HOW STUPID ARE THESE IDIOTS?
Facing criticism, Trump administration has no regrets about leaving out Jews in Holocaust statement
Facing growing criticism for
failing to mention Jews in a statement marking the Holocaust, the Trump
administration on Sunday doubled down on the controversial decision.
In a statement on Friday, President
Donald Trump broke with the bipartisan practice of past presidents by failing
to include any mention of the anti-Semitic views that fueled the Holocaust and
left 6 million Jews and millions of others dead.
"I don't regret the
words," said White House chief of staff Reince Priebus when asked to
defend the statement on NBC News'
"Meet the Press" on Sunday.
"Everyone's suffering (in) the
Holocaust including obviously all of the Jewish people affected and miserable
genocide that occurs - it's something that we consider to be extraordinarily
sad," Priebus added.
Trump's 117-word statement was
issued on International Holocaust
Remembrance Day, which marks the anniversary of the liberation of
the Auschwitz concentration camp, Trump remembered "the victims,
survivors, heroes of the Holocaust" without specifically mentioning the
attempted extermination of Jewish people.
What might have been seen as an
oversight was confirmed by White House spokeswoman Hope Hicks to have been an
intentional decision.
"Despite what the media
reports, we are an incredibly inclusive group and we took into account all of
those who suffered," Hicks told CNN on Saturday.
On Sunday, Sen. Tim Kaine,
D-Va., sharply criticized the White House for deploying a well-known tactic of
Holocaust deniers.
"This is what Holocaust denial
is," Kaine said on NBC. "It's either to deny that it happened or many
Holocaust deniers acknowledge, oh yeah people were killed but it was a lot of
innocent people, Jews weren't targets."
Conservative commentator John
Podhoretz slammed the White House's defense of its actions in a column on
Saturday, noting that Nazi ideology rested on the aim of exterminating Jewish
people from the face of earth.
"The Nazis killed an
astonishing number of people in monstrous ways and targeted certain groups -
Gypsies, the mentally challenged, and open homosexuals, among others,"
Podhoretz wrote. "But the Final Solution was aimed solely at the Jews. The
Holocaust was about the Jews.
"There is no 'proud' way to
offer a remembrance of the Holocaust that does not reflect that simple, awful,
world-historical fact," he added. "To universalize it to 'all those
who suffered' is to scrub the Holocaust of its meaning."
In fact, the United Nations created
the International Holocaust Remembrance Day in 2005 in part to combat a growing
wave of anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial worldwide.
The tactic of minimizing the impact
of the Holocaust on Jewish people is also closely associated with nationalist
movements in Europe, including far right National Front Party in France now led
by Marine Le Pen, whose father Jean-Marie Le Pen was fined for Holocaust
denial.
The younger Le Pen has sought to
make connections with Trump, calling his victory in the November election a
"sign of hope" for her own political future.
Kaine tied Trump's move on Friday
to bar the entry of travelers from seven predominantly Muslim countries to the
puzzling Holocaust statement issued on the same day.
"The fact that they did that
and imposed this religious test against Muslims in the executive order on the
same day, this is not a coincidence," Kaine said.
But Priebus noted that Trump's
son-in-law Jared Kushner, who is also a senior adviser in the White House, is
Jewish. Trump's daughter Ivanka converted to judaism before the two married.
"You know that President Trump
has dear family members that are Jewish and there was no harm or ill will or
offense intended by any of that," Priebus added.
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