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ToggleKilmeade Channels the Founders—And the Left Calls It ‘Racism’
By: Skip Rowland
Let me set the scene.
It was 8:06 a.m. Eastern. The Fox & Friends chyron read, “STANDING FOR AMERICA: Rep. Omar Doubles Down on Criticism.” And in that moment, Brian Kilmeade, co-host, patriot, and unshakable voice of reason, turned to the camera and delivered what I now refer to as The Truth Monologue.
“If Ilhan Omar hates this country so much… maybe she should consider leaving it.”
Reader, I wept.
The Courage to Say the Quiet Part on National TV
While weak-kneed journalists twisted themselves into ethical knots, Kilmeade—calm, assertive, gently lit by the Fox News glow—told it like it was. Not with venom, but with valor.
Where others see xenophobia, I see a First Amendment workout. Where critics cry racism, I hear the Founding Fathers whispering, “Broadcast it louder.”
The Chyron That Changed Me
After the segment aired, the chyron changed to:
“PATRIOTIC DISAGREEMENT OR DANGEROUS RHETORIC?”
I screamed, “PATRIOTIC!” at my TV. The toaster caught fire. My tears put it out.
Viewer Response: “Finally, a Voice for the Silent Majority”
Fox News viewers took to social media in support.
“Kilmeade said what we all feel.”
“This country needs more truth and fewer complaints.”
“Can we get him on the Supreme Court?”
I upvoted every comment. Twice.
The Left’s Predictable Collapse
Within hours, mainstream outlets ran headlines like:
“Kilmeade Echoes Trump-Era Xenophobia”
“Omar Told to Leave—Again”
“Is Fox News Waging War on Women of Color?”
The answer, dear reader, is no. Fox is waging a war on low ratings and nuance.
Skip’s Final Thought: The Televised Truth
Kilmeade didn’t say anything hateful. He said something broadcastable. Something sponsorable. Something that made me adjust my antenna and stand.
“If she hates it so much, maybe she should leave.”
Those words are not just a sentence. They’re a symphony.
America heard it. I felt it. The microwave buzzed with patriotic electricity.
And to those who claim this is “dangerous rhetoric,” I say: danger is sometimes the price of freedom. Also, ratings.