Hate is hate no matter what group
is spewing it or their reasoning behind their hatred. I do not understand
exactly why there is such clamor about the latest hate movement. It seems to me
that the clashes by white nationalists in Charlottesville, Virginia, are no
worse than the riots caused by members of Black Lives Matter. Both groups are
demonstrating hate for members of a different race and causing division in the
nation.
I suppose that one major difference
is that white people are coming forward condemning the actions of the white nationalists
and no blacks have ever come forward condemning the riots and other troubles
caused by blacks.
Conservative commentator Ben Shapiro
has been one of the most vocal whites to condemn the white nationalists when he
sent out a 12-tweet message. He says that the white nationalists or “so-called `alt-right’
movement [is] a far-right political movement that rejects conservatism and
embraces white nationalism.” He also says that the “alt-right movement” is “evil”
and has “nothing to do with constitutional conservatism.”
According to Shapiro, the mainstream
media is attempting to make people think that the “alt-right” movement is
bigger and more influential than it actually is. He compares the “alt-right”
movement to a “replay of brown shirts vs. reds in Weimar Germany. They’re even
carrying the same flags.” He says that the only way to end this “alt-white”
movement is for everyone, including the White House and media leadership, to
condemn it.
This makes sense to me. However, the
same treatment should be applied to every hate group – white, black, Hispanic,
Muslim, etc. – across the board and in a unified way.
President Donald Trump tweeted his
condemnation the violence that took place in Virginia:
We ALL must be united & condemn all
that hate stands for. There is no place for this kind of violence in America.
Lets come together as one!
I thought that the President sent a
good message. “ALL of us are responsible to end this problem!” However, he was
criticized because he blamed “many sides” did not specifically condemn the
white nationalists and Nazis.
Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee explained on “Fox and Friends Weekend” that there was little more that
the President could have said because there was little information available
when he sent his tweet.
I think it was smart not to jump to a
conclusion. We would have condemned him for that … Look, here’s the fact. No
matter what Donald Trump said, there are going to be people who condemn his
every word, his every action. Nothing will ever satisfy the Trump haters. And
there are a lot of Trump haters within the Republican Party who jumped on him
as well.
Let me just be clear. Donald Trump is no
more responsible for Charlottesville than Barak Obama was personally
responsible for Baltimore and Ferguson.
All Americans are responsible to
eradicate hatred and evil from the United States. Right or left, conservatives
or liberals, we must come together and make it clear that we condemn violence
and racism. We must be unified as Americans.
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