Trump
strategist Steve Bannon has stepped down, and there’s a media frenzy
over it the likes of which hasn’t been seen since Pope Benedict XVI
stepped down. But then, there’s a media
frenzy over everything related to Trump, whether it’s what he said or
didn’t say or shouldn’t have said or should’ve said but didn’t say fast
enough.
Not since the GOP debates where there were 17 candidates have there been so many people on CNN at once who all thought they should be President.
Not since the GOP debates where there were 17 candidates have there been so many people on CNN at once who all thought they should be President.
Bannon has been
slammed by the media since day one for allegedly pushing for Trump to
appeal to white supremacists. If true, that would be scurrilous and
cause for his dismissal. Problem is, the anti-Trump left has so
overplayed the “everyone I disagree with is Hitler” card that the public
has grown weary and skeptical of the charge.
Trump’s opposition is now so strident and deranged that according to them, thinking that mobs shouldn’t tear down and spit on Confederate monuments means you want to bring back slavery.
You think I’m overstating the derangement?
Someone in New Orleans vandalized a statue of Joan of Arc by spray-painting “Take it down” on it. You’d think they’d give her at least a few feminist points for being the first female general. You'd think the liberals would happily call her, “Joan of Arkansas.”
Trump’s opposition is now so strident and deranged that according to them, thinking that mobs shouldn’t tear down and spit on Confederate monuments means you want to bring back slavery.
You think I’m overstating the derangement?
Someone in New Orleans vandalized a statue of Joan of Arc by spray-painting “Take it down” on it. You’d think they’d give her at least a few feminist points for being the first female general. You'd think the liberals would happily call her, “Joan of Arkansas.”
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