MSNBC’s Joy Reid is the race-baiting queen but she’s never met a Republican like Winsome Sears who was elected as the LT. Gov of Virginia. Reid claimed that Sears, a military veteran, businesswoman, and politician replied with “I wish she would invite me on her show”.
“We are framing too many issues in terms of race and it just continues to divide us. And unfortunately, politicians are using it as a tool, because of the things that have happened to us historically, to advance, I would think, their nefarious purposes. And so if we stop just looking at race and just looking at people—because you see, I’m destroying all the narratives about race.”
“Look at me, look at me, I am a heartbeat away from the governorship in case anything happens to the governor,” Sears said, “and and how are you going to tell me that I’m a victim. And I didn’t do anything special to get here, except stay in school and study, I took advantage of the opportunities that are available here in America. I wasn’t born here. This is not my culture, not my country. But it allowed me America allowed me to come and do for myself and for my family.
“And I remember when I was wanting to go to college, I had three children under five, my husband took a lower-paying job so he could stay home because he already had his degree. And I put one of my children on the back of a bicycle so that I could get to college. So nobody can say to me, I don’t know what it is to be poor. You’re looking at the American dream. So we can do better.”
“And it’s not 1963 when my father came at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, 17 days before Martin Luther King Jr. gave his I Have a Dream speech. We’re better than that. We’re always gonna have problems. I understand that. I’m not saying we’re perfect. But you can see those people at the border right now. Trying to get in, they’re dying to get in because they know if they can put a foot on American soil, the trajectory of their lives will change just as it did for my father,” Sears said.
Sears next replied to Reid’s garbage:
“I wish Joy Reid would invite me on her show,” Sears said. “Let’s see if she’s woman enough to do that, I’d go in a heartbeat. And we’d have a real discussion without Joy speaking about me behind my back, if you will.”
“She talks about white supremacy. Does she know that I ran against a white supremacist? I mean Joy, come on, get your facts straight, and then come talk to me.”
Watch The Clip Below.
Sears was born in Jamacia but immigrated to the US in 1963 with her parents during the height of the civil rights movement. To repeat Sears again, she is ‘the American dream’.