On Saturday, a gunman opened fire in a Pittsburgh synagogue, massacring 11 people. The shooter said he was motivated by his belief in a conspiracy theory: a Jewish financier, the gunman said, is paying for an “invasion” of Central American migrants seeking refuge in the United States.
Two days after the attack, Donald Trump publicly endorsed — twice — the idea of a migrant “invasion,” and four days after the attack, the president lent credence to the idea of a Jewish financier. This was the exchange between Trump and a reporter during a brief White House Q&A yesterday afternoon:
Q: Do you think somebody is funding the caravan? Do you think somebody is paying for the caravan?
TRUMP: I wouldn’t be surprised. I wouldn’t be surprised.
Q: George Soros? Who’s paying for it?
TRUMP: I don’t know who. But I wouldn’t be surprised. A lot of people say yes.
We’re left with the painful realization that the sitting president of the United States has now offered at least some public support for the exact conspiracy theory — for which there is no evidence — that drove a madman to commit the deadliest crime against Jewish Americans in the nation’s history.
Complicating matters, this isn’t the only way in which Trump has badly screwed up the response to the mass shooting in Pittsburgh.
Ignoring appeals from local officials, the president traveled to the city this week to pay his respects. Yesterday, however, Trump went out of his way to make the visit about him, writing on Twitter, “Melania and I were treated very nicely yesterday in Pittsburgh. The Office of the President was shown great respect on a very sad & solemn day. We were treated so warmly.”









