Barack Obama’s Perfect Tweet About Charlottesville Violence Becomes Third Most Liked Ever

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In the aftermath of the terror acts committed at the Charlottesville ‘Unite the Right’ rally, where Klan members and Neo-Nazis congregated before a deadly clash, one man has perfectly condemned this unquestionable racism.

Nineteen people were injured, and one killed, in a car-ramming incident on Saturday. Another 15 people were wounded in separate clashes related to the far-right march on Saturday afternoon. Many have responded in outrage, grief and disbelief; none more eloquently than former President Barack Obama.

Needless to say, his nugget of hope and wisdom has now been elevated to the third most like Tweet in history:

Violence originally broke out when white supremacists and members of the far right clashed with anti-fascist counter-protesters at the Unite the Right Rally, which was organised to protest the removal of a statue of Civil War Confederate General Robert E Lee.

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Anti-racism protesters attended to condemn the swastika-toting display of Confederate flags and nazi-salutes, brazenly showcased by those in KKK robes.

Meanwhile, the 45th President, Donald Trump, has been widely criticised by both Democrats and Republicans for not explicitly condemning the White Supremacists and their transparent racism.

AP

Hours after the violence erupted, Mr Trump said he condemned ‘in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry, and violence on many sides’, adding: “The hate and the division must stop right now. We have to come together as Americans with love for our nation.”

Neo-Nazis have since praised President Trump for his lax response to racist violence, which seemed to place blame at the door of the peaceful anti-fascist protesters.

Elsewhere on Twitter, users have profoundly pointed out their grandparents fought Nazism overseas, so our generation didn’t have to.

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They too condemned the actions of American racists:

Perhaps the current President could take a leaf out of his predecessor’s Twitter feed, after his hopeful message was liked by 2.2 million people, at the time of writing.

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Obama’s simple tweet of unity and love speaks to the fact that we are created equal and any differentiation between race or religion or class is a societal construct born out of ignorance and fear.

It is a call to arms against bigotry, at a time when we need it most.