R
Ridgerunner
Guest
There is so much interpretation of the David Duke exchange that it’s hard to even know what Trump said, let alone what he meant.
This, apparently, is the controversial statement:
"“I don’t know anything about what you’re even talking about with white supremacy or white supremacists,” he said. “So I don’t know. I don’t know – did he endorse me, or what’s going on? Because I know nothing about David Duke; I know nothing about white supremacists.”
One might criticize Trump for slowness of thought in this; perhaps excessive wariness, not knowing whether it was a “trick question” or not. What, indeed, did he know about David Duke or various white supremacist groups at that moment? Frankly, after all these years of Duke not really being a news item and being something of a footnote oddity even at his point of greatest renown, I’m not sure I would have made the connection any more quickly than Trump did. And since I would have had no idea whether David Duke was at that precise moment a Grand Wizard or a converted Carthusian monk, I couldn’t have commented on his life at the time either. Nor would very many, even among the intelligentsia of this country if they answered truthfully.
Obviously, he didn’t know where the questioner was going with the subject. Quite possibly he knows no more about white supremacists than most of us do; that they exist somewhere or other and pretend to each other that they matter. They are, after all, a miniscule group that affect nothing at all but the fevered imaginations of those ultra-leftists who would like them to somehow be representative of this nation.
But yes, he should have made a quicker mental connection of David Duke when “white supremacist” was in the same question, and focused on “white supremacist” instead of cogitating over whether Duke was a person of political significance or one of the characters in “Dukes of Hazzard”.
This, apparently, is the controversial statement:
"“I don’t know anything about what you’re even talking about with white supremacy or white supremacists,” he said. “So I don’t know. I don’t know – did he endorse me, or what’s going on? Because I know nothing about David Duke; I know nothing about white supremacists.”
One might criticize Trump for slowness of thought in this; perhaps excessive wariness, not knowing whether it was a “trick question” or not. What, indeed, did he know about David Duke or various white supremacist groups at that moment? Frankly, after all these years of Duke not really being a news item and being something of a footnote oddity even at his point of greatest renown, I’m not sure I would have made the connection any more quickly than Trump did. And since I would have had no idea whether David Duke was at that precise moment a Grand Wizard or a converted Carthusian monk, I couldn’t have commented on his life at the time either. Nor would very many, even among the intelligentsia of this country if they answered truthfully.
Obviously, he didn’t know where the questioner was going with the subject. Quite possibly he knows no more about white supremacists than most of us do; that they exist somewhere or other and pretend to each other that they matter. They are, after all, a miniscule group that affect nothing at all but the fevered imaginations of those ultra-leftists who would like them to somehow be representative of this nation.
But yes, he should have made a quicker mental connection of David Duke when “white supremacist” was in the same question, and focused on “white supremacist” instead of cogitating over whether Duke was a person of political significance or one of the characters in “Dukes of Hazzard”.