Tom Hanks asked if he is worried about another Trump presidency. Hear his response

I just want to know what it feels like to be here on the 80th. It may be the last of these reunions. I don’t I mean, we if you do the math, if you were say you were 17 years old and you were making your first trip into combat on June 6th of 1944, you do that. Do the math. You’re now 97 years old. that there, here. I mean, the first thing I say to any of the veterans that I happen to made is don’t get up. You know, because, you know, they’re more or less wheelchair, wheelchair bound. But there they are, resplendent in their patches, in their hats, in their caps, in them, and, and the memories and I ponder what these last 80 years have been for them. I want to ask them, what’s the most extraordinary thing you’ve witnessed? Yeah. Since that day. and there’s an awful lot to to take note of. But would any of it have happened if this day had not been? Well, I wonder, you know, since you lead me straight into that question, it’s probably okay. Bar the Cold War, when there wasn’t a raging war in Europe, is probably the most difficult, most existential crisis for everybody since their sacrifice with Russia having invaded Ukraine with a literal raging war in Europe, I never thought there’d be a land war in Europe in my lifetime once again, because it had it proven to be so disastrous for all of humanity. The last time somebody tried that. And it funny how often it comes out of the ego of one human being, one guy, back in the 1930 says, no, I’m going to solve all these problems because I know what what works and what does not work. I, I think, you know, look on the late historian and I’m as opinionated as any not that you’re ever going to come across. But there was this thought that America, particularly America, was lazy, was divided, was undisciplined, that couldn’t get its act together, wouldn’t that would never band together in order just to do the right thing by choice. And when I’m here, I think of a bunch of kids. It was a young force that came here. They were somewhere between if you were 25 years old, they called you pops, or they called you the old Man and they, and then they were they left absolute all, all of the comforts of a very comfortable America, safe America on the other side of the ocean. And they put themselves here for what? because it was the right thing to do. And they were not defending the status quo. They were not, gaining, territory. They’re not here for riches. They were not here to conquer anything. They were really here in order to to to mend the future. If I can coin a word that has just come out in a book that I read not too long ago, that there was an article I want to say in the Bedford newspaper in which on, on the, on the 6th of June, because of the time lag, made it possible for the 6th of June to have this be the headlines. The United States of America and it said, the next 50 years of European history is being decided right now in the in the fields and beaches of Normandy. It was not about everything that had happened prior to 1944. It was actually about what was going to happen in 1954 and 64. I was born in 1956. had D-Day not happened? And that’s not hard to imagine. Here you can look around and we can see the invasion in our mind’s eye. We can see that day, but we can also imagine with a little bit of turn of frame, what if it had not happened? If this had stayed as it had been a conquered territory by the one of the most murderous regimes? There we go. And, there’s a Fedex is delivering my, my, my over lunch right now. what would have been like if, all those that young forces and the Canadians and their English and all the Free French did not come along and said that those people are wrong. Can I ask you something? Because one man is doing it again, Vladimir Putin, that he hasn’t been invited. He was, you know, ten years ago, but this time not. Do you think when you think about it, Americans would do this again? British would do it again. I mean, we’re in the fight of our lives again. Well, yes. You don’t have to go back very far. I can believe as early as 1939 and 1940 and big parts of 1941, there was a huge vocal, section of the United States of America that said, no way Charles Lindbergh led the America First. There were there were literally Nazi Party rallies in Madison Square Garden in which Adolf Hitler and George Washington, their their their images were up on stage at the same time. It wasn’t until, of course, that we were attacked that everybody kind of like, wised up and realized that something very venal was going on in the world. You can’t help but wonder, where would it be right now? And I have absolute 100% faith in the American people and the concept of what is right and what is wrong. And if something as definitive as what happened in Europe back then, I don’t think there’ll be any question that it would take time, but would not be overnight. It would be it would be thought out. It would be, I think, taking into account all the lessons that were learned, what happens when you don’t do it right over a long course? Can I ask you? I walked over there. I looked at the beach. It’s Omaha beach. the the cliffs that those boys had to scale. Then they had to rush, you know, and start to liberate a place they didn’t even know anything about. And as you say, they were so young. You did that film, Saving Private Ryan. I know you’re an actor, but everybody says it’s one of the most realistic depictions of what happened that day. Can you recall what it was like actually filming that and putting yourselves in their boots for that period of time? Well, of course, you know, part of it is glamorous fun, you know? but at the other time, as soon as the cameras started rolling and everything started happening, there was a tactile quality to the confusion. One of the things that happened was the special effects guys would come up and all over the beach were these little red flags. They said, hey, be careful where the little red flags are because there’s explosive charges underneath and it’s going to throw some stuff up. And whatever you do, don’t step over there because that’s a whole air around. It’s going to throw a guy up in the air, and a guy down there is going to be lit on fire. So try to stay away from anything. You put that together and says, well, this is pretty glamorous. Stay at work and what time’s lunch? But then it begins. And the the first thing they did was removed all those red flags. And I realized, you know, something goes right now we are not in any danger at all whatsoever. But the verisimilitude, if I dare use that does that word does put it in a different sort of form. There is a moment when, of course, as actors, we’re just pretending, but there comes a moment where the reason we’re there is to capture the truth as the film, as the as the film rolls. And to be cold, wet, scared and have it be awfully noisy for an awful long time. I remember, when we were, when we were shooting and and by the way, this is one of the reasons Steven Spielberg wanted to make the movie. He said, finally, I’ll be able to do with film technology. I’ll actually be able to capture what happened on Omaha Beach, and here’s why I’m going to do it. First, it’s going to take three weeks, and secondly, it’s going to be every single day. And third, we’re going to have all kinds of stuff going off and forth in between there will make some sort of movie at the same time, we’re trying to load it up with as much authentic, and I wanted to do use the word again, verisimilitude as we can. Okay. That’s our job as filmmakers. It’s also our job as lay historians because for good or for bad, that movie is a document that has to accurately reflect the tenor of that day. And I’d like to think that we did. Yeah. on this day. President Biden is also obviously giving his big speeches, and it’ll all be in the in the cloak of democracy. That’s what we’re defending democracy here. Yeah. And and without mentioning, you know, Donald Trump, he will talk about the stakes for America and for the world. Finally, do you worry about the United States in case in terms of its commitment to democracy and freedom and everything these people died for, if there’s another Trump I think I think there’s always a reason to be worried about the short term. But I look at the longer term of what this what happened. I think there is a there’s a ongoing look, our Constitution says we the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union. That journey to a more perfect union has missteps in it. We know we can. I can catalog them as much as you can. And you’re a professional journalist, and I’m just a guy that makes movies and reads books and a historian and okay, and a late historian. I’ll take that to. Over the long term, however, we inevitably make progress towards, I think that more perfect union. That’s what it. And how does it come about? It comes about because not because of somebody’s narrative of who is right or who is a victim or not. It comes out of the slow melding of the truth. Two of the actual practical life that we end up living. It comes down to the good deed, that is, that is practiced with your neighbor, with your local virtues. And I will always have faith that the United States of America and the Western societies that have adopted more or less the same sort of democracy cannot help but turn towards what is right. And they told us how, they were, kids, by and large, they were well practiced. Some of them, you know, years ago, I actually on the 65th, which is the last time we were here, I happened to have dinner with the great Andy Rooney, who himself was who was a veteran. He flew and he said, oh, come on, they’re not all heroes. Some of them some of them were in the 38th Shoe Repair Battalion. And yet, even if you were in a shoe repair battalion, you know, there were guys if you read Ambrose, there were guys whose job it was. They came to Europe to do one thing and one thing only to take busted weapons and make them workable. Yet to take exploded jeeps cable to get a bunch of parts in order to get them moving again. Those guys lost as much sleep and had as bad teeth from the horrible food that they ate and were as exhausted anybody else was because they woke up every morning, said, what do I have to do in order to further up this cause of of liberation? I’m not going to discount anybody for what they went through at that time, even if all they did was type out very, very important, important papers on a typewriter somewhere. Well, well behind the lines. I go back again to that concept. It was the great communal effort. And periodically in the United States of America, great communal efforts come to be, and they end up changing the world for the people who who take part of that and actually want to end up. I can’t say it enough. I know that probably like a little goody two shoes, but, they do the right thing and they wake up every morning and they think, well, what do I need to do today in order to create that more perfect union that’s always seems to be just slightly out of our grasp. But on the cusp of reality, I like to thank Tom Hanks. Thank you so much.

Actor Tom Hanks sat down with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour as celebrations for the 80th anniversary of D-Day, marking the beginning of the end of World War II, are underway. #CNN #News

29 comments
  1. I love Tom Hanks movies, especially the one's about WW2, but I don't understand why we should ask him about Donald Trump…he couldn't possibly know him any more than we do. Also, we should never put faith in any politician, they're just in it for a paycheck.

  2. 8:11 to 9:11 These words are the first that I have heard that gives me hope that what is happening in America now (and in many other parts of the Democratic World) are just a brief 'Misstep' on our path to a better future & not a foreshadow of the path we are being lead down by those not happy with progress to a more understanding, inclusive & accepting World.

  3. Dont forget the millions we killed in iraq and libia when you celebrate how nobel we are, interpretation of what we are is always positive when written by the winners. I winder what these 95 year olds think of what we have become and our media.

  4. I was friends with a former German paratrooper from World War II. At 19, he was captured in Africa by the British and became a POW in Texas. He told me the scariest part of the war wasn’t being captured but a night in Russia. While having dinner in a local village, partisans came searching for German soldiers. He hid in the cellar as they searched the houses. If caught, they would mutilate them. He also shared that as a child, he was automatically signed up for the Nazi Youth, like thousands of other kids.

    Manfred was a kind man and I believed him to be genuine. After the war, he returned to Germany, which was in ruins. He got married and eventually moved back to the US. After his wife passed away, he was terribly sad and died shortly after. It’s rare to meet someone who fought against us in World War II, especially a German paratrooper. They didn’t jump that many times.

  5. Asked if he was worried about another Trump presidency, Hanks has basically said it'd survive in the long term.
    I would disagree with that. Another Trump presidency would see the constitution as it is now known would be altered by Trump to be unrecognisable into a dictatorship.
    Don't forget that Trump has vowed to terminate and alter the constitution so that he would get what he wants – to be president for life.
    November elections people need to vote for Biden in numbers too big for Trump too steal and rig the vote.
    From a british prospect Trump is dangerous for western democracy.

  6. Love, Gratitude, and Admiration to the D-Day Veterans and all "Greatest Generation" veterans of WW II — including my late Dad.
    I am a combat wounded career military member myself (retired now), and greatly appreciate Tom Hanks "amateur historian" discussion about those killed on D-Day and those who served to save the world. Very well thought out comments. I will take slight issue on the "seeming" criticism of the 50% of the country who DID NOT WANT the U.S. to participate in WW II prior to the U.S. being sneak attacked at Pearl Harbor. The criticism is definitely unduly harsh and perhaps even somewhat illegitimate insofar as it is offered only with the benefit of 50/50 hindsight — after we saw what happened in the war, after we participated in it, and after we saw how the post-war peace unfolded and what became of America. AFTER fighting and winning the war, it's much easier to RETROACTIVELY say that we definitely should have fought and it was bad judgment on the part of the "America First" isolationists to want to stay out of the war. That's facile — yet grossly INCOMPLETE, disingenuous, and unfair after-the-fact "told you so" — analysis for two key reasons:
    1) The isolationist "America First" sentiment was INDEPENDENT of the German-American Bund, despite the fact that the Bund glommed onto the overarching isolationist spirit in the country [the Bund's primary motivation was to advabce Germany, but that was NOT the objective of the wider isolationist movement]. More to the point, the isolationist mindset behaved that way because it GENUINELY BELIEVED ISOLATIONISM was in the BEST INTERESTS of the UNITED STATES of AMERICA — and the USA was the main objective to be served. THEREFORE, the second the U.S. was treacherously attacked by Japan, "America First" didn't evaporate — that was ALWAYS the focus — but the preference for ISOLATIONISM DID EVAPORATE INSTANTLY.
    2) Prior to America actually being attacked, there absolutely WAS a LEGITIMATE BASIS for the people in the U.S. to have an isolationist sentiment. Just 20 years earlier, the U.S. had already come to Europe's rescue to "Make the World Safe for Democracy" the first time in what was SUPPOSED to be "the War to End ALL Wars." American mothers lost several million sons killed or maimed in what everyobe clearly viewed as a "European War" for monarchs and empires seeking to expand their territories and colonies around the world. That war DEMOLISHED the "flower of youth" of an ENTIRE GENERATION in Europe — and cut down a good chunk of American youth as well … and for what? Here the world (primarily Europe, but not exclusively so) was, 20 years later, and it hadn't learned ANYTHING seemingly. So there were A LOT of American mothers (and fathers too — a good percentage of whom were WW I veterans themselves) who said "no way" — NO MORE ENTANGLEMENTS in "European Wars" and NO MORE POINTLESS SACRIFICES of AMERICAN BOYS (because there will always be another war in Europe they felt because Europe couldn't help itself). They genuinely believed (foolishly as it turned out) that the warring Nations would leave the U.S. alone — protected by two vast oceans — if we simply stayed out of it. So the point is that this @50% of the Country that was isolationist was NOT "bad," or "cowardly," or "pro Nazi," or whatever; they simply loved America and so no value in sacrificing another generation of young Americans in a European War that "didn't impact or concern" the U.S. Remember, PRIOR to WW II, the U.S. was NOT YET "the world's policeman" nor were we a "superpower." Parents just wanted their sons left alone.
    Anyway, the thing that truly DOES irritate me, however, is Ammanpour's constant insistence to try to inject her LEFTIST political views into EVERYTHING; she refused to let the interview remain focused on D-Day and the veterans … she had to try to inject "bad Trump; aren't you concerned about the world if he 'gets in again' into the interview" … and disappointingly, Hollywood left-winger Hanks tried to deflect the Q somewhat, yet he still couldn't resist taking the political shot at Trump by saying somethng like "well, there are always SHORT TERM concerns [meninng Trump if he wins the election] but in the long term I have faith in the American People for the most part [meaning after Trump was out]" For cryin' out loud, LEAVE POLITICS OUT OF D-Day CELEBRATIONS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  7. I like Tom Hanks. I wonder if Putin – would have made his move – if Trump were President. We'll never know. We'll soon find out if Trump can resolve this mess. All of this could have been prevented – if the right decisions had been made and spoken about Ukraine and NATO. God Bless the Soldiers that Stormed the Beaches.

  8. Trump couldn't care less about you or America. Narcissistic personality disorder is a mental health condition in which people have an unreasonably high sense of their own importance. They need and seek too much attention and want people to admire them. People with this disorder may lack the ability to understand or care about the feelings of others. That's Trump

    Trump has been, Impeached Indicted, Convicted.

    He also had two sets of books about his properties, Assaulted E. Jean Carol, Used a charity for fraudulent purposes, Set up a bogus school, that was proved to be a fraud, Had his CFO Jailed, Had his lawyers disbarred, Had Advisors were the dirtiest in history.
    That's Trump.

  9. Anyone else remember that they kept swearing up-and-down that if Trump was President, we have war across the world and yet, under the Trump, we actually had a peace. Accord between Israel and the Arab natiunder Trump, we had a greater economy than Biden takes over and I was studying. We went up in war with Russia that they said what happened under Trump? The peace accord the trumpets created by the tour part. And the entire war between Russia and Ukraine was based on the fact that Russia didn't want Ukraine joining the United Nations. So democrats in Biden that we had interfere. Then we find out now that Biden doesn't think you crank should be in the United Nations. So why did we have to get into the war? And start sending all kinds of money to the nation that had been paying off Biden's son and the biden family for years. Or did I just answer my own question.

Leave a Reply