Trump says his 'rhetoric brings people* together' *racists
expressed before killing nearly two dozen people in El Paso.
“I am concerned for any group of hate, I don’t like it… whether it’s white supremacy or any other kind of supremacy, whether it’s Antifa, whether it’s any group or kind of hate,” Trump told reporters., a man who killed 9 people in Dayton, Ohio.“Meanwhile, the Dayton, Ohio, shooter had a history of supporting political figures like Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and ANTIFA.”August 7, 2019
In El Paso, the killer posted a racist, anti-immigrant manifesto moments before he went on a killing spree in an immigrant community that was a 9-hour drive from his home. In Dayton, there’s no evidence the killer was motivated by his politics. It’s not the first time Trump has attempted to blur these lines in the wake of white nationalist violence. When a white nationalist in Charlottesville drove a car through a crowd of protesters in 2017 and killed Heather Heyer, Trump remarked that the white nationalist rally and counter-protests featured “very fine people on both sides.”
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