Donald Trump hammered Hillary Clinton Sunday for a Democratic National Convention devoid of not only prescriptions to combat radical Islamic terrorism, but even mention of the threat.

“Our country’s a mess. And that’s why when [Hillary] makes the speech, she doesn’t talk about radical Islam,” Trump  said during an interview with George Stephanopoulos on ABC News’ “This Week.” “She doesn’t talk about the problems that we have in this country and throughout the world. Many of the problems, she caused. I mean, she created ISIS with her stupidity and her lack of knowledge with her bad judgment.”

“I think the trouble with ISIS, or with radical Islam, is that its existence … countermands the one-world kumbaya … that the Democrat Party has been ramming down our throats for 30 years.”

Although Democrats squeezed in almost twice as many speakers during their convention as Republicans, barely any time at all was spent addressing radical Islamic terrorism or any Democratic plan to keep Americans from safe from its increasingly global reach.

In fact, the first day of the DNC Convention did not see mention of terrorism or ISIS by even one speaker, despite the increasing death toll of westerners at the hands of savage Jihadists.

“Based on our searches of C-SPAN closed-captioning text, Congressional Quarterly transcripts and other video archiving services, we couldn’t find any speaker who mentioned ‘ISIS,’ ‘Islamic’ ‘terror,’ ‘terrorist,’ or ‘terrorism’ during the first day of the convention,” PolitiFact reported on Tuesday.

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“I think the trouble with ISIS, or with radical Islam, is that its existence, its bare existence, countermands the one-world kumbaya moral relativism and multiculturalism that the Democrat Party has been ramming down our throats for 30 years,” Dr. Sebastian Gorka, the Major General Matthew C. Horner Distinguished Chair of Military Theory at the Marine Corps University, said Friday on Fox News’ “Hannity.” “It’s too much of a smoking gun that disproves the whole argument of cultural equivalency and moral relativism.”

Now that both the DNC and the Republican National Convention have concluded, Trump expressed optimism for how Americans will compare his and Clinton’s platforms moving ahead into the general election.

“Look, I think the Republican convention was great or I wouldn’t have had the bounce that I had,” Trump told Stephanopoulos. “As you said, I had 3 million people more than she had on the final night. She had a Thursday, I had a Thursday, she had a speech, I had a speech, I had 3 million people more than she did. And I had a lot of people. There were a lot of people. I think I had 30 million. They had 27 million. I think we’re going to do very well in this election.”