Porterville Recorder

With Trump speech, judge for yourself

- Byron York is chief political correspond­ent for The Washington Examiner.

That much news coverage is biased against President Trump goes without saying. But every now and then there comes an episode of bias so egregious it deserves attention. The coverage of the president’s July 3 speech at Mount Rushmore is one of those episodes.

The Wall Street Journal editorial page called it “one of the best speeches” of Trump’s time in office. Conservati­ve intellectu­al Roger Kimball called it “perhaps his most forceful and eloquent to date.” The message, Kimball said, was an “invitation to unity in the midst of conflict.”

Indeed, Trump’s theme was a call for Americans to unite in the face of threat. Standing in front of Mount Rushmore’s massive images of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt, Trump celebrated “American giants in full flesh and blood, gallant men whose intrepid deeds unleashed the greatest leap of human advancemen­t the world has ever known.”

Trump praised America’s founding as “not only a revolution in government, but a revolution in the pursuit of justice, equality, liberty and prosperity. No nation has done more to advance the human condition than the United States of America. And no people have done more to promote human progress than the citizens of our great nation.”

The key to the Founders’ genius was they “enshrined a divine truth that changed the world forever when they said: ‘all men are created equal,’” Trump said. “These immortal words set in motion the unstoppabl­e march of freedom.”

The nation created an extraordin­ary people. Trump not only recounted the biographie­s of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Roosevelt. He celebrated many more: Andrew Jackson. Ulysses S. Grant. Frederick Douglass. Wild Bill Hickock. Buffalo Bill Cody. The Wright Brothers. The Tuskegee Airmen. Harriet Tubman. Clara Barton. Jesse Owens. Gen. George Patton. Louie Armstrong. Alan Shepard. Elvis Presley. Muhammad Ali. Walt Whitman. Mark Twain. Irving Berlin. Ella Fitzgerald. Frank Sinatra. Bob Hope. And more.

But the country that produced all that greatness faces a new and dangerous threat, Trump said. “Our nation is witnessing a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values and indoctrina­te our children. Angry mobs are trying to tear down statues of our Founders, deface our most sacred memorials and unleash a wave of violent crime in our cities. Many of these people have no idea why they are doing this, but some know exactly what they are doing. They think the American people are weak and soft and submissive. But no, the American people are strong and proud, and they will not allow our country, and all of its values, history and culture, to be taken from them.”

The violence, and the “cancel culture” that goes with it, is part of a “left-wing cultural revolution,” Trump said. “They would tear down the principles that propelled the abolition of slavery in America and, ultimately, around the world, ending an evil institutio­n that had plagued humanity for thousands and thousands of years. Our opponents would tear apart the very documents that Martin Luther King used to express his dream, and the ideas that were the foundation of the righteous movement for Civil Rights. They would tear down the beliefs, culture and identity that have made America the most vibrant and tolerant society in the history of the Earth.”

But America will prevail, Trump declared. Equal opportunit­y, equal justice, open debate, tolerance, love of country — those are the values that will ultimately win over the disorder now raging in some U.S. cities.

That was the speech: a declaratio­n of America’s virtues, a descriptio­n of a looming problem, and a reaffirmat­ion of those virtues. To many, it seemed both a soaring tribute to American greatness and an urgent warning of the threats it faces.

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