'Bernie Sanders is lying when he says his disruptors aren't told to go to my events. Be careful Bernie, or my supporters will go to yours!'
Donald Trump on Sunday morning went after potential general election rival Bernie Sanders by calling him a liar and indicated he might soon instruct his own supporters to attend Sanders' rallies in order to foment disruption and discord among his progressive (aka "super-liberal") base.
In a tweet, Trump declared:
Bernie Sanders is lying when he says his disruptors aren't told to go to my events. Be careful Bernie, or my supporters will go to yours!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 13, 2016
The social media salvo followed a chaotic cancellation of Trump rally in Chicago that turned violent on Friday and images of protesters being pepper-sprayed by police outside a rally in Kansas City on Saturday night. With waves of criticisms against Trump reverberating over the weekend for the role he's played in ginning up tensions, any expectations or hopes that the Republican presidential candidate would make efforts to tamp down the palpable tensions were dashed rather immediately.
"My people have said we oughtta go to his rallies, when liberals and super-liberals, I don't even call 'em liberals... These people are bad people that are looking to do harm to our country." —Donald Trump
In fact, the near opposite happened as Trump refused to accept any responsibility for the acrimony, defending the behavior of his supporters, and projecting blame on others by accusing the Sanders of "organizing" the protests.
At a rally in Cleveland on Saturday, Trump charged that Friday's protests in Chicago were directed by the Sanders' campaign, an assertion the Sanders' camp immediately denied and which no evidence exists to support.
"As is the case virtually every day, Donald Trump is showing the American people that he is a pathological liar," Sanders said in a statement on Saturday. Though it was clear that many protesters in Chicago were, in fact, vocal Sanders' supporters, far more appeared only unified by their opposition to Trump's political message and campaign rhetoric.
"I don't think our supporters are inciting. What our supporters are doing is responding to a candidate who has, in fact, in many ways, encouraged violence," Sanders said during a Saturday press conference in Chicago."When he talks about: 'I wish we were in the old days when you could punch somebody in the head.' What do you think that says to his supporters?"
Appearing on CNN's State of the Union with Jake Tapper on Sunday morning, Trump said that he is quite serious about issuing orders so that his supporters would go and confront people at Sanders' rallies.
"When[Trump] talks about: 'I wish we were in the old days when you could punch somebody in the head.' What do you think that says to his supporters?" —Bernie Sanders"It's not a threat, it's not a threat. It's not a threat at all!" Trump declared when asked by Tapper about the tweeted message. "My people have said we ought to go to his rallies, when liberals and super-liberals, I don't even call 'em liberals... These people are bad people that are looking to do harm to our country. These people come into mine ... They're being arrested and all sorts of things are happening to them. There's a horrible thing going on in the media. We are treated so unfairly, and I'm treated so unfairly."
Watch:
And here's the segment with Sanders speaking on CNN:
Separately on Saturday, Trump said he is now considering pressing charges against those who would protest or disrupt his events in the future. "I hope they arrest these people, because honestly they should be," Trump told supporters referring to a new wave of protesters at the rally in Kansas City on Saturday night. "The only way to stop the craziness is to press charges."
Reader Comments
Very interesting, really this is an exposure of an agenda. One which I also now believe that Hillary validated with her comment on playing with matches, and starting something you can't control.
Isn't that a somewhat odd thing to say? What was Clinton talking about? In my opinion, there is only one way to make sense of the events of the world today, and that is by going backwards in time with your thinking and to see the events by looking at them in terms of religious warfare, cabals, and organizations.
Politics is an invention. It's an invention of mind control, and a natural one which was birthed from the first order of mind control, which is of course religion, and which first ruled the minds of humans.
The linage of that mind control system is clearly displayed in the Catholic Capital. The Pope is of course the living image of their proxy God, the venerated living God on Earth of this organization, and whose roots are clearly Egyptian with the Pope as the Pharaoh.
No organization is older, more well funded, endowed with greater access to information, intelligence, and resources. It is itself a character of the the facade with a black and white partition.
Politics is the illusion, the veil behind which the great and powerful Oz stands.
People seem to think this exchange of words are political, but I think if you begin to think about this in terms of what actually controls the lives and thoughts of most people today, then, it isn't any different from what once controlled and directed he lives of people in the distant past. The only difference is that the veils placed over the core controlling interests have made the ability to see the puppet masters more difficult.
Religions operate in conjunction with the other underlings of the Black Pope, and to foment the seeds of political destruction, and in this way control the destiny of the peoples daily lives through these political stooges.
What we are witness to here isn't an accident, despite the best attempt to make it appear so, rather it is the next phase in an objective to overthrow the peoples republic, as is also happening in all other nations using other proxies, and other issues. Like immigrants, false flags, corrupted and complicit media, ect.
Think about the 30 years wars, the 100 years wars, that kind of thing and see that this is an intentional act to pit the already divided political populus against one another, and in a real fashion, just as happened in prior times but through religious differences fomented by the same techniques.