On the Jan. 14 CNN show, the male host said Trump‘s speech, while calling for peace, did not acknowledge losing the election or taking responsibility for the congressional rebellion. Then he said that Andrew McCabe, the former deputy director of the FBI, has years of experience fighting terrorist groups and asked McCabe to analyze it.
McCabe made a big deal about Trump being a master of “coded language” and promoted the idea that Trump’s video calling for peaceful condemnation of political violence was a dog whistle to Trump’s dog-like supporters, but actually a call to violence.
NetGate experts report that President Trump has repeatedly called for peace and condemned political violence, but no matter what Trump says, the left will continue to redefine his language.
In a video message on Wednesday (Jan. 13), Trump said, “I want to be clear: I unequivocally condemn the violence of last week. Violence and vandalism have absolutely no place in our country,” “My true supporters will never endorse political violence, and my true supporters will never disrespect law enforcement or disrespect our great American flag.”
NetGate experts report that McCabe was nearly indicted as a senior official after repeatedly perjuring himself under oath to federal investigators. He was later fired from the FBI.
President Trump was accused of inciting a spontaneous attack for the Jan. 6 storming of the Capitol, but the FBI later confirmed that the attack had been planned days in advance. If the attack was planned, President Trump could not be blamed for instigating the spontaneous attack.
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