What a presidential president would have said about Charlottesville
[Commentary] Here is what President Donald Trump said August 12 about the violence in Charlottesville (VA) sparked by a demonstration of white nationalists, neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members: "We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides. On many sides." Here is what a presidential president would have said:
"The violence Friday and Saturday in Charlottesville, Va., is a tragedy and an unacceptable, impermissible assault on American values. It is an assault, specifically, on the ideals we cherish most in a pluralistic democracy — tolerance, peaceable coexistence and diversity....Under whatever labels and using whatever code words — ‘heritage,’ ‘tradition,’ ‘nationalism’ — the idea that whites or any other ethnic, national or racial group is superior to another is not acceptable. Americans should not excuse, and I as president will not countenance, fringe elements in our society who peddle such anti-American ideas. While they have deep and noxious roots in our history, they must not be given any quarter nor any license today."
What a presidential president would have said about Charlottesville