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Friday, October 18, 2024
Trump Tries to Rewrite History of Jan. 6 in Campaign’s Final Stretch. (NY Times, October 18, 2024)
"As scarce as truth is, the supply seems greater than the demand." -- ADLAI STEVENSON, JFK's Ambassador to the United Nations, 1963. From The New York Times:
Trump Tries to Rewrite History of Jan. 6 in Campaign’s Final Stretch
Donald J. Trump amplified a conspiracy theory that the federal government had staged the Capitol attack and compared jailed rioters to people of Japanese descent in internment camps.
Donald J. Trump on Friday tried to revise the history of the deadly attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, as new details in the federal prosecution against him were made public by the judge in the case.
His attempt to recast the events of Jan. 6, 2021, came on the same day that he compared his supporters who were arrested, convicted and imprisoned for their actions at the Capitol to the victims of the Japanese internment camps in the United States during World War II. And it followed a recent remark in which Mr. Trump declared Jan. 6 a day of “love.”
The former president made his comments about Jan. 6 and its aftermath at a time when, just weeks before Election Day, uncommitted voters in battleground states tell pollsters that among their top concerns is that they view him as a threat to democracy.
He reposted a meme that a user had originally posted on Thursday, which read: “January 6 will go down in history as the day the government staged a riot to cover up the fact that they certified a fraudulent election.” Those words appeared over two images of people swarming the outside of the Capitol building that day and waving American flags.
Earlier on Friday, on a podcast hosted by the conservative media figure Dan Bongino, Mr. Trump lamented how those arrested in connection with the attack have been treated.
“Why are they still being held?” Mr. Trump told Mr. Bongino. “Nobody’s ever been treated like this. Maybe the Japanese during the Second World War, frankly. They were held, too.”
During that war, people of Japanese descent were among those held in internment camps under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a law Mr. Trump has said he wants to try to use for mass deportations of undocumented immigrants if he returns to the White House.
A Trump campaign spokesman did not respond to an email seeking comment.
Voters mostly look back on Mr. Trump’s actions after the 2020 election as dangerous. Half of likely voters said his actions went so far as to threaten democracy, compared with 44 percent who said he was just exercising his right to contest the election, according to a New York Times/Siena College survey in July.
And in a recent survey from PRRI, a public opinion research firm, 53 percent of Americans — including 17 percent of Republicans — said Mr. Trump had broken the law to try to stay in power after the 2020 election.
It was worse than Hilter's Munich Beer Hall Putsch. You can look that up in the history books...not to be confused with Mike Lindell and Alex Jones books.
It was worse than Hilter's Munich Beer Hall Putsch. You can look that up in the history books...not to be confused with Mike Lindell and Alex Jones books.
ReplyDeleteLet's send fascism down the toilet for at least 4 more years. Vote Harris.. not far right wing mad man.
ReplyDelete