If in 2020 you still think President Trump once called neo-Nazis “fine people,” you are a low-information voter. It is the most debunked fake news in American history.
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Then I mention I oppose Confederate statues because they are offensive to many Americans. That’s reason enough to relocate them at least.
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Then low-information voters will be triggered into cognitive dissonance and start repeating themselves. Then I lay down the kill shot...
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. . . by saying the President stated his assumption about who attended and spoke to his assumptions. If he was wrong about who attended, he would be equal to the news industry who also never reported the mix of attendees. But that’s the worst case, that he was wrong about data.
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And he wasn’t even wrong about who attended. I interviewed locals and others who assumed the protests would be a diverse group with diverse opinions, and saw no reason they couldn’t attend to disavow racism while supporting historical monuments.
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End of conversation
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次に、情報量の少ない有権者は、南軍の彫像を支持する人物が「善良な人物」ではないと不満を言うでしょう。次に、アフリカ系アメリカ人の約25%が、世論調査ごとに彫像の維持をサポートする理由を尋ねます。
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As for the statues I think they should be put in a museum. They are historical artifacts. They shouldn't be destroyed just moved.
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