Billy, I'm still curious to hear your answer to my question.
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Originally posted by: Boilerman
Your comment about David Duke being the KKK Grand Dragon was incorrect. Was this a mistake or a lie? I'm guessing that I'll get no answer and be called a name.
Originally posted by: Boilerman
Your comment about David Duke being the KKK Grand Dragon was incorrect. Was this a mistake or a lie? I'm guessing that I'll get no answer and be called a name.
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Originally posted by: billryanQuote
Originally posted by: Boilerman
Billy, I read half of your first sentence and found a mistake. David Duke left the KKK 36 years ago, so he can't be the Grand Dragon, as you claim.Quote
Originally posted by: billryan
GOP frontrunner Donald Trump raised eyebrows yet again when he refused to disavow Ku Klux Klan grand wizard David Duke's endorsement on CNN's State of the Union on Sunday. The real estate billionaire shrugged off having any prior knowledge of the KKK and their message, saying he couldn't disavow Duke's statement as he simply knows "nothing about white supremacists." Trump should be rather knowledgeable about the white supremacist organization however, as he's had a tricky past with the KKK before, beginning with his father, Fred Trump.
Trump's father was arrested in 1927 after a brawl broke out between KKK members and sympathizers of the Italian fascist movement in Queens, New York on Memorial Day, 1927. The Washington Post reported that 1,000 Klan members dressed in white robes marched through the city neighborhood, and seven men were arrested after the public rally turned violent — Fred Trump, who lived in Jamaica, Queens at the time, was one of these men.
Of course, Donald Trump thinks none of this happened, and wants people to know that — he denied it to the Daily Mail, saying, "It's a completely false, ridiculous story. He was never there! It never happened. Never took place."
Similarly, Trump said this week he has no idea who David Duke is nor what atrocities the Klan is responsible for, but he lambasted the Reform Party in 2000 when he refused to run for president under its platform as it "now includes a Klansman, Mr. Duke, a neo-Nazi, Mr. Buchanan, and a communist, Ms. Fulani," he wrote at the time, according to Washington Post. "This is not company I wish to keep."
Donald Trump has since disavowed the group on Twitter after receiving extensive backlash online for not disassociating from the KKK, even from some of members of the conservative GOP. He hasn't clarified why he wouldn't initially steer as far away from the organization however, nor has he (or will he, likely) admit his father was ever associated with the Klan.
It remains unclear whether this will be the straw that breaks the camel's back on Super Tuesday.
Two morons were walking thru the woods when they came upon some tracks. These look like deer tracks said the first. Nope, I think they are moose. They were still arguing when the train hit them.