'Fact checkers' have FINALLY copped to the Charlottesville 'very fine people' hoax
Leftist fact-checking website Snopes has finally admitted that President Donald J.
Trump did not call Neo-Nazis and white supremacists at the ‘Unite the Rally’ in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 “very fine people” and that senior Democrats, including Joe Biden and Chuck Schumer, are lying to this day about what was said.
(Article by Jack Montgomery republished from
TheNationalPulse.com)
Snopes, which is regularly
pressured into changing its fact-check
ratings by the Biden regime, notes that the 81-year-old Democrat “[made] Trump’s comments on Charlottesville a cornerstone of his campaign” and that Senate Majority Leader Schumer has claimed Trump “called white supremacists in Charlottesville ‘very good people.'"
The fact-checkers
admitted that this is a misrepresentation because while Trump did say that some of the people protesting the removal of a statue of General Robert E. Lee were “fine people,” he was explicit that he was “not talking about the Neo-Nazis and the white
nationalists, because they should be condemned totally."
Trump was actually referring to peaceful protesters concerned about historical preservation, as The National Pulse has repeatedly noted.
Snopes’s clarification on Trump’s comments vindicates the former president, who holds it up as a major hoax against him, alongside the
Russiagate hoax and the more recent
bloodbath hoax.
However, Biden has
suggested there are “very fine people on both sides” of the ongoing college campus crisis in the U.S., which has often seen anti-Semitic demonstrators protesting against the
war in Gaza clash with Jewish and pro-Israel counter-demonstrators.
“I condemn the anti-Semitic protests… I also condemn those who don’t understand what’s going on with the Palestinians,” he said in April, amid crashing support among
Muslims,
Jews, and
younger voters.
Read more at:
TheNationalPulse.com