

There is a 'loser' here, but it is not anyone buried in Normandy. Even as sons of a president, born into privilege, they understood they had an equal obligation to serve this great nation. In a tweet last night, he wrote, “My great grandfather Theodore Roosevelt jr (and his brother) are buried in Normandy. One person deeply troubled by the reporting is Ted Roosevelt V, the great grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th President of the United States. There is nobody that respects them more.” He added, “What animal would say such a thing?” Roosevelt, generally considered the oldest man to hit the beaches on D-Day, at age 56, died of a heart attack late on July 12, 1944. The Georgian style home was designed to Ted and Eleanor Roosevelt’s satisfaction by their son-in-law. “And I would be willing to swear on anything that I never said that about our fallen heroes. (Ted) and his wife Eleanor Alexander Roosevelt built the house they called Old Orchard in 1937-1938 on four acres of land purchased from Ted’s mother in the Sagamore Hill apple orchard. Trump shouted above the noise of the plane’s engines.

The reporting has been met with shock and anger by many, and was vehemently denied by the president, who, according to the New York Times told reporters on Air Force One: “If people really exist that would have said that, they’re lowlifes and they’re liars,” Mr. A bombshell report, published yesterday in The Atlantic, details firsthand accounts that in 2018, President Donald Trump chose not to visit an American military cemetery in France, saying “Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers." He later "referred to the more than 1,800 marines who lost their lives at Belleau Wood as 'suckers' for getting killed."
