whether it was the grift or being the worst thing in the world you can be, a loser. there s a scene in a book where right after the election hope hicks, who was so close to trump comes in and says you know, you have to move on. think about your legacy. and he says to her, paraphrasing, if i m a loser, there is no legacy. and one thing he the president also not thinking about, and i think the hearing is really wisely focussed on this. the people that he was victimizing were his supporters both with the grift and the people who came to washington on january 6th. the video at the end was striking. people repeating the lies they heard from trump. rudy giuliani and elsewhere in their media silo and information silo. that s the true cancer here. that s the true cancer here. the fraud of trump telling the lies over and over again, has created a kanser that continues to spread in american politics. you have a huge group of people voting this year who continue to
her, get the girl in the red dress. that s mob rule. then they knock her down. thinly beat her up because mob rule is totally about assaulting and victimizing someone. we have to start getting tough with these people who need their safe spaces. penalize them, absolutely. harold: straight ahead, black lives matter defense spending $69 on a mansion.
questions as to why, what they ve told the fbi and the government as recently as within the last two years about ghislaine maxwell is so different now and obviously what the defense are arguing is that the death of jeffrey epstein is what made all the difference because suddenly there was all the money available from his estate for them to claim in the compensations fund. i think the big question is why the government, there are many reasons not to have mentioned ghislaine maxwell going back for years and years. as we know sexual crimes are people who have been victimized have great issues talking a their victimizing. what you re talking about is the prospect of reasonable doubt. in the mind of jurors, that s what it s all about. did you hear anything that was
they have, over the last since the 60s, gained enormous power, the power of the american laughter really is grounded in race.. in the idea of america as a victimizing, oppressive nation, and that they then cast themselves as our redeemer is. they are going to lift us out of this shame, and as such, they need the power to socially engineer without worrying about whether they are being civilized or not. jesse: they are preying on white guilt, and i think for the first time in a long time, the race card backfired and didn t work. thank god for that. shelby steele, thank you. thank you. jesse: tony kinnett is the science coordinator at the indianapolis school district in indiana and the author of chalkboard review. you may have seen his video making the rounds on the internet today. in the video, kinnett response to claims from democrats that
they have, over the last since the 60s, gained enormous power, the power of the american laughter really is grounded in race. in the idea of america as a victimizing, oppressive nation, and that they then cast themselves as our redeemer is. they are going to lift us out of this shame, and as such, they need the power to socially engineer without worrying about whether they are being civilized or not. jesse: they are preying on white guilt, and i think for the first time in a long time, the race card backfired and didn t work. thank god for that. shelby steele, thank you. thank you. jesse: tony kennett is the science coordinator at the indianapolis school district in indiana and the author of chalkboard review. you may have seen his video making the rounds on the