Campus Reform has taken to college campuses once again to educate the students in the difference between perception and reality. The Democrats are using the Nazi tactic of repeating the same lies until their base believes it to be true.
They are continuing to call President Trump racist and a Nazi, but the Israelis have never named a street Hitler Blvd or a settlement, Mengele Heights, but they do have ones named for Trump. Several presidents vowed to move our embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, but it was Trump who actually did it.
It was the Democrats who swept Ilhan Omar’s antisemitic comments under the rug, just like the N@zis did.
That fun little experiment came courtesy of Campus Reform, who sent their own Cabot Phillips out to do yet another survey of what our nation’s undergraduates are thinking, if and when they are.
This time, he was armed with three racist quotes from the past. The students — who almost uniformly said they would prefer Joe Biden in a hypothetical Biden-Trump 2020 matchup — were asked to guess who said them.
The thing is, they were all Biden quotes.
First quote: “You cannot go into a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent. I’m not joking.”
Next up, the infamous “they’re going to put y’all back in chains” quote — delivered during the 2012 election to a largely African-American audience, warning them that if Mitt Romney got into the White House, it was back to the antebellum days.
Finally, his assessment of Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential race: “I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean.”
Other reactions: “I don’t think that’s something I want to support,” “That’s surprising,” and “I’ve never heard any of those things. The fact that you told me that, I’m now I’m like d—, is he really who he says he is?”
No, of course not, but that’s going to be the problem with Biden. In the video in which he announced his campaign, he basically called Donald Trump a racist and implied he was a force for stability. That came from a gaffe-prone man given to rhetoric like this. Once America finds this out, we’ll see if that polling advantage holds up.