After staying silent for days following Hurricane Maria’s utter devastation of Puerto Rico, Donald Trump’s initial instinct was to blame the island for its problems, remind the U.S. territory that it owes Wall Street a lot of money, and attack the Mayor of San Juan for stating, factually, that more aid was necessary. So when the president traveled to Puerto Rico last week to prove the haters and losers decrying his total lack of empathy wrong, it wasn’t entirely surprising that his remarks there included more of the same.

During his on-site visit, Trump complained about how much money the disaster was costing him, said the event wasn’t “a real catastrophe like Katrina,” and threw rolls of papers towels into the crowd. Now, just a week after V.P. Mike Pence told the people of P.R., “We will be with you every step of the way,” the president has apparently decided that said “steps” should’ve been wrapped up by now.

To clarify, that‘s the president of the United States (1) doubling down on his claim that, really, the commonwealth brought this on itself; (2) suggesting that, despite the fact that nearly 90 percent of people are still without power and some may be drinking from Superfund sites because they don’t have clean water, the federal government is about ready to wash its hands of the situation; and (3) implying that the people of Puerto Rico are pulling a fast one on him, trying to take advantage to extract more aid than they really need. The House is set to vote Thursday on an aid package that includes roughly $5 billion for Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands—structured, reportedly at Trump’s request, as a loan.

Meanwhile, the death count in Puerto Rico—which Trump has repeatedly bragged about being in the low double-digits—is thought to be roughly ten times the official count.