Plans for new dams slated for end of 2025, while municipal debt to water boards persist
“Hate has always existed in America. Yes we know that but Donald Trump just made it fashionable again!” James tweeted shortly after Trump angrily defended his controversial initial response to the white supremacist rally on Saturday that erupted in clashes with counter-demonstrators.
A suspected Nazi sympathizer plowed his car into a crowd of anti-racism demonstrators, leaving one woman dead and 19 injured.
Trump’s reaction on Saturday, that there was violence “on many sides” provoked a backlash and on Monday he singled out the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis involved as criminals.
But in an exchange with reporters at Trump Tower in New York on Tuesday, a clearly irked Trump again said that both groups were at fault in inciting violence and insisted that those who gathered to protest the removal of a statue of Confederate leader Robert E. Lee form a park were not all racist.
James, who has long been outspoken about matters of race in America and endorsed Trump’s opponent Hillary Clinton for president, had tweeted his dismay at the events in Charlottesville over the weekend.
“It’s sad what’s going on in Charlottesville,” James tweeted on Saturday. “Is this the direction our country is heading?
“Make america Great Again huh?! He said that,” added James in a dig at Trump’s celebrated campaign slogan.
While James has attempted to use his celebrity to combat racism, his wealth and fame haven’t made him immune.
On the eve of the NBA Finals in June his house in an upscale Los Angeles neighborhood was daubed with a racial slur.
“Hate in America, especially for African-Americans, is living every day,” James said at the time.
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