Trump Snaps at Reporter Over Chicago Crime Question

President Donald Trump delivered a fiery response to a reporter on Thursday after being asked whether he was “trying to go to w*r with Chicago” following the circulation of a controversial meme.

The image, which spread rapidly online, depicted Chicago in flames with a caption that read: “I love the smell of deportations in the morning. Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.” The meme was a reference to Trump’s recent executive order restoring the Pentagon’s original name, the Department of War, replacing its modern title of Department of Defense.

As Trump departed the White House for the U.S. Open in New York City, NBC correspondent Yamiche Alcindor asked if the meme signaled a military-style approach toward the city’s crime issues.

“Are you threatening to go to war with Chicago?” Alcindor pressed.

Trump immediately bristled. “When you say that, darling, that’s fake news,” he shot back, raising his voice. As Alcindor attempted to interrupt, Trump leaned in sharply. “Be quiet, listen! You don’t listen. You never listen. That’s why you’re second-rate. We’re not going to war—we’re gonna clean up our cities. We’re gonna clean them up so they don’t kill five people every weekend. That’s not war, that’s common sense.”

Another reporter asked why Trump was focusing on Chicago when other U.S. cities face higher crime rates. The president countered with statistics.

“Excuse me, do you know how many people were killed in Chicago last weekend? Eight. Do you know how many were killed the week before? Seven. Do you know how many were wounded? Seventy-four people were wounded,” Trump said. “You think there’s worse than that? I don’t think so.”

Trump has hinted for weeks that he may deploy the National Guard to Chicago, citing what he calls the city’s “lawlessness.” In Washington, D.C., his administration went even further last month, assuming direct control of the Metropolitan Police Department.

The president has argued that such moves are necessary to protect communities that he says have been “abandoned by failed leadership.” His critics, however, warn that federal intervention risks escalating tensions and undermining local authority.

For Trump, the clash with reporters underscores his larger messaging: framing violent crime in major Democratic-led cities as a failure of local government and a justification for stronger federal intervention.

Whether Chicago will actually see federal troops on its streets remains uncertain. But one thing is clear—the president intends to keep crime in Chicago at the center of the national conversation, no matter how heated his exchanges with the press may become.

Related Posts

Debt, A Bus, A Miracle

The morning Emily stood up, the universe took note. No thunder cracked, no headlines flashed, yet one small girl in a patched yellow raincoat shifted the balance…

Cut More Than His Hair

The phone call didn’t just interrupt the afternoon; it detonated it. By the time I reached the office, my son was already gone—replaced by a quieter, smaller…

Buried Rank, Broken Silence

The general’s salute hit me like shrapnel I’d thought I’d outrun, tearing thirty quiet years wide open in a single, public breath. I’d come as a father…

I Was Visiting My Brother At Camp Lejeune

I was visiting my brother at Camp Lejeune for Family Day – and when his Gunnery Sergeant looked me up and down and said, “So YOU’RE the…

Bloodlines Against the Ledger

He said my name like a sentence being carried out. The courtroom air vanished, every eye pinned to the judge’s hand as he lifted my military ID…

He Uncuffed A Shoplifter Until He Discovered His Father’s Vietnam Secret And Everything Changed

The Pouch I uncuffed an old criminal, and the second I saw his arm, every sound in the courtroom disappeared. His sleeve had ridden up just enough…