Sell Them on ebay for $10,000, Trump tells People after giving Them Autographs

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Trump tells Hurricane Laura emergency responders to sell his autograph on eBay for $10,000
Donald Trump gestures during a briefing at Lake Charles Fire House as he visits nearby areas damaged by Hurricane Laura in Lake Charles, Louisiana, on 29 August, 2020(REUTERS)

August 29 – Louisiana, after the survey of damages due to Hurricane Laura, the US president Donald Trump told Hurricane Laura emergency responders to sell his autograph on eBay for $10k. Watch the video, below.

https://youtu.be/PZj1W4UlMvk
Video: President Trump tells people to sell his autograph on eBay: You’ll get $10,000

President Donald Trump travelled to Lake Charles, Louisiana, on Saturday to inspect damage from Hurricane Laura and attend a briefing on the impact of the disaster and the federal response.

After taking questions from reporters, the president began signing autographs for some of those in attendance, quipping that they could sell them on eBay that night for $10,000.

After being asked to sign one autograph, Mr Trump sits down and calls over to a group of people near by, saying: “Come here fellas, get over here. I want a little power.”

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Handing an autographed piece of paper to one local official he says: “Sell this on eBay tonight, you’ll get $10,000.” He tells another recipient that he is deliberately not putting his name on as it will be worth more without it.

The visit came on the 15th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, and there was an unexpected parallel to the calamitous response of the George W Bush administration to that catastrophe.

The president told FEMA administrator Pete Gaynor: “You’ve done a helluva job, Pete”, a remark reminiscent of President Bush telling the 2005 head of FEMA, Michael Brown: “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job,” despite the dire situation that had unfolded in New Orleans.

The nine feet surge that did strike the Gulf Coast was highly damaging.

The death toll of the two storms differs greatly as Laura missed more densely populated areas. At present 16 people are confirmed dead; more than half died from carbon monoxide poisoning due to the unsafe operation of mobile generators in the aftermath of the storm.

The first four deaths, including a 14-year-old girl, were caused by trees falling on houses. In comparison, more than 1,800 people died in the wake of Katrina.

Early damage estimates are between $25bn to $30bn, according to analysis by AccuWeather. Katrina holds the record for the most costly hurricane disaster, totalling $160bn after it submerged 80 per cent of New Orleans.https://0248f75f9053e2fb0512982b3e6c5e67.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html?n=0

With Laura, the numbers are still bleak. At least 8,000 homes were destroyed in the hurricane, 14,000 people sought shelter, and more than 500,000 consumers are still without power. At the peak of the outage that number was over 900,000 across three states.

Sell them on Ebay for $10,000