Matt Walsh
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And more importantly, unlike the 1970s, the violence reflects the consensus view of most Democrat Party politicians and voters.
Consider the embarrassingly bad Reddit-tier cringe manifesto of the man who tried to kill Trump at the White House Correspondents' Dinner on Saturday.
That man's name, as you know now, is Cole Allen.
Now, this is a guy who donated $25 to Kamala Harris and believed pretty much every piece of Democrat Party propaganda imaginable, judging by social media posts.
He called Trump a Nazi.
He abandoned Twitter and fled to the open-air asylum that is Blue Sky.
And he even believed that Kamala Harris would win the state of Iowa based on that ridiculous poll that dropped shortly before the election.
He bought into all this.
He wrote, quote, based on Iowa predicting that Kamala wins all swing states and at least three red states.
So the guy was a bit delusional.
I mean, there were signs.
There were signs.
And when you read his manifesto, it becomes obvious just how deeply held these beliefs were.
The key takeaway is that there's nothing in the manifesto that's out of step with mainstream Democrat Party talking points.
Now, Ted Kaczynski's manifesto, by comparison, was at least thought-provoking and well-written.
There were some interesting ideas in there.
He didn't sound like a generic cable news talking head, but Cole Allen simply writes a summary of various Democrat hoaxes and propaganda.
He calls Trump a traitor, alluding to the Russiagate hoax.
He also says Trump is a pedophile, alluding to nonexistent evidence in the Epstein files.
He implies that inmates are getting sexually assaulted in detention camps and that innocent fishermen are getting blown up by a Nazi president.