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Trump Says Getting The Coronavirus Was A ‘Blessing From God’

The US president spoke of COVID-19 as a "blessing" in a video message from the White House. Coronavirus has killed over 211,000 Americans so far.

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President Donald Trump called it a “blessing from God” that he got coronavirus, a disease that has killed over 211,000 Americans this year.

“I think this was a blessing from God that I caught it,” the president said of COVID-19 in a video message outside the White House on Wednesday.

Trump tested positive for COVID-19 last Thursday and spent three days hospitalised at Walter Reed medical center before returning to the White House on Monday.

The US leads the world with over 7.5 million confirmed coronavirus cases and over 211,000 dead so far.

The president also said he was feeling “great — I feel, like, perfect” and touted his recovery: “For me, I walked in, I didn’t feel good, a short 24 hours later, I was feeling great.”

Trump received top-notch medical care for free, including experimental treatments — something out of reach for most Americans.

Trump has received several forms of treatment, including a polyclonal antibody cocktail from pharmaceutical company Regeneron. He celebrated this treatment as “the key” — though in the video, Trump said, “they gave me Regeneron,” apparently believing that to be the name of the drug, as opposed to the company that produces it.

“To me it wasn’t therapeutic, it just made me better, OK, I call that a cure,” he said. There is currently no cure for coronavirus.

The president has repeatedly downplayed the threat of coronavirus since it began to spread in the US in the spring. Since he himself got coronavirus, he’s continued to do so, tweeting on Monday: “Don’t be afraid of Covid.”

Coronavirus is highly infectious and Trump and over two dozen others surrounding him have tested positive for the virus in recent days after flouting public health guidance by not wearing masks or social distancing. Among those affected by the White House’s COVID-19 outbreak are press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and at least three members of her staff, three Republican senators, and Trump adviser Stephen Miller. Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie remains hospitalised four days after he revealed he tested positive.

Trump is pressing forward with next week’s debate with Democratic nominee Joe Biden, despite not knowing if he’ll still be contagious by then.


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