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Fox News contributor Juan Williams reminded his colleagues that the man who allegedly attempted to assassinate former President Donald Trump was a Republican.

“I mean, it’s not only when you think about the president, former President Trump, but also the people in the audience, the people who died, and you understand the danger,” Williams explained during a panel discussion on Fox News Sunday. “It just makes you feel like the country is, the level of political polarization in the country is at a danger point.”

“It’s, I think, a reflection of the divisions within the United States today, not only liberal, conservative, but also on the extremes,” he continued. “This young man, they say he’s a Republican.”

Williams said he found the scenario puzzling.

“The whole thing is just like, especially with the Internet, I think the Internet feeds a lot of the extremism that we’re experiencing in the country, drives people,” he explained. “The politics of grievance, anger, all the conspiracy theories.”

[…]

Williams expected the Republican National Convention to “become a more zealous affirmation of President Trump as a martyr for having been shot at, and I think it’s going to change the whole tone.”

The FBI has identified the shooter as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks. Although a motive for the assassination attempt was unclear, Pennsylvania voter records listed a person with his name and address as a Republican […]

  • Blanksy@reddthat.com
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    4 months ago

    Any amount is if you’re a Republican. It just doesn’t make sense, why wouldn’t he donate to his own party and instead donate to the opposition?

    • LukeZaz@beehaw.org
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      4 months ago

      I think you’ve forgotten that centrists exist. Which is not entirely surprising, given how polarized politics is these days, but still. There are a lot of “I hate both sides” folks out there, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see them not particularly committing to either party.