
"America is respected again as a country. We were not respected with [Joe] Biden. They looked at him falling downstairs every day. Every day, the guy's falling downstairs. Said, it's not our president. We can't have it. I'm very careful, you know, when I walk downstairs, like I'm on stairs, like these stairs, they're very I walk very slowly. Nobody has to set a record. Just try not to fall. Because it doesn't work out well."
"A few of our presidents have fallen and it became a part of their legacy. We don't want that. You have to walk nice and easy. You're not having, you don't have to set any record. Be cool. Be cool when you walk down, but don't, don't bop down the stairs. It's the one thing with Obama, I had zero respect for him as a president, but he would bop down those stairs."
"I've never seen, da-da, da, da. Pop, pop, pop. He'd go down the stairs, wouldn't hold on. I said, it's great. I don't want to do it. I guess I could do it, but eventually bad things are gonna happen. And it only takes once. But he did a lousy job as president. A year ago, we were a dead country. We were dead. This country was going to hell."
An extended tangent at a military gathering centered on the mechanics and optics of walking down stairs, including a comical reenactment of a former president's energetic descent. Frequent references were made to a current president's reported falls and claims that such incidents undermined national respect. Advice emphasized slow, careful stair descent to avoid legacy-damaging accidents. The statements mixed personal anecdote, mockery of past presidents' physical missteps, and broader assertions about national status and recovery, asserting that the country had been failing but was now respected again.
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