“You’re a shit vice president!” former President Donald Trump said of Kamala Harris at a recent rally. Harris is the vice president of the United States who’s his Democratic opponent in the quickening race to be the next president. “You’re the worst, you know, the worst vice president, Kamala.”

Trump added, “Get the hell out of here!”

And, according to the New York Times, at a dinner with big-money donors recently, Trump said that Harris was “retarded.”

He has also conveyed that assessment of her mental ability – to shouts of approval from his supporters – many times at recent rallies, like the one he’ll hold in Greensboro on Tuesday, Oct. 22.

“She’s a stupid person, a stupid person,” former president Trump said at a recent rally while speaking about Harris.

Trump’s political opponents have criticized his calling Harris a “retarded” “shit vice-president.”

Trump’s opponents argue that, even if one finds her policies unacceptable, Harris is clearly not retarded and they also say that the mere use of the word “retarded” is highly offensive to those who face mental challenges.

However, Trump has never been politically correct in his speech or in his actions, and that is something that his millions of fans love about him – that he’s not afraid in the least to call the vice president of the United States a retarded shit vice president.  He speaks his mind and he doesn’t sound like a normal politician. For Trump’s millions and millions of supporters, it’s a feature, not a bug.

  It’s not known what choice words Trump will have for Harris when he speaks in Greensboro Tuesday night, but it is known that his supporters will be cheering and laughing at whatever insults Trump has for his “stupid and incompetent” opponent.

Thousands of Trump fans and supporters will gather in the Greensboro Coliseum at 1921 W. Gate City Blvd. in Greensboro on Tuesday, Oct. 22 with the hope that the event can help Trump win the critical state of North Carolina and the presidency for a second term.

Greensboro residents and others from all over North Carolina and other states will be enthusiastically showing their support for the Republican nominee when he speaks at the rally, which will start at 7 p.m.

The doors will open at 3 p.m. Tuesday.

The event is free but, if you want to go, you must register for tickets online at https://www.donaldjtrump.com/events.

You can only register for up to two tickets per mobile phone number, and all tickets are available on a first come first serve basis.

With just over two weeks to go until the election, Trump has been turning up the volume on his language at rallies – and he has also been providing more detailed information on the policies that he will enact as president in order to make the country safer, economically healthy and prosperous in other ways as well.

He also pledges to place America’s interests ahead of the interests of foreign countries.

 Earlier in his campaign, Trump focused largely on his efforts to strengthen the border with Mexico and he trumpeted the economic success America saw during the non-COVID years of his first administration. He has promised repeatedly to restore the country to economic health by, among other things, placing large tariffs on products coming into America.

With so much on the line in this election, and North Carolina as a pivotal state, there are a lot of people who are very interested in hearing what the former president will say in Greensboro.

Over the last few weeks, as Trump attempts to close strong in the presidential race, he has announced several new initiatives he will implement soon after he takes office as president.

 For instance, one newly announced policy Trump said he intends to implement is to, if necessary, use the US military to collect and imprison illegal immigrants, and, in some cases, American citizens as well if their actions warrant it.

Trump also said recently the “enemies from within” are in many cases even a greater threat to America than the illegal immigrants who are committing crimes of murder and rape against US citizens, and they are certainly, he said, a greater threat than the Haitian immigrants who Trump says are stealing and eating pet dogs and cats in Springfield, Ohio.

“I think the bigger problem is the enemy from within,” Trump said recently when asked on Fox News about the threat of outside forces wanting to harm the US.  “We have some very bad people. We have some sick people, radical left lunatics. And I think they’re the big — and it should be very easily handled by, if necessary, by National Guard, or if really necessary, by the military.”

Trump has promised to find and punish those people who make up the “enemy within.”

In recent weeks, Trump has provided new details as to how he will, when elected, conquer the enemies from within.

One aspect of the plan calls for pulling a large number of military troops from foreign countries around the world so that they can be put to use keeping America safe.

For instance, they will play a key role in his mass expulsion effort to find, round up, and deport millions of immigrants who came into the country under the Harris and Joe Biden administration – as well as those immigrants who entered illegally under any previous administration including his own.

Another key plank in the platform Trump is running on is that, when police forces around the country are unable or unwilling to address the problem of American citizens or legal immigrants who pose a threat to the country, then the National Guard and the US Military could be used to address the situation.

Other recently announced Trump policies include using federal agencies, such as the Federal Communications Commission and the Justice Department, to keep the country’s airwaves honest and factual and to reign in those who are a threat to peace and safety in the nation’s streets.

For instance, Trump announced this weekend that he wants to see the federal broadcast license for CBS revoked since the network’s flagship news show – 60 minutes – edited a clip of one of Harris’ answers in a televised interview to make her answer sound more coherent than it actually was.

Trump said he was dismayed that the FCC hasn’t already pulled the network’s broadcast license over that incident.

While, under Trump’s plan, the FCC and other federal agencies would be used to prevent news outlets from spreading misinformation to viewers and readers, Trump has also pledged to work closely with the US Justice Department to go after those who have unjustly persecuted himself and others.

 He said the January 6, 2021 protesters who entered the US Capitol building are an example of one group of loyal Americans who are essentially now political prisoners.

Trump has said he plans to pardon those arrested that day, and, this week, he said January 6, 2021 was “a day of love.”

“People have a right to protest,” Trump said of the events of January 6.

While Trump supporters want to see Trump elected so he can put his plans into action and “make America great again,” Trump’s detractors argue that, given the violence of January 6, including the severe beating of law enforcement officers by Trump supporters, it is incorrect to characterize the event as “a day of love.”

Last year, during a speech at a conservative convention, Trump told the crowd, “I am your justice…I am your retribution,” and he vowed to “totally obliterate” the deep state.

However, at that time, he didn’t provide details as to how he would deliver that retribution – as opposed to now, in the closing weeks of the campaign, when he is in fact offering specific details of his plans of action to help fix the country’s troubles.

Trump’s critics claim that, when Trump talks about “obliterating the deep state” and using the military against “the enemies from within,” there is a danger that Trump might use those immense powers and forces at his disposal – such as the military and federal agencies – to get back at his political enemies in the name of personal vengeance, rather than use those powers to advance the country in a positive way, and make America stronger as part of a well-conceived, thoroughly thought-out and effective plan to keep the country safe.

Many Democrats this week were highly critical of the fact that Trump specifically called out California Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff as one of the enemies from within and that Trump called Schiff one of the most dangerous threats to America.

 Trump’s critics argue that Trump wants to go after Schiff largely because Schiff led the congressional investigation that resulted in Trump’s first impeachment – not because Schiff presents an actual danger to American democracy.

Those same critics also argue that the country’s fundamental right of free speech could be put at risk by Trump’s announced policy of using the presidential powers and military forces to go after the “enemies from within,” because, while Trump has announced he will go after those people and groups, so far, the former president hasn’t clearly defined specifically what subsets of American citizens compose that threat.

Once Trump begins using the powers of the legal system, the military and federal agencies to arrest and deport people and go after people in other ways, those actions, critics argue, could result in a perception among Americans that speaking out against Trump’s policies and actions puts themselves in danger merely for stating their opinion.

  Some are concerned that Trump’s promised policies would essentially eliminate the ability to speak freely in America, because, in that environment, people may be fearful that the powerful arms of government will come after them just for speaking in opposition to Trump or criticizing his actions.

Trump supporters, however – like the ones who will pack the Greensboro Coliseum on Tuesday evening – argue that the last four years of the Biden administration have been so catastrophic – and have put the country in such peril of total destruction – that very strong and definitive action must be taken to save it.

They believe that, in some cases, in order to fix the current problems of the nation, it may very well be necessary to do things Trump favors, such as suspending the Constitution of the United States, limiting the speech of citizens and news organizations and rescinding some long-guaranteed rights that citizens and others have held dear in the past, at least temporarily, until the country’s current problems can be brought under control.