Biden Shocks Anew With Claim That Some Whites ‘Still Want To’ Lynch Blacks
Charlie Kirk Staff
02/18/2023

President Joe Biden once again turned heads with a racial remark he made on Friday during a screening of a new film, claiming that some whites “still want to” lynch black people.
Biden commented during a screening of “Till,” a movie about Emmett Till, the 14-year-old black boy lynched in Mississippi in 1955, the Daily Wire reported.
“You know, folks, lynching is pure terror, enforcing the lie that not everyone belongs in America and not everyone is created equal,” Biden said. “Pure terror to systematically undermine hard-fought civil rights. Innocent men, women, children hung by a noose from trees. Bodies burned, drowned, castrated.”
“Their crimes? Trying to vote. Trying to go to school. Trying to own a business. Trying to preach the gospel. False — false accusations of murder, arson, robbery,” Biden went on. “Lynched for simply being black, nothing more. With white crowds, white families gathered to celebrate the spectacle, taking pictures of the bodies and mailing them as postcards.”
“Hard to believe, but that’s what was done. And some people still want to do that,” Biden claimed, without citing a single smidge of evidence or list any examples to support the statement.
WATCH:
Biden on lynching: "White families gathered to celebrate the spectacle, taking pictures of the bodies … Some people still want to do that" pic.twitter.com/oNY0x9UKcv
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) February 17, 2023
It should be noted — because the ‘mainstream media’ won’t remind you — that Biden has a long history of making racist and racially charged remarks, as the Heritage Foundation noted in a July 2021 post, and then getting away with it:
On Charlamagne Tha God’s popular morning radio show in May 2020, Biden infamously asserted to the largely black audience that if they were unsure of whether to vote for him or Trump, then “you ain’t black!”
Then in August 2020, Biden told a gathering of black and Hispanic journalists that “unlike the African American community, with notable exceptions, the Latino community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly different attitudes about different things.”
Taken together, these statements clearly suggest that Biden believes all black people think alike.
In the same interview, responding to a question on whether he had taken a cognitive test, Biden angrily fired back with the suggestion that the black reporter was a drug addict.
“That’s like saying you . . . before you got in this program, you’re take [sic] a test whether you’re taking cocaine or not,” Biden said. “What do you think? Huh? Are you a junkie?”
Put these words into Mitch McConnell’s mouth and try to envision how long he’d be allowed to remain in the Senate, let alone in a leadership position.
But Biden has been getting away with this for years.
In 2010, he warmly eulogized Sen. Robert Byrd, a former Exalted Cyclops in the Ku Klux Klan, saying he was “one of my mentors” and that “the Senate is a lesser place for his going.”
In 2007, he referred to Barack Obama as “the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean.”
In 2006, he said, “You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent.”
Way back in 1977, he said that forced busing to desegregate schools would cause his children to “grow up in a racial jungle.”
It’s worth noting that he notoriously collaborated with segregationist senators to oppose mandatory busing, a position that Kamala Harris famously used to her advantage in a powerful moment during her presidential campaign, where she criticized him for personally affecting her as a young girl. Furthermore, throughout his career, he frequently expressed admiration for staunchly segregationist senators.