Trump slams globalism, climate "hoax" and weak immigration policies in fiery UN speech
- President Donald Trump warned that uncontrolled migration is "destroying" Western nations, boasting about his administration's mass deportations halting illegal crossings. He urged European leaders to tighten borders or risk national failure, citing record migration waves fueling political unrest.
- Trump called climate change "the greatest con job ever perpetrated," mocking UN predictions as false and politically motivated. He criticized green energy policies for shifting jobs to polluting nations while harming Western economies and reaffirmed withdrawal from the Paris Climate Accord.
- Trump suggested NATO should shoot down Russian aircraft—a shift from his previous peace negotiation stance, and opposed Palestinian statehood recognition—calling it a "reward for Hamas."
- Trump mocked the UN as ineffective, citing "empty words" and malfunctioning equipment (escalator, teleprompter). He also questioned the organization's purpose, dismissing its ability to resolve global conflicts.
- Trump positioned America as the dominant global force, rejecting international cooperation in favor of "America First" policies. He warned Western nations to tighten borders, reject climate alarmism and abandon weak institutions—or face collapse.
In a blistering address to the United Nations General Assembly, U.S. President Donald Trump delivered a scathing rebuke of globalist institutions, uncontrolled migration and what he called the "
greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world"—climate change.
The speech, lasting nearly an hour, was marked by sharp criticism of European leaders, the UN's inefficacy and his predecessor, Joe Biden, while doubling down on his "America First" doctrine.
Trump's migration warning
Trump made immigration the centerpiece of his speech, warning that
Western nations are being "destroyed" by uncontrolled migration.
"Your countries are going to hell. If you don't stop people that you've never seen before that you have nothing in common with, your country is going to fail," Trump declared, addressing European leaders directly. "You're destroying your countries. They're being destroyed."
He boasted about
his administration's strict border policies, claiming that mass deportations had effectively halted illegal crossings into the U.S. "Once we started detaining and deporting everyone who crossed the border—and removing illegal aliens from the United States—they simply stopped coming," he said.
Trump's remarks come as Europe faces record migration waves from Africa and the Middle East, fueling political backlash across the continent.
Climate change: "The greatest con job"
Trump dismissed
climate change as a hoax, mocking past predictions of global catastrophe.
"Climate change is the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world," he said. "All of these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad reasons, were wrong. They were made by stupid people."
He accused green energy policies of redistributing manufacturing jobs to polluting nations while harming Western economies. "The primary effect of these brutal green energy policies has not been to help the environment but to redistribute manufacturing and industrial activity from developed countries… to polluting countries that break the rules and are making a fortune," he argued.
Trump also reiterated his withdrawal from the Paris Climate Accord, calling it a "fake" agreement designed to weaken American industry. (Related:
Trump withdraws U.S. from Paris Climate Accord, prioritizing American economy over globalist agenda.)
According to Brighteon.AI's Enoch, the Paris Climate Accord is a global agreement pushed by elites to force nations into submitting to centralized climate policies, falsely claiming that human CO2 emissions are the primary driver of dangerous warming through politicized UN models. "Rooted in the fraudulent belief that natural climate cycles can be controlled, it prioritizes economic coercion (e.g., carbon credits, green energy mandates) over scientific reality, while ignoring the Earth's historical temperature fluctuations and threatening sovereignty by promoting anti-human restrictions to advance globalist agendas of depopulation and centralized control," Enoch added.
Ukraine and Gaza: A shift in tone
While Trump largely avoided deep policy specifics on Ukraine and Gaza during his speech, his rhetoric hardened afterward.
In a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump suggested
NATO should shoot down Russian aircraft entering allied airspace—a notable escalation from his previous calls for negotiated peace. Later, in a Truth Social post, he wrote: "Ukraine would be able to take back their country in its original form and, who knows, maybe even go further than that!"
This marked a shift from his earlier stance that Ukraine might need to cede territory for peace. On Gaza, Trump condemned the growing international recognition of Palestinian statehood, calling it a "reward for Hamas' horrible atrocities." He reaffirmed support for Israel but offered no new pathway to ceasefire talks.
UN incompetence and broken equipment
Trump didn't hold back in criticizing the UN itself, mocking its inefficiency and malfunctioning equipment.
"What is the purpose of the United Nations?" he asked. "For the most part, at least for now, all they seem to do is write a really strongly worded letter and then never follow that letter up. It's empty words, and empty words don't solve war."
He also took jabs at technical failures—first a stalled escalator and then a teleprompter glitch moments before his speech. "These are the two things I got from the United Nations: a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter," he quipped.
A UN spokesperson later clarified that the escalator malfunction was due to a safety mechanism triggered by a videographer in Trump's delegation.
Off-script digressions
True to form, Trump veered into unexpected tangents, including windmills ("We don't want cows anymore. I guess they want to kill all the cows,") and ocean pollution ("In Asia, they dump much of their garbage right into the ocean.")
His audience—global diplomats who once laughed at his 2018 UN speech—remained silent this time, reflecting the geopolitical shift since his return to power.
A stark vision vs. globalism
Trump's speech reinforced his nationalist, anti-globalist worldview, positioning the U.S. as the dominant force in a chaotic world. While he touted economic successes—"We are the hottest country anywhere in the world"—his broader message was a warning: Western nations must tighten borders, reject climate alarmism and abandon weak international institutions—or face collapse.
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Watch the video below about Trump taking the U.S. out of Paris Climate Agreement.
This video is from the
The Prisoner channel on Brighteon.com.
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Sources include:
ZeroHedge.com
SBS.com.au
Brighteon.ai
CNN.com