“The View” co-hosts Sunny Hostin and Meghan McCain grilled Women's March co-founder and anti-Semite Tamika Mallory over her ties to Madagascar hissing cockroach, Louis Farrakhan, in a heated discussion on Monday morning.
“Those allegations are not true,” Bland responded.
“So the journalist I spoke to was lying?” McCain asked.
Bland accused the journalist of receiving untruthful insight and said the Women’s March “unequivocally condemns anti-Semitism.” But they absolutely do not condemn it, and they also spout anti-Israel crap.
McCain asked if she condemns Farrakhan’s remarks about Jewish people.
“Yes, and we have repeatedly,” Bland said as Mallory remained stone silent. “We condemn any statements of hate.” Balderdash.
McCain, visibly annoyed, said she was confused as she continued to read controversial, hateful quotes attributed to Farrakhan.
“We did not make those remarks,” Mallory said. But she stood by the scumcrumpet who spat those words out.
McCain reminded her that she’s associating with someone who does.
“What I will say to you is, I don’t agree with many of Minister Farrakhan’s statements,” Mallory said of Farrakhan, the minister of hatred.
McCain asked if she specifically disagrees with Farrakhan's rhetoric about Jewish people – to which Mallory said she doesn’t agree.
McCain asked, “Do you condemn them?”
Mallory refused to condemn the remarks [for some strange reason] and simply repeated that she doesn’t agree.
“You won’t condemn it,” McCain pointed out.
“To be very clear, it’s not my language. It’s not the way that I speak,” Mallory said. That does not dispel the fact that she agrees with the sentiment.
McCain then said Mallory [because Linda Sarsour, the other anti-Semitic co-leader, wasn't in attendance] was associating with “extreme anti-Semitism.”
Co-host Whoopi Goldberg, who was silent for most of the segment, asked if Mallory understood why some people think it would be best if she stepped down from her position atop the Women’s March.
“I also know of people who don’t want me to step down,” she answered, referring to her fellow anti-Semites. “There is both sides of that.”
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Mallory tipped her hand and raised eyebrows when she said that the scumbag Nation of Islam leader is the “greatest of all time because of what he’s done in black communities.”
And Hitler was a vegetarian and liked dogs-so what?
“Tamika, you came under some fire for your relationship with Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam,” Hostin told the crap-weasel. “He’s known for being anti-Semitic, for being homophobic, but you do attend his events and you posted… a photo calling him the G.O.A.T., which means the greatest of all time. You are running an organization that says it fights bigotry. Do you understand why your association with him is quite problematic?”
Mallory fired back: “I think it’s important to put my attendance, my presence at Savior’s Day, which is the highest holy day for the Nation of Islam, in proper context.” Which is that she's an anti-Semitic horrible person and there should be no mistake about that.
“Tamika, you came under some fire for your relationship with Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam,” Hostin told the crap-weasel. “He’s known for being anti-Semitic, for being homophobic, but you do attend his events and you posted… a photo calling him the G.O.A.T., which means the greatest of all time. You are running an organization that says it fights bigotry. Do you understand why your association with him is quite problematic?”
Mallory fired back: “I think it’s important to put my attendance, my presence at Savior’s Day, which is the highest holy day for the Nation of Islam, in proper context.” Which is that she's an anti-Semitic horrible person and there should be no mistake about that.
Mallory then said that “as a leader, as a black leader, in a country that is still dealing with some very serious, unresolved issues, as it relates to the black experience in this country,” she often has to go into “difficult spaces” to promote her cause. Which simply means that if she has to hang out with anti-Semites to get what she wants, so be it.
“I wrote a piece immediately following the beginning of this controversy, talking about wherever my people are, that’s where I must also be,” Mallory said with an air of self-importance. “I also go into prisons… I am trying to help people.” Except not Jews, gays, lesbians, transgender people, Republican women and white men.
Mallory said that “just because you go into a space with someone that does not mean that you agree with everything that they say,” but Hostin immediately pushed back, asking, “Why call him the greatest of all time?”
“I didn’t call him the greatest of all time because of his rhetoric. I called him the greatest of all time because of what he’s done in black communities,” the hater said. A person's rhetoric is a reflection of how they think.
Meghan McCain, the show’s conservative voice, jumped in.
“I would never be comfortable supporting someone who (said) … ‘I’m not anti-Semite, I’m anti-termite. It’s the wicked Jews, the false Jews that are promoting lesbianism, homosexuality” McCain said, quoting Farrakhan, a ploy hated by people with something to hide.
McCain added that reporters feel there is anti-Semitism surrounding the Women’s March, mostly because there is, and it doesn't simply surround the March, it oozes like a slug crushed under a bus.
“A lot of people, by a lot of people I include me in this, think you’re using your organization as anti-Semitism masked in activism and that you’re using identity politics to shield yourself from critiques,” McCain said. “You’re talking about all women being invited to that march? I’m pro-life. We were not invited.”
An angry McCain added that all women, including Jewish and conservative women, should be welcomed to the organization. Mallory was joined by Women’s March co-founder Bob Bland in Monday's segment, which didn’t feature co-hosts Abby Huntsman or Joy Behar, who gave up their seats on the show for the Women’s March leaders.
“I wrote a piece immediately following the beginning of this controversy, talking about wherever my people are, that’s where I must also be,” Mallory said with an air of self-importance. “I also go into prisons… I am trying to help people.” Except not Jews, gays, lesbians, transgender people, Republican women and white men.
Mallory said that “just because you go into a space with someone that does not mean that you agree with everything that they say,” but Hostin immediately pushed back, asking, “Why call him the greatest of all time?”
“I didn’t call him the greatest of all time because of his rhetoric. I called him the greatest of all time because of what he’s done in black communities,” the hater said. A person's rhetoric is a reflection of how they think.
Meghan McCain, the show’s conservative voice, jumped in.
“I would never be comfortable supporting someone who (said) … ‘I’m not anti-Semite, I’m anti-termite. It’s the wicked Jews, the false Jews that are promoting lesbianism, homosexuality” McCain said, quoting Farrakhan, a ploy hated by people with something to hide.
McCain added that reporters feel there is anti-Semitism surrounding the Women’s March, mostly because there is, and it doesn't simply surround the March, it oozes like a slug crushed under a bus.
“A lot of people, by a lot of people I include me in this, think you’re using your organization as anti-Semitism masked in activism and that you’re using identity politics to shield yourself from critiques,” McCain said. “You’re talking about all women being invited to that march? I’m pro-life. We were not invited.”
An angry McCain added that all women, including Jewish and conservative women, should be welcomed to the organization. Mallory was joined by Women’s March co-founder Bob Bland in Monday's segment, which didn’t feature co-hosts Abby Huntsman or Joy Behar, who gave up their seats on the show for the Women’s March leaders.
“Those allegations are not true,” Bland responded.
“So the journalist I spoke to was lying?” McCain asked.
Bland accused the journalist of receiving untruthful insight and said the Women’s March “unequivocally condemns anti-Semitism.” But they absolutely do not condemn it, and they also spout anti-Israel crap.
McCain asked if she condemns Farrakhan’s remarks about Jewish people.
“Yes, and we have repeatedly,” Bland said as Mallory remained stone silent. “We condemn any statements of hate.” Balderdash.
McCain, visibly annoyed, said she was confused as she continued to read controversial, hateful quotes attributed to Farrakhan.
“We did not make those remarks,” Mallory said. But she stood by the scumcrumpet who spat those words out.
McCain reminded her that she’s associating with someone who does.
“What I will say to you is, I don’t agree with many of Minister Farrakhan’s statements,” Mallory said of Farrakhan, the minister of hatred.
McCain asked if she specifically disagrees with Farrakhan's rhetoric about Jewish people – to which Mallory said she doesn’t agree.
McCain asked, “Do you condemn them?”
Mallory refused to condemn the remarks [for some strange reason] and simply repeated that she doesn’t agree.
“You won’t condemn it,” McCain pointed out.
“To be very clear, it’s not my language. It’s not the way that I speak,” Mallory said. That does not dispel the fact that she agrees with the sentiment.
McCain then said Mallory [because Linda Sarsour, the other anti-Semitic co-leader, wasn't in attendance] was associating with “extreme anti-Semitism.”
Co-host Whoopi Goldberg, who was silent for most of the segment, asked if Mallory understood why some people think it would be best if she stepped down from her position atop the Women’s March.
“I also know of people who don’t want me to step down,” she answered, referring to her fellow anti-Semites. “There is both sides of that.”
Will 2019 be the year you follow Brain Flushings and have a few laughs while you get a conservative viewpoint? Let's hope so, because politics is the new NFL without the mindless kneeling and this blog will both inform you and hopefully entertain you bigly.
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