When it comes to calling out the Biden regime, we must sometimes take a look at the smaller things just as much as we look at the bigger picture.

While Biden can, and should, be mercilessly attacked for his egregious overseas failures, his deliberate efforts to flood the country with illegal aliens, and his actions that have crashed the economy, we must also call out the finer details of his very messaging, even when it comes to seemingly innocuous things such as Veterans Day.

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As Biden offers up empty words of praise for a military that he has actively weakened with divisive, woke practices, and humiliated with such embarrassing failures as the Afghanistan withdrawal, President Trump offered up a Veterans Day message that carried with it the patriotism deserving of the day, and respect that the military deserves on a regular basis.

We cannot forget that, most simply, Biden and his cronies hate the United States. Donald Trump loves America, and that is why he must be returned to the White House as soon as possible.

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Trump’s Veterans Day Message Was Quite Different From Biden’s

Jack Phillips

Quick - Do This Before Biden “Fixes” Your Retirement Plan Next …

The current and former president released separate comments on the holiday.

President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump released differing messages on Nov. 11, Veterans Day.

“Today, we honor the story of our veterans—the story of our nation at its best,” President Biden wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. “On Veterans Day, let’s recommit to fulfilling our one sacred obligation as a nation: to prepare those we send into harm’s way and care for them and their families when they come home.”

In a Veterans Day speech at the Memorial Amphitheater in Arlington National Cemetery, he highlighted “those who have always, always kept the light of liberty shining bright across the world,” while making reference to his late son, Beau, who was deployed to Iraq about 15 years ago.

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“We come together today to once again honor the generations of Americans who stood on the front lines of freedom. … to once again bear witness to the great deeds of a noble few who risked everything, everything, to give us a better future,” President Biden said.

During the event, the president was joined by First Lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, second gentleman Douglas Emhoff, and several members of his Cabinet.

On Nov. 11, President Biden announced that military veterans who were exposed to toxins could be able to enroll in no-cost health care starting next year.

President Trump marked Veterans Day with a message on his Truth Social social media platform that read, “To our heroic veterans, I am grateful for your service to our country and honored to wish you a Happy Veterans Day.”

He added that there’s “no greater act of selfless service than defending America’s God-given freedoms and liberty.”

Hours later, he wrote a message on the platform noting, “[In] honor of our great veterans on Veterans Day, we pledge to you that we will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists, and radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country.”

They will “do anything possible, whether legally or illegally, to destroy America, and the American dream,” wrote President Trump, who was later seen at a UFC fight in New York on Nov. 11.

“The threat from outside forces is far less sinister, dangerous, and grave, than the threat from within,” he wrote. “Despite the hatred and anger of the radical left lunatics who want to destroy our country, we will make America great again!”

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Two Republican presidential candidates issued Veterans Day messages to underscore their military ties.

“Proud of my veteran Michael Haley and the many men and women who have served to defend our freedoms,” former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley posted on X, along with a photo of her husband, Michael, a National Guard officer.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a former judge advocate general (JAG), sent his thanks to “all who have worn the cloth of our country,” and added, “As a veteran myself, I am honored by the unwavering support we receive. I will always have the backs of our vets.”

Nov. 11, once known as Armistice Day, is the anniversary of the armistice that ended World War I in 1918.

The first celebration that used the term Veterans Day occurred in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1947, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. World War II veteran Raymond Weeks had set up a “National Veterans Day,” which included a parade and other events to honor veterans. It was held on Nov. 11.

“In 1954, after the return of service personnel from both World War II and the Korean War, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a bill rededicating Nov. 11 as Veterans Day, encouraging Americans to commit themselves to the cause of peace and to honor America’s veterans for their courage, honor, patriotism, and sacrifice,” according to the National World War I Museum.

Read the original article at The Epoch Times