ITS Tieme: The ex-political editor has 6 forceful questions about the health of the triumphs
The journalist Garrett Graff, former editor of the Political Magazine, said “is time” that the press begins to ask deeper questions about the health of President Donald Trump.
Graff said that his column did not intend to light conspiracy theories, both as to “establish obvious evidence” at various points, including some “curious questions” about the bruised hands that the White House has blamed the use and use of aspirin hands.
“There are reasons to believe that there is more than that,” he wrote, pointing out that bruises appear in both hands, not only the one he uses to greet people, and that it is not clear why Trump is taking aspirin given what is publicly known about his health.
But the biggest problem can be the one that has caused a frenzy on social networks in recent days: Trump’s decision to stay in the White House for the holiday and remain absent from the public eye, with only short and limited appearances since last Tuesday, including golf departures on Saturdays, Sunday and Monday.
“Trump takes off for one of his golf resorts the first opportunity that can almost every weekend of the year, and yet he only chooses to spend an extravagant holiday weekend in the White House? Why?” He wrote. “Does your medical team want to keep it closer to the best safe medical facilities?”

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds through Getty Images
He pointed out other recent changes of patterns, including August 22, when Trump wore a hat and without a tie while sitting on his desktop in the oval office, something he almost never does. Everyone who joined him either used a tie, which suggests some coordination.
“At least, I would ask me about what else was happening with Donald Trump on August 22. He wrote.
Graff said journalists need to deepen.
“Place all this, and it is clear that there is enough smoke from the White House to justify at least an important story in an important store that investigates if there is fire,” he wrote.
He added that the same press that now faces questions about how he handled questions about the health of former President Joe Biden should be more willing to “deepen” now.
Trump himself addressed speculation about his health in a publication on social networks during the weekend.
“I never felt better in my life,” Trump wrote.
The publication occurred after days of limited, unusual appearances according to their standards, and followed Trump’s comments that attend their health.
“The president has incredibly good health,” said Vice President JD Vance to USA Today last week. “It has incredible energy.”
Vance said he is “very sure” that Trump will fulfill his full term, but said he is ready to step forward if “God should not” something happens to the president.
Last week, the White House also issued a statement to The Daily Beast for representative Ronny Jackson (Texas Republican), who was Trump’s doctor during his first term, insisting that Trump is the “healthiest president that this nation has seen” and “is mentally and physically more likely than ever.”
Jackson, in 2018, once said that if Trump had eaten healthier, he could live up to 200 years.
And Eric Trump, one of the president’s children, described the media “sick and twisted” due to the health questions of his father.
Trump’s partial absence can come to an end on Tuesday: the White House said the president will make an oval office announcement at 2 pm


