Michael Moore: Pro-Trump White People ‘Are Not Good People,’ ‘Be Afraid of Them’

December 27th, 2019 11:41 AM

Michael Moore can’t keep his trap shut about President Donald Trump. The documentary director who’s better known as an obnoxious lefty these days provided more insane TDS soundbites just after Christmas. He told Rolling Stone’s progressive audience to be “afraid of white people” because the majority of them voted for Trump.

Really, Mike? But we're supposed to believe you’re one of the good ones?

Appearing on Rolling Stone’s podcast, “Useful Idiot,” Moore did the program’s name justice, spouting off some hateful progressive tripe about the moral failings of “white people” as a group because of their hand in electing Trump. Moore asserted that white people are “not good people” and that “you should be afraid of them.”

Moore, by the way, is as white as Frosty the Snowman.

He began by waving off the rationalization that since Americans elected Barack Obama as president, they’ve healed racial divides. Heck no, he maintained, claiming that “white people have not changed” from their racist ways. He stated, “I refuse to participate in post-racial America. I refuse to say, ‘because we elected Obama that suddenly that means everything’s OK.’”

“White people have not changed,” he declared.

 

 

“Two-thirds of all white guys voted for Trump,” Moore continued, taking the thread into ridiculous territory. “That means anytime you see three white guys walking at you, down the street toward you, two of them voted for Trump.” Uh oh, where’s this going, Michael? Surely, you’re not going to ask non-whites in those situations to discriminate.

But he did. Moore declared, “You need to move over to the other sidewalk because these are not good people that are walking toward you. You should be afraid of them.”

Though, unsurprisingly, Michael Moore didn’t consider himself to be one of those bad whites. He told Rolling Stone he’s a “race traitor” in a good way.

Moore explained that the “third one” in that group of Trump-voting, mean-looking sidewalkers, “is you and me,” (gesturing to the white co-host of “Useful Idiot.”) “We’re traitors to our race — that’s how they see us,” he claimed.