“She was not an extreme kid at all, nothing like the angry kids we see all the time in our own city who wear black, shout slogans, set fires and push over our statues.” Carlson said sadly on his show, “And when the camera caught her face after the gunshot, she looked so shocked that she knew she was going to die… Although she was probably just telling her family when she left home that she was going to a political rally in D.C.”
That’s what Fox TV host Tuker Carlson said. Tuker Carlson commented on the shooting death of a 20-year-old girl draped in an American flag on Jan. 6 as a joint session of Congress counted the Electoral College votes.
He also said that if America’s new leaders truly care about America and want to change that, they need to be self-aware and address well the reasons why America sparked the Jan. 6 protests, rather than just silencing dissent and demanding that others comply.
He then analyzed that what makes America great is that “people have enjoyed a stable political system for centuries. And the only reason that system is stable is because it’s a democratic society, a country that responds to the votes of its electorate.”
“As long as people honestly believe that they can change reality with their votes, so that people are very calm, they don’t go storming the Capitol, they talk and then they organize to go to the polls.” Carlson said.
However, he explained, the reason people went to protest on Jan. 6 is because millions of Americans believe that the general election for the 2020 U.S. election was faked and an election that was privately rigged by a small group of dishonest people in power, for their own benefit.
According to Carlson, such popular protests on Jan. 6 due to discontent are not unusual, and in fact have been happening in countless other countries over the past many centuries, he said, “because human nature has never changed.”
And the leaders of many countries have always suppressed dissent and have always tried to demand that those who dissent “shut up, obey, and do what is asked of you,” by denying people their inherent rights. He cited the denial of the right to speak without censorship, the right to assemble freely, the right to defend one’s family, “even though these are the most basic and ancient rights of human beings.”
“Each time this repression has resulted in very bad results,” he said, making these countries more volatile and dangerous.
He therefore urged America’s new leaders, who he said, “If you really care about this country and really care about your people, they make a commitment to the people that America is indeed a democracy and confirm with action that it works.”
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