Democrat double standard: if trans attacker kills Christians, is it not hate crime?

The White House press secretary stated that “It’s not for us to decide”, when asked if the school shooting in Nashville by a trans individual should be classified as a ‘hate crime’. When, however, a shooter killed five people at an LGBTQ+ nightclub, Biden called it “horrific hate violence.'

WORLD APRIL 9. 2023 10:31

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre refused to comment Wednesday when asked if the school shooting in Nashville by a trans individual should be classified as a ‘hate crime’. The transgender terrorist Audrey Hale specifically targeted Christians, killing three children and three teachers at a private school last week.

“It’s not for us to decide” whether the act constitutes a hate crime, the press secretary said.

However, the White House has not been so circumspect in the past, Summit News points out.

When a shooter killed five people at a LGBTQ+ nightclub in Colorado last year, Biden called it “horrific hate violence,” and stated “We must drive out the inequities that contribute to violence against LGBTQI+ people. We cannot and must not tolerate hate.”

There was no further comment, however when it was revealed that the suspect was a ‘non-binary’ they/them person, and it just went away from the media cycle.

After a teenage gunman killed 10 people and injured three others at a supermarket in Buffalo last year, Biden labelled it “an act of domestic terrorism,” and stated that “an act perpetrated in the name of a repugnant white nationalist ideology, is antithetical to everything we stand for in America. Hate must have no safe harbor. We must do everything in our power to end hate-fueled domestic terrorism.”

The same level of denunciation was noticeably absent when a black supremacist and BLM supporter with a history of anti-white statements, including calling white people “the enemy,” killed five people and injured dozens of others during a Christmas parade.

WORLD

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attack, christians, joe biden, lgbt, nashville, usa, white house