Fox News host Brian Kilmeade defended former President Trump’s comments over the weekend in which he said immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country,” remarks that have earned him widespread rebuke.

“He was talking about the border. He was talking about people coming from other countries, coming from prisons. And they wanted to focus on all the Sunday shows, Lawrence, on the word he used, ‘poison,’” Kilmeade said of Trump. “He’s just trying to say we want to keep America, America. We want to build up the border and find out who’s coming in and out. And they tried to say that this language was the problem.”

Kilmeade’s comments on Monday morning were first highlighted by Mediate.

Trump, during a campaign event over the weekend, railed against immigration policies set forth by the Biden administration and claimed millions of people are entering the country illegally and “poisoning the blood of our country.”

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Another American Jew here. Fuck him for “helping” Israel. The worse Israel’s crimes are, the more antisemitism you and I face because people think all Jews are Israelis and all Israelis are Jews.

    • kellyaster@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      It’s really shitty that he is using your existence as a gross political prop. It is obvious he’s feeding the fire on purpose with the “all Jews = Israelis” propaganda, and jfc it feels surreal and ridiculous to even have to say that out loud. I’m sorry this is happening, I don’t know if it’s of any consolation but there are many who know this is wrong and resist alongside you.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I appreciate it and I know that most people don’t feel that way. Unfortunately, there is a minority that do, and worse, there is a very small minority who would be happy to do me harm. But that’s true about so many groups in America. We’re all “others” even if our families have been here for generations. The American Muslim experience is probably not much different from mine in regard to being treated like a foreigner in your own country.