the united states used much of central america as essentially a giant plantation. tammy: wow, here you have women s lives being ruined. children s lives being ruined. sex trafficking, drugs coming over the border. but it s not such a global issue she says. what s your reaction? first of all, is there a more important issue for any country than whether or not it has, defends and maintain as border? what nation and what sizzles has long endured that failed to protect and defend its own borders? it s fundamental to survival as a country, as a sizzles. civili. secondly what too we think the odds are that she has doors on her homes and locks on those doors? what are the odds that she has a car that she locks that she leaves it at night. this is our country we are talking about. and what about all the people as you mentioned that are raped and brutalized on the journey north?
what the anc was doing, spear of the nation, this is not hamas. the important distinction here is that this these were people who were, you know, sort of living in a giant plantation, you know, bantu stands and the rest of it and the illegitimate government and totalitarian regime. how does one respond to that if one does not pick up a gun? it should be said that i don t think this is a great tactic in the long run. i don t think it was the right tactic. ultimately it didn t work in northern ireland, the church street bombing where there was lots of innocent people killed. but it s not terrorism. these are people waging a war against a government who has waged war upon them. and i think it was a perfectly legitimate struggle. you know, i feel like we have to this notion when we start to say that resistance by taking arms is not the right tactic, it doesn t work, is always articulated from the space of never understanding what it means to be under sustained