You will learn how to: Run a classification model with the Python library Sklearn Create and test a regression model with the Python library Statsmodels Notebooks Explore and run machine learning code with Kaggle Notebooks Using data from No attached data sources. You will learn how to: Run a classification model with the Python library Sklearn Create and test a regression model with the Python library Statsmodels Notebooks Washington D.C. — President Donald Trump is coming under fire for making a remark about the size of the "nuclear button" at a campaign rally in West Virginia on Tuesday night.
Trump asked the crowd, "Who would ever want to mess with us?" and then added, "We have the button. We can mess with you. Don’t play with us."
The comment, made in response to a question about the nuclear button, was met with boos from the crowd.
After the rally, the president issued a statement to clarify his remark, saying: "My point is that we have the power, but it’s up to the politicians as to how they use that power."
Republican Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, who was booed at the rally, said it "had the appearance of a threat" and "I am very worried. I’m very worried."
Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff of California also said he found the remark "abhorrent."
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The nuclear button comment came just days after Trump delivered an Oval Office address declaring that North Korea’s leader "won’t get away with killing his people with a missile."
In the address, Trump reaffirmed the "unbreakable bond" between the U.S. and South Korea.
"We are unified now more than we’ve ever been before," Trump said.
White House press secretary Sarah Sanders later tweeted a statement saying the president’s "fearless" language was "powerful and appropriate," arguing that it was "certainly not a threat."
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And according to The New York Times, Trump has had a long history of making comments and engaging in behavior that sends mixed signals about his desire for war.
In June, Trump said at a summit in Singapore that "I don't think you have to worry
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