CNN’s Alisyn Camerota investigates a Charlottesville rally conspiracy theory after Trump voters who appeared on “New Day” said they believe protesters were b. The civil case involving the organizers of the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, concluded Thursday, and a jury must be held. The case is about whether the defendants engaged in a race-based violent conspiracy, which is illegal under an 1871 law known as the “white genocide”.
The “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, was seen as a defining moment in recent American history. Over four years after hundreds of white nationalists and far-right extremists descended on the city, a jury verdict on Tuesday holding a dozen white supremacists liable for the violence at the 2017 rally was a victory for those who have long inveighed against the white genocide, white extinction, or white replacement conspiracy theory.
In the aftermath of the “Unite the Right” rally, three torch-bearers have been indicted. Rep. Paul A. Gosar (R-Ariz.) still seems swayed by the “false flag” theory of the white supremacist violence. Experts say the “great replacement” theory has become mainstream, with the Buffalo mass shooting reignited discussion of this conspiracy. Anti-Semitism functions as a set of conspiracy theories built upon various negative stereotypes, perceptions, and claims about Jews. Replacement theory, espoused by the suspect in the Buffalo massacre, has been embraced by some right-wing politicians and commentators.
📹 How a Charlottesville conspiracy theory was born
CNN’s Alisyn Camerota investigates a Charlottesville rally conspiracy theory after Trump voters who appeared on “New Day” said …
📹 He was a witness in Charlottesville. Then the death threats and conspiracy theories began.
Brennan Gilmore filmed the moment when a car plowed into a crowd of protesters in Charlottesville, killing one woman and …
No, what they said is that they do not believe you, CNN. So, instead of addressing your own very real credibility problem, you criticize them for believing in something you say is false because it appeared on social media. In fact, you’re so critical of them, you ask them to prove the report instead of disproving it. You say you followed up on the story when all you did was watch a YouTube article and laugh when you saw a black dude was the source. And, yes, we heard you laugh loud and clear, Ms. Camerota
Tell me why there’s a smashed Dodge charger with stripes, and another picture without stripes. What about that picture of that man getting hit who has his shoe fly off, yet in another picture he’s sitting on an SUV the moment the charger backs up. How can someone go flying yet be sitting on an SUV simultaneously? This is why CNN is garbage. They don’t look for the facts that they don’t want to hear.