Decembers’s Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom poll indicates Iowa Republican caucus goers are more likely than not to agree with former President Donald Trump’s warning that mass immigration and the unchecked flow of drugs is “poisoning the blood of our country.” Of those polled, 42-percent said the remarks made them more likely to back Trump during the January 15th Iowa Caucus. Just 28-percent said it made them less likely to support the former President.
The corporate media has tried to use the “poisoning the blood” line against Trump since he first used the phrase in an interview with The National Pulse’s editor-in-chief Raheem Kassam. “Nobody has ever seen anything like we’re witnessing right now. It is a very sad thing for our country; it’s poisoning the blood of our country… People are coming in with disease, people are coming in with every possible thing that you can have,” Trump told Kassam at the time.
Almost immediately, major American corporate news outlets from the New York Times and MSNBC to CNN pounced on the remarks. MSNBC’s former resident Islamic extremist, Mehdi Hasan, claimed Trump used a “white supremacist/neo-Nazi talking point” while CNN’s Dana Bash said the line was “borrowed from white nationalists.” Neither Hasan nor Bash provided any material evidence for their claims of Trump adopting Hitlerian rhetoric.
Just yesterday, U.S. Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) took a reporter for the Associated Press to task for exaggerating the former President’s words and trying to tie them to German Nazism and Adolf Hitler. The Ohio Senate noted Trump was obviously talking about the negative impact illegal (not legal) immigrants are having on law and order in the United States – and how President Joe Biden’s open border policies are allowing dangerous drugs like fentanyl to pour into our country, killing tens-of-thousands of Americans a year.