Charlottesville trump
Joe
Biden’s presidential launch has again cast a spotlight on President Trump’s comments
about the 2017 tragedy in Charlottesville trump. And in doing so, it has unearthed a surprising amount
of revisionist history from Trump’s supporters. Trump tries to defend his Charlottesville trump response by praising Robert E. Lee. He claims the 'very
fine people' remark was about people who "felt very strongly about the
monument to Robert E. Lee. A great general, whether you like it or not."
Via Politico. President Trump reverted Tuesday to blaming
both sides for the deadly violence in Charlottesville trump, Va., and at one point questioned whether the movement to pull down
Confederate statues would lead to the desecration of memorials to George
Washington.
Mr. Trump defended those gathered in a Charlottesville trump park to protest the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee. “I’ve
condemned neo-Nazis. I’ve condemned many different groups,” he said. “Not all
of those people were neo-Nazis, believe me. Not all of those people were white
supremacists by any stretch.”
Abandoning his precisely chosen and carefully delivered
condemnations of the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis from a day earlier, the
president furiously stuck by his initial reaction to the unrest in Charlottesville trump. He drew the very moral equivalency for which a bipartisan chorus, and
his own advisers, had already criticized him.
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