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Feb. 19, 2021 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
08:09
Trump: Still the Most Hated Man in America
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Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance.
Donald Trump is the most hated man in America.
He could even be the most hated man in American history.
I don't think even Benedict Arnold got the treatment the president gets.
How's this for Trump-hating?
The day after the 2018 midterm elections, the four top Trending op-ed pieces in the Washington Post had the following headlines.
Trump freaks out after the election and ousts Sessions.
Trump is leaving a trail of ruin behind him.
Trump's rambling, angry news conference shows he ignored the message voters sent him.
Trump just reminded us he's still a dangerous authoritarian who will burn it all down.
So you see, he freaks out.
He's leaving a trail of ruin.
He's rambling and angry.
He's going to burn it all down.
What is it about the president that makes the Washington Post fraud at the mouth like that?
Well, we get a pretty clear idea from the op-ed that tells us Mr. Trump is a dangerous, pyromaniac authoritarian.
Regular Post columnist Greg Sargent writes that the day after the midterms, a black reporter named Yamiche Alcindor asked the president what he meant the other day when he called himself a nationalist.
She wanted to know if he isn't really a white nationalist.
Mr. Trump got angry and said that was a terrible question, a racist question.
Well, Mr. Sargent then wrote something I had to read several times before I could understand it, and I quote, One shudders to imagine the message that white nationalists and alt-right groups will take from the spectacle of the President of the United States dressing down a black reporter's question about his white nationalism as racist.
Well, I think what Mr. Sargent is trying to say is that we so-called racists were supposed to have gotten all excited because the President got angry at a black reporter and called her question racist.
Why would we get excited about that?
We're supposed to get some kind of racist thrill because the president got angry at a black person?
This Greg Sargent must be an idiot.
The president got angry because, as he explained, he is a nationalist who loves America, and he's sick of false accusations.
He called the question racist.
Because when a black reporter calls him a white nationalist, it is an anti-white racial insult.
Now, white nationalists might have been excited if the president had said, yeah, I'm a white nationalist, but he isn't, and so he didn't.
Now, Mr. Sargent continued, and I quote, These groups, meaning people like me, I suppose, Are already emboldened by the ongoing mainstreaming of their views at the hands of Trump and others.
More WAPO idiocy.
The media love to say this, but white advocates aren't emboldened by Donald Trump.
We were telling the truth long before he came along, and we'll be doing it long after he's gone.
I've never even heard of anyone who thinks, Wow!
Thanks to Donald Trump, I can now finally say that I'd rather the country stayed white.
But you see, it's all part of making Donald Trump the most hated man in America to claim that he's a closet kluxer.
And it's only on account of him that people like me have been emboldened.
Well, Mr. Sargent winds up by saying that the entire exchange with the black reporter was, quote, an extraordinary act of malicious and destructive intent.
What? There was no intent in Mr. Trump's answer other than to swat away yet another accusation of racism.
But since the left hates him, I guess everything he does is malicious and destructive.
The media continue to write hysterical fantasies about the fascist in the White House, and then they believe what they read in the papers.
The trouble is, other people believe them, too.
Take Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Puerto Rican woman who has just been elected to Congress from the Bronx.
Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, an avowed socialist who wants to abolish ICE, explained that Americans should vote for Democrats because that was how to, quote, defeat the brutal white supremacist forces of anti-Semitism, anti-immigrant nativism,
and racism.
Does she really think that's what Republicans stand for?
At the day after the midterms, there was a Vox article called How White Supremacist Candidates Fared in 2018.
Now, after a grisly list of people you've never heard of who lost, Vox listed the white supremacists who won.
There was House Majority Whip.
Steve Scalise.
He's been in Congress for 10 years practicing white supremacy.
And then Steve King of Iowa, who has been perfecting his white supremacy in Congress for 15 years.
I'm sure the two of them will invite me to a cross burning on the Capitol lawn because, you see, they've been emboldened by Donald Trump.
Now, Vox tells us that another white supremacist who won is Ron DeSantis, who beat a black challenger for governor of Florida.
Look him up.
You'll see how utterly harmless he is.
The idea that these people are white supremacists is cuckoo, but it's all over the place.
Columnist Max Boot used to call himself a conservative, but now he believes in white privilege and male privilege.
He says that this election, and I quote, You see, Trump, the great Satan,
has kidnapped the GOP and spirited it back to the days of George Wallace and Lester Maddox.
But here's what may be the craziest I hate Trump story of all.
Patrick Stein.
Is a lunatic white man who has just been convicted of thinking he was going to save America by trying to blow up an apartment building in Kansas that was full of Somalis.
Well, just last week, his lawyers asked for a light sentence because, you see, he couldn't really help it.
He was egged on by Donald Trump.
Well, the feds started investigating this lunatic nine months before Mr. Trump was even elected president.
But Mr. Stein's lawyers say that Mr. Trump's campaign was, and I quote, violent, awful, hateful, and contentious.
And this pushed the goofball over the edge.
Right, I distinctly remember candidate Trump saying we absolutely have to blow up Somalis.
Well then, just this week, GQ, the magazine for men who love fancy clothes, ran an article with this title.
The midterm election is a referendum on the GOP's white nationalism.
What? About 110 million people voted in the midterm, and an awful lot of them voted GOP.
Are there really 50 million white nationalists in America?
If there are, of course, it's Trump's fault.
But this kind of crazy talk might just turn more of us into white nationalists.
I didn't know the president...
The House Majority Whip and the Governor of Florida were all white nationalists?
You know, I kind of like those guys.
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