Michael Brown spent his Dec. 23 WorldNetDaily column complaining about the “power of the lie”:
Speaking of the hatred that united the Jersey City shooters and the synagogue shooters in Poway and Pittsburgh, Biden then blamed President Trump for this hateful climate.
He said, “After Charlottesville, instead of condemning a naked display of hatred, Trump assigned a moral equivalence between those streaming through the night with torches, chanting anti-Semitic bile – and the courageous neighbors and activists who stood against them. He gave license and safe harbor to white supremacists, Neo-Nazis, and the KKK.”
He continued, “As I said after Charlottesville, we are in a battle for the soul of this nation. And, it’s why I am running for president.”
The only problem is that Trump did not say that “those streaming through the night with torches, chanting anti-Semitic bile” were very fine people.
To the contrary, on Aug. 12, 2017, the day of the Charlottesville protests, he said, “I think there is blame on both sides.
“You had some very bad people in that group” (referring to those protesting the removal of a confederate statue). “But you also had people that were very fine people, on both sides.”
Then, two days later, Trump issued a categorical statement, saying, “Racism is evil and those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including the KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and other hate groups.”
How on earth could anyone get this wrong? And how on earth, now more than two years later, could former Vice President Biden’s claim that, “He gave license and safe harbor to white supremacists, Neo-Nazis, and the KKK”?
Read Trump’s words again; then read Biden’s words again. This is willful misrepresentation.
Not only so, but the next day, on Aug. 15, at a wide-ranging press conference, Trump said again that “we condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry, and violence.”
And in answer to another question, he explained exactly what he meant by the “very fine people.” He said, “You had people in that group that were there to protest the taking down of, to them, a very, very important statue and the renaming of a park from Robert E. Lee to another name.”
That’s who he was talking about.
Well, no. As we pointed out the last time someone claimed this, the group that was protesting the removal of the Confederate statue and Robert E. Lee park renaming was a group calling itself American Warrior Revolution, which considers itself a militia and later effectively blaming liberal counterprotester Heather Heyer for her own death in getting mowed down by a car driven by white supremacist James Fields Jr.
In other words, what Brown is calling the “Charlottesville Lie” isn’t a lie at all. Not that Trump defender Brown will ever admit it:
He could not have made himself clearer. And anyone with an open heart and mind – really, anyone who simply wanted to know the truth – would understand exactly what he was saying.
What is so frightening is that people – millions of people – believe the lie. And they believe it to the point that, if you’re white and you voted for Trump, then you are, by default, a white nationalist, a racist.
Of course, Trump’s cardinal sin was calling out hatred on the left as well as on the right, speaking against both neo-Nazis and antifa.
And, given his comments in the past about Mexicans and Muslims, which were either exaggerated or taken out of context, it was all too easy to create the Charlottesville Lie.
[…]May God help our nation pursue the truth before a web of lies so entangles us that we can no longer find our way out.
Funny, we don’t recall Brown ever holding Trump accountable for the web of lies he has spun over the years.