bannon ethno nationalism. he talked about poland, but not poland as a country of democracy and liberty, but a kind of ethno nationalist poland. that s because of the disaster in poland s history. and yes, i think the nationalist right felt empowered in that bannba bann bannonite personality. is trump feeding the ethno nationalism? i thought there was a wild and sometimes rather unreasonable attempt to miscon tr misconstrue it as a white nationalist speech. if you talk about world war ii, i don t think that s necessarily a bad thing in poland, since in many ways poland was the main victim in world war ii. some have empowered this
what you hear, horrible brexit, how could it have happened? the reason is to ask how it would happen not simply blame people for it or say they were lied to. donald trump came to poland, radek, and gave a speech seen, by some people back home, as forming a steve bannon ethno-nationalism. he talked about poland but not as the country of democracy and liberty but a kind of ethno-nationalist poland. he praised us for the warsaw uprising, biggest disaster in poland s history. yes, the nationalist right felt empowered in that bannon-ite ideology, thanks to the president s speech, yes. is trump feeding this ethno-nationalism? i didn t like the speech as much as you, radek. i thought there was a wild and sometimes unreasonable attempt to misconstrue it as a white supremacist speech, you know.
history is not written by the victims, it s written by the victors. history is written by those in power. but during the course of time when those who have been oppressed emerge the positions of power, like women, they begin to re-evaluate the narrative and that s what s happening. 40 years ago, women couldn t say a thing. it was a social norm in that culture to keep quiet and just turn a blind eye. here it is 30, 40 years later. women are empowered, in positions of strength and are now coming out and saying we cannot allow this to continue. i m surprised we even have a conversation about the role of morality in leadership. how can we and me as a pastor even take on the notion that i can be in a position of leadership and have people respect me as a moral leader in a religious context when i put that aside and say, well, it s okay, i can do what i want. pastor burns, how do you answer that? i wanted to be clear as i stated in the last segment, i
empowered by it. you can make the case that saturday was the worst day of the trump presidency. juan: the media heard from mr. trump today and tonight he tweeted, quote: made additional remarks on charlottesville and realized once again that the fake news media will never be satisfied, truly bad people, end quote. what do you think, kimberly? kimberly: look, i think he is frustrated because he knows in his heart who he is. what he stands for, and how he really wanted to focus on the economy and the working men and women across this country who he felt were left behind. he feels personally probably dismayed. and hurt that people would think that this was something that was, you know, in his heart or that he wouldn t condemn. basically this just comes down to communication and making sure that when something like this happens, and you are the president of the united states, that you and your team immediately get out there and do the right thing. i thought what he had to say today
.on the hotel you want. trust this bird s words. tripadvisor. the latest reviews. the lowest prices. juan: back t now to the domestic terror attack in charlottesville. that s how the trump administration referred to it today. the president took a lot of heat over the last 48 hours for the initial response to the violence particularly from some folks in the media. failing to call out clearly the neo nazis, the white supremacists, the ku klux klan members who instigated this violence is a major misstep. not only the man, not the movement but anybody who points their fingers at mexicans and muslims. shared responsibility. the fact is through that campaign he blew all kinds of whistles that those of us who grew up in the jim crow south like i did, recognized immediately it was just calling out to these white supremacists who then felt