hispanic Federation, said.
José Acevedo, a 48-year-old health worker from San Juan, [said] "What humiliation, what discrimination!" he said early Monday as he waited to catch a public bus to work.
Acevedo said he immediately texted relatives in New York, including an uncle who is a Republican and had planned to vote for Trump.
"He told me that he was going to have to analyze his decision," Acevedo said, adding that his relatives were in shock. "They couldn't believe it."
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