White terrorism is not as bad as Muslim terrorism.
That, believe it or not, was the crux of an argument Sean Duffy, a Republican representative from Wisconsin, made last week on CNN.
What follows has been condensed for space, but it unfolded like this:
Asked by anchor Alisyn Camerota about the Trump regime’s failure to condemn a recent massacre in which six Muslims were killed by a white extremist in Quebec, Duffy allowed that, “Murder on both sides is wrong,” but insisted, “There is a difference.”
That difference, as he sees it: there’s no white extremist Islamic State or al-Qaida fomenting terrorism. What happened in Canada, he said, “was a one-off.”
And the Oklahoma City bombing?
“So, you’ve given me two examples,” said Duffy.
And the Charleston church massacre?
“Look at the good things that came from it. (Then-South Carolina Gov.) Nikki Haley took down the Confederate flag. That was great. But . . . there’s no constant thread that goes through these attacks.”