President Donald Trump answered critics — including U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May — of his November 29 tweets on Islamic attacks with another tweet urging them to focus on “Radical Islamic Terrorism.”

.@Theresa_May, don’t focus on me, focus on the destructive Radical Islamic Terrorism that is taking place within the United Kingdom. We are doing just fine! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) November 30, 2017

He was responding to the uproar in the United Kingdom following his retweet of three tweets from the “Britain First” group, which is a considered extreme in the United Kingdom.

A spokesman for the prime minister said the group spreads “hateful narratives which peddle lies and stoke tensions.”

The first video showed a Muslim youth being thrown to his death by Islamic activists during 2013 anti-government rioting in Cairo, Egypt. The rioting took place after the military removed Egypt’s Islamic government, which was controlled by the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood. The alleged murderer, Mahmoud Ramadan, was hanged in 2015.

https://twitter.com/JaydaBF/status/935775552102981633

A second video shows a Muslim destroying a Christian statue deemed by Muslims to be a false idol. Islamic law considers Allah to be the only deity and it bars worship of deceased people. That rule applies to people who are regarded as famous Muslims, including Mary, mother of Jesus, who Muslims say was a prophet before the final prophet, Muhammad.

The video ends with the statue-smashing Muslim calling for “Takbir,” or an affirmation of Islamic faith. He gets the orthodox response, “Allahu Akbar,” meaning “Allah is greater [than your God],” which also means that Allah is the single deity supreme over all others, including Mary, the mother of Jesus.

https://twitter.com/JaydaBF/status/935805606447013888

The remaining video is widely described as a fake. It shows a Dutch youth — not a Muslim — attacking another Dutch youth. “The perpetrator was not a Muslim, let alone a migrant, but simply a Dutchman,” said a translated statement on the website which published the video.

In the United States, critics slammed Trump for giving the group visibility, but largely ignored Trump’s criticism of intolerant Islam.

Trump’s criticism of Islamic ideas — such as the Islamic claim to supremacy over other religions — was applauded by observers, including Robert Spencer, the author of several best-selling books on Islam and also the operator of the JihadWatch website:

[President Ronald] Reagan had the courage to say to [Soviet leader Mikhail] Gorbachev ‘Tear down this [Berlin] Wall!’ when no-one else dared to challenge the Soviet Union, and Trump is behaving in the same manner… [This] could change the conversation and would bring out in the open the oppression we are not allowed to speak to… [Now] we’re stigmatized and demonized as ‘Islamophobes’ for talking about it.

Under the tenures of Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, official policies treated Islamic terrorism as an aberration of Islam, but not part of Islam.