agjacent said:
Back on topic:
This means that all his other comments didn't get flagged, and thus had implicit approval from the campaign. So much for those "jokes" "not reflect[ing] the views of President Trump or the campaign." Gonna be tough to sell that one when the campaign thought calling Harris a **** was going to far, but calling Puerto Rico a floating pile of trash wasn't.
If you actually read the article that the tweet references, you can see that the sources used for the article also said many jokes were ad-libbed and were thus not 'implicitly approved by the campaign' as you claim. (By the way, this is a huge issue in society today. There are people that believe everything they see in 140/280 characters of a tweet without even looking at the source material.)
"Those sources insisted that they did not spot the other objectionable lines in Hinchcliffe's speech prior to him delivering it because they were ad-libbed.
Hinchcliffe couldn't be reached for comment."