WATCH: Rep. Buddy Carter Points Out Beautiful Irony as CNN Panel Cries “White Supremacy” and CNN Commentator Whines “Our Family Weren’t Free on the Fourth of July” * The Gateway Pundit * by Jordan Conradson
Rep. Buddy Carter (left), CNN commentator Xochitl Hinojosa (right)
Rep. Buddy Carter (R-GA) on Sunday nuked the victimhood narrative being spewed by leftist CNN panelists as they attempted to credit the Trump Administration with White Supremacy and imply that blacks aren’t safe in America.
The exchange happened while the panel was discussing the likely psyop Patriot Front demonstrations on Capitol Hill on Saturday, which the left-wing media is now propagating as one of the biggest stories from Independence Day.
As The Gateway Pundit reported, host Dana Bash earlier tried to grill Interior Secretary Doug Burgum over the Patriot Front demonstration, which she feigned horror over, and he destroyed her for ignoring the violent leftwingers across the nation and in Washington, DC, while focusing on an irrelevant demonstration that harmed nobody.
“There are protests on the Mall that people say things that I think are irreprehensible about President Trump, and yet they’re allowed to go on because of free speech in our country,” Burgum said. “There are people that are saying death to Israel and death to America. I mean, this is part of free speech in America. They can say it, we can object to it, but it is, it is something that comes with free speech in America.”
It was a convenient time for the psyop to be pushed, giving the left-wing media something to attack in the aftermath of the July 4 celebrations.
Bash brought it up again, this time attempting to back Carter into a corner, asking, "Since you're an elected Republican sitting here, when you see that march, what do you say?"
Carter responded, telling Bash that he doesn't feel it reflects the Republican Party. "I would just not ignore it, but I don't pay that much credence to it," he said.
Then, queue the outrage from CNN's liberal pundits.
Former Kamala Harris communications director Jamal Simmons tied the demonstrations to "the struggle of America," arguing that they represent the "darker part of our soul that exists" in America's history. Laughably, he further claimed he "had to have a conversation" with his children, as if they weren't allowed to be proud of America on the Fourth of July, "because our family weren't free on the Fourth of July."
"Our, literally, ancestors were enslaved on the Fourth of July," he said, implying that his children might be unable to "compete" in unknown future circumstances as if slavery is coming back. "Our kids are strong enough. My kids got—they got it immediately. Our kids are strong enough to understand this. They're big enough. They can do it. And if we want our kids to be stronger and to be able to take care of what's coming that we can't even imagine the world they're going to inherit, we have got to give them all the facts so that they're able to compete."
Shermichael Singleton, a former Trump Administration official, easily debunked Simmons' attempt at victimhood by noting that we literally had a black president, and we have black entrepreneurs, inventors, and creators under a system that "enables us to continue to improve." Not to mention that the system has even given unequal weight to nonwhites through DEI and affirmative action over the years.
Then, former DNC communications director Xochitl Hinojosa claimed that Trump has "emboldened the white supremacists" by pardoning the January 6 Patriots, blaming Trump for the Patriot Front demonstration. "The reason why we have white supremacists marching on the streets of Washington, D.C., is because he pardoned everyone who stormed the Capitol on January 6," she claimed.
But Carter fired back at the race-baiting leftists with perfect irony. "Who is the grandson of a sharecropper? Who is the son of a shift worker in a paper mill? Who is the first one in his extended family to go to college and to graduate, and now he's walking in the halls of Congress? You want to talk about the American dream? I have lived the American dream," he said, slamming the leftists' notion of racism and the racist idea of White Privilege.
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