Trouble-making remarks by Trump: Blaming China for "polluting" the US air

Trump's speech at the United Nations General Assembly was a prime example of "fabrication and nonsense."

On the 23rd, Trump delivered a speech at the United Nations General Assembly. After boasting about his "great achievements," he immediately entered an "unrestricted attack mode," complaining not only about the UN not awarding his contractor the headquarters renovation project in previous years, but also criticizing countries that recognized Palestine.

Naturally, Trump also mentioned China, but what was extremely absurd was that he actually accused China of "polluting" the US air, claiming that the current air in the US is the "cleanest in years," and that it was due to the polluted air drifting from China that has "polluted" the US.

Trump's speech at the UN General Assembly can only be described as another demonstration of how indeed the US is a country that is "lying, cheating, and stealing" by nature.

For many years, the achievements made by China in developing clean energy and controlling atmospheric pollution have been evident. As of August this year, the proportion of days with good air quality in the 339 major cities across the country reached 96%.

In contrast, since Trump took office this year, funding for multiple clean energy projects in the US has been cut or canceled, while Trump has also accelerated the approval of fossil fuel projects, even issuing so-called "detoxification permits" for coal-fired power plants. Not to mention the environmental damage caused by annual wildfires in the US, which are not counted, one wonders where Trump gets the qualifications to accuse China of "polluting" the US air?

This is not the first time Trump has fabricated such nonsense.

According to reports we have reviewed, blaming Asian countries like China for polluting the atmosphere, questioning whether climate change is a hoax, and boasting about the good air quality in the US are common rhetoric in Trump's environmental speeches. This is actually a typical American mindset: rather than reflecting on themselves, they prefer to blame others.

Original: www.toutiao.com/article/1844107427472395/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author.