Tucker: Panic in Virginia

Tucker takes a look at the gubernatorial race in Virginia and Terry McAuliffe’s campaign, indoctrinating children and fabricating racial division.

Highlights include:

“In Virginia, as in the rest of the country, democrats have been yammering about race nonstop. Specifically about the dangerous racism of white people, literally without ceasing, for the last year and a half. It’s all they talk about, it’s a kind of monomania.”

“Whatever Terry McAuliffe doesn’t like is racist, seriously terrifyingly racist like slavery. On the other hand, whatever Terry MacAuliffe does like, such as accumulating more personal power for himself, is by definition the answer to racism, in fact the only answer. It’s a very simple and very familiar formula. It’s also incredibly divisive, not to mention stupid and tiresome.”

“Interestingly, weirdly, Terry McAuliffe has not corrected course. He has instead doubled down on this stuff, which again no one really likes.”

“At a campaign event just last night, McAuliffe told the crowd that he’s identified the actual problem in Virginia’s schools, and you’ll never guess what it is. It’s too many white teachers.”

“To his credit, McAuliffe’s opponent Glen Youngkin … has called this kind of rhetoric for what it is. It’s a racial attack. It’s also an assault on the founding principals of the United States, which to sum up, is the Christian belief that all people, regardless of their skin color, are equal before God.”

“If you wanted to unite the country, which badly needs to be united, you would emphasize our equality of value. We may be different in many ways, and we are, but we are all worth the same, period. And anyone who doesn’t believe that should not be within 100 yards of power, ever.”

“Unfortunately for the rest of us, the racial unity message which we so badly need does not get democrats elected.”

“So, last week democrats in Virginia concocted yet another fake race hoax to make voters hate each other and increase their electoral advantage. Democratic political operatives posing as neo-nazis showed up outside a Glen Youngkin event carrying torches. They stayed long enough to be photographed by a prejudiced local reporter, then Terry McAuliffe’s campaign team circulated pictures of those alleged ‘white supremacists,’ claiming they were Youngkin supporters. Then, within hours, the lie collapsed.”

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