Trump cancels Juan Williams
President Trump, who complains of the famous culture, tried to cancel me last week.
The Trump administration’s boost led to racial diversity celebrations to one of my books, which is selling in the New York Times, which is removed from the American Navy Library.
My book was arrested in an extensive network that was withdrawn in more than 300 books by prominent authors, including Maya Angelou, Ts Eliot and William Faukner.
I also want to point out that, on the dust jacket of this book, you will see approvals by the famous conservative thinkers such as Thomas Swail, John Maksher and Jalin Lori.
Reading the title of the book: “It is sufficient: mixed leaders, blocked movements, and the culture of failure that undermines black America-and what we can do about it.” Many objected to the black left on this cash on their agenda.
Bill Orili, a pioneering governor’s voice, made me on the highest -class Fox News to discuss the book. He praised her thesis.
I am the author of ten books, and highlights “enough” to this day as one of two conservatives on a large scale and converted to the viewers of Fox News.
On this month’s tour for my last book, “A New Award for these Eyes: the rise of the second civil rights movement in America”, the self-identified conservatives, some told me that they are supporters of Trump, how much they enjoy “enough”-after nineteen years of publishing it for the first time. Conservative enthusiasm is concept. The book is a criticism of the failure of black leaders to protest against bad schools, drug dealers, feed hop celebrations of the word “N”, and photographing black women.
She has made it clear that many black politicians and activists have abandoned the basic task of the movement of black law, and to return to the nineteenth century, to improve the life of blacks. What happened, I asked to stand on strong families, strong education and strong work ethics.
“Sufficiently” argues that many black leaders, from Jesse Jackson to the Sharbaton, appeared focusing on gaining political power and concluding financial deals while ignoring shocking decline in many black societies.
I said that this was especially true, in the big cities, where the term “urban” became tragicly synonymous with the tragic black neighborhoods that suffer from violent crimes, drug use, “dysfunctional” rap culture, failed schools, and hostility towards rented schools and religious schools.
The book was praised through political lines in 2006 as a sudden testimony coming from a black democracy known for writing the articles and television comments urging prominent Republicans (while President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney) is looking to expand more to expand the republican base among socially conservative and Latinus looking for answers.
This thesis was recorded in 2024 with a number of blacks and Latinians rising ready to vote for Republican-even for Trump-protesting the current situation of the life of the working class in the troubled neighborhoods.
The controversy over freedom of expression on political sensitive topics is a storm that I know well. NPR launched me years ago because she said on Fox News that I felt nervous, immediately after the September 11 attacks, at the sight of people in Muslim clothes to board a plane. By admitting my personal fears, I was referring to the need for an honest discussion at the time of the crisis. The issue was clarified for tolerance and avoiding joining fear, and discrimination against Muslims.
Now the cancellation comes from the right, as Trump is trying to monitor my book from existence. Why?
I think censorship did not read the book. They only saw the name of a black author criticizing the administration and extracting it from the shelf. Control first, ask questions later – or not at all.
This is the same “ready -to -fire” position that caused Defense Minister Beit Higseth to remove a website quote on the Internet that praises the military service of Jackie Robinson, the first player in the Black Black League. They later regained the web page.
The same stupidity applied to the Tuskegee pilot whitening on Air Force. Under the pressure of Republican politicians, the Ministry of Defense has regained a Tusky pilot to history.
Trump’s war also led to the cleaning of temporary signals to Enola Gay, the American plane used to drop the atomic bomb on Japan during World War II. Fooling censorship believed that the word “gay” was a sexual reference or support.
Recently, after Trump’s dictates, National Park Service searched a picture of Harright Tobman with a web page telling the underground railway story. The page turned its focus into “cooperation” between ethnicities, between eggs and black slaves. Even the Trump administration agreed that madness must be retracted.
We are witnessing a reckless attack on the history of race in America by Trump Akolit-the abolition of American history from the far right.
But even the president cannot block the truth. He cannot block reality. Intelligent people will find their way to real and real and disgrace those who sell ignorance.
We are a nation born from the revolution. The greatest gift from our founders is still the right to speak abroad, write articles and read books.
Juan Williams is a major political analyst for the Fox News channel and award -winning civil rights historian. He is the author of the new book, “A New Award for this Eyes: the rise of the second civil rights movement in America.”