Twist and Tur: MS NOW 'Journo' Claims Dem James Talarico Took Back ‘God...
Cop Copulating Judge Reprimanded for Cheating in Chambers on the Taxpayer's Dime
Pray for Krystal Ball: Her Husband, Kyle Kulinski, Says ALL Republicans = Pedophiles,...
Erick Erickson on Platner: They Will Run From Him
Ro Khanna Pivots From LA Mayoral Race and Democrat Incumbents to Trump and...
Turley: Rep. Wasserman Schultz Yesterday's News in Democrat Land
Sexting Scandal Just Got Worse: Platner Team Threatened Former Staffer Then Tried to...
Larry Elder Nails Analogous Response to Fox News Headline Screengrab
'WOKE OVERLOAD': Rashida Tlaib Says Women Having Periods Equals Economic Violence and I...
Black Democrat SHREDS Jon Favreau for Defending Platner 'Cuz 'He's a White Man'...
His FACE! LOL! WATCH Democrat Andy Kim Duck, Dodge, and DIVE During CNN...
Dems Are Twisting Themselves Into DESPERATE Pretzels Defending Platner, HERE Are Some of...
What I Read About Platner's Wife AFTER She Defended Her Scumbag Husband Makes...
Just INSANELY Creepy: GUESS Which Democrat Thought Posting His Texts With a 13-YEAR-OLD...
HA! NO WAY? Forget Nazi Tat, Cheering Troops' Deaths & Sexting: THIS May...

'Jaw-dropping': Attempts to put context around Trump's 'both sides' comment on Wikipedia don't last long

As Twitchy reported at the time, President Trump’s first attempt at giving a statement after the demonstrations and counter-protests in Charlottesville that left one woman dead was a mess. He tried again with a teleprompter, and then he gave it a third try, which still struck out with the press and much of the public.

Advertisement

If anything lives on from Trump’s Charlottesville comments, it’s the idea that he claimed there were “very fine people on both sides” — and since there were white supremacists gathered there, he was saying that Nazis were fine people.

Like we said, he fumbled at first, but we’d always taken his “both sides” comment to mean both sides of the argument over whether statues and other Confederate monuments should be taken down or left up for their historical value. (For what it’s worth, Charlottesville decided to throw black tarps over their statues for a while.)

After the horrific mass shooting at two mosques in New Zealand, the subject of white supremacism was in the news, and so was the talking point that Trump had called Nazis “fine people.”

Breitbart’s Joel Pollak has been trying to set the record straight by putting Trump’s words into context, even using the #CharlottesvilleHoax hashtag to call attention to his efforts.

Advertisement

Of course, CNN is never going to retract anything — but people trying to put Trump’s words into context on Wikipedia have found their efforts don’t last long. Scott Adams called it “jaw-dropping.”

Check this out:

Advertisement

Advertisement

Remember when an intern from Democratic Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee’s office used Wikipedia to post the personal information of Republican senators during the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation hearings?

Is it sticking?

Just in case it wasn’t clear in the tweet above, here are the president’s words in context; it would be nice if people could stop taking them out of context and weaponizing them:

Advertisement


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement