Instead of helping President Trump unify the nation after the recent mass shootings, Democrats are once again peddling the Charlottesville hoax to further inflame America's divisions.
For two years now, liberals have been brazenly lying about the remarks President Trump made in response to the 2017 Charlottesville tragedy, touting their fabrication as the most convincing evidence available that the president is actually the "White nationalist" they've always claimed.
President Trump explicitly denounced the very people that liberals accuse him of praising, clarifying that "I'm not talking about the Neo-Nazis and the White Nationalists. They should be condemned totally." Note that President Trump uttered those words immediately after referencing "Very fine people." The media insidiously limited the quote to portray Donald Trump as a monster.
Naturally, liberal journalists and Democrat presidential candidates returned to the Charlottesville narrative to bolster yet another round of slanderous attacks on President Trump in response to the tragic shootings this week.
Joe Biden, who launched his presidential campaign with a video based on the Charlottesville deception, brought up the president's Charlottesville comments again in his remarks following the recent shootings, citing them as evidence that we are in a "Battle for the soul of the nation."
Democrats keep returning to the Charlottesville hoax because it's the only piece of so-called evidence they have that President Trump is a racist - and because the compliant mainstream media allow them to get away with their blatant mischaracterization.
Whenever President Trump tries to heal the country and ease tensions, as he's been doing in the wake of the Dayton and El Paso shootings, Democrats use Charlottesville to sow discord and undermine his efforts.
https://townhall.com/columnists/stevecortes/2019/08/16/the-charlottesville-hoax-that-would-not-die-n2551787
For two years now, liberals have been brazenly lying about the remarks President Trump made in response to the 2017 Charlottesville tragedy, touting their fabrication as the most convincing evidence available that the president is actually the "White nationalist" they've always claimed.
President Trump explicitly denounced the very people that liberals accuse him of praising, clarifying that "I'm not talking about the Neo-Nazis and the White Nationalists. They should be condemned totally." Note that President Trump uttered those words immediately after referencing "Very fine people." The media insidiously limited the quote to portray Donald Trump as a monster.
Naturally, liberal journalists and Democrat presidential candidates returned to the Charlottesville narrative to bolster yet another round of slanderous attacks on President Trump in response to the tragic shootings this week.
Joe Biden, who launched his presidential campaign with a video based on the Charlottesville deception, brought up the president's Charlottesville comments again in his remarks following the recent shootings, citing them as evidence that we are in a "Battle for the soul of the nation."
Democrats keep returning to the Charlottesville hoax because it's the only piece of so-called evidence they have that President Trump is a racist - and because the compliant mainstream media allow them to get away with their blatant mischaracterization.
Whenever President Trump tries to heal the country and ease tensions, as he's been doing in the wake of the Dayton and El Paso shootings, Democrats use Charlottesville to sow discord and undermine his efforts.
https://townhall.com/columnists/stevecortes/2019/08/16/the-charlottesville-hoax-that-would-not-die-n2551787
No comments:
Post a Comment