scott, who would not attack something trump said. don t we also have a responsibility to not only not do it but also to say when someone does it, that that s wrong or we disagree with it forthright and not try to kind of pull out punches? absolutely to i agree with you. one of the things that just shocked me early in trump s presidency was when he would use words like deranged and human scum to describe his enemies, enemies of the state. and i m from a generation when we would address our opponents by something like my right honorable opponent. what a what a fall in just the civility of our nation that was introduced by trump. and i don t think anybody can really justify that. i don t think it helps them at all. i agree with you. yeah, it should be renounced and called out. we re at the top of the hour. i just want to underline one final thing here because you brought this up, and i remember when nancy pelosi said that she prayed for donald trump, and he said, oh, that
i was born and bred a racist. and it really took martin luther king jr., and reverend sharpton knows almost everyone who was a civil rights leader in those days was a reverend, and they were appealing to a higher power, and it was martin luther king jr. who actually took that principle of love your enemies and put it into practice. he said i ve got to love the policeman who s hitting me with the billy club, the jail kwhoer s making my life miserable. i have to somehow find a way to that person. we have to start there. he appealed to a higher power. i think that s what we re lacking today, so much you versus me, what side are you on, but we don t have a higher power we can appeal to, which is so different from the dramatic change that took place during the civil rights movement of the 1960s. the recent men oir is titled where the light fell, philip