Thursday, September 18, 2025

Both side do not do it; lets keep it that way!

‘Remember That’: Greg Gutfeld Decodes Obama, Cohost ‘Both Sides’ Argument After Charlie Kirk’s Murder 

. . . "These are news anchors, these are politicians, these are college professors that are actually legitimizing this and saying it over and over again, these are why this is different," Gutfeld said of calling people on the right Nazis and fascists." . . .

Obama Implies Trump to Blame for Charlie Kirk Assassination: ‘Extreme Views Were Not in My White House’   . . . "He mourned Kirk’s death, saying it was “horrific,” but made sure to recite an (inaccurate) laundry list of Kirk’s more controversial statements, including a false claim that Kirk claimed black women were stupid.

"Obama then said that Trump wanted to use Kirk’s assassination as “a rationale for trying to silence discussion around who we are as a country and what direction we should go.” He then claimed that when he had been in the White House, “those extreme views were not in my White House. I wasn’t embracing them. I wasn’t empowering them. I wasn’t putting the weight of the United States government behind extremist views.”

"In fact, it was Obama who inaugurated an era of division and extremism. On the campaign trail in 2008, he encouraged his supporters to confront friends and neighbors, and “argue with them, get in their face.' ” . . .  On the campaign trail in 2008, he encouraged his supporters to confront friends and neighbors, and “argue with them, get in their face.”

Obama Couldn't Help but Take Vile Swipe at Trump in New Comments on Charlie Kirk's Assassination   . . . "Obama also found the temerity to insist that, while there are fringe elements on both sides of the political aisle, he never pushed divisive rhetoric during his time in the White House.

" 'But I will say that — those extreme views were not in my White House," he said. "I wasn't embracing them. I wasn't empowering them. I wasn't putting the weight of the United States government behind extremist views."

" 'When we have the weight of the United States government behind extremist views, we've got a problem."

"The absolute balls it takes to say that when we've spent the past decade hearing Obama, Biden, Kamala Harris, Tim Walz, and on and on refer to Trump supporters - half the nation - as "fascists" or "Nazis" or an "existential threat" to the country is mind-numbing.

"Obama was one of the most divisive presidents in this country's history. He quite literally used the death of Trayvon Martin as a springboard to create a massive racial divide in this country during his presidency.

"As for calling political opponents "enemies"? Yeah, he did that too.

"Some would suggest Obama was so divisive during his presidency that it actually led to Mr. Trump's shocking victory over Hillary Clinton in 2016. The divisiveness, relentless weaponization of government, and the violent threats from his party under Biden's reign helped bring us Trump 2.0.

"Here again, Obama demonstrates that divisiveness, suggesting the violent rhetoric is equal on both sides of the political spectrum (it isn't) and taking an unnecessary swipe at both Trump and Kirk, two victims of targeted political violence." . . .

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