The One Sentence Donald Trump Won't Stop Saying
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By:
In the above clip, he says it:
- At the 7-second mark ("We have to bring our country back, Bill.")
- The 15-second mark ("We have to bring our country back.")
- At 3:06 ("We have to start a process where we take back our country.")
- At 3:11 ("We have to start a process, Bill, where we take back our country").
![Take Our Country Back Take Our Country Back](https://static.attn.com/sites/default/files/CBYeplhWUAA2q1k.jpg_large.jpg?auto=format&crop=faces&fit=crop&q=60&w=736&ixlib=js-1.1.0)
This phrasing is not new.
![Anti-Immigrant Cartoon Anti-Immigrant Cartoon](https://static.attn.com/sites/default/files/5023.jpg?auto=format&crop=faces&fit=crop&q=60&w=736&ixlib=js-1.1.0)
In the 1928 presidential election, Democratic candidate and New York Gov. Al Smith dealt with bald-faced bigotry attacking his immigrant background and Catholic faith, with opposition making the argument that a vote for Al Smith was really a vote for the European Catholic Pope to rule America. "A [Ku Klux] Klan colleague in remote North Manchester, Ind., warned his audience, in booming tones, of the imminent arrival of the pope: 'He may even be on the northbound train tomorrow! He may! He may! Be warned! America is for Americans! Watch the trains!'” Robert Slayton wrote, looking back on that election in the New York Times in 2012.
"Trump's not saying anything new," Silberman said. "This kind of xenophobia, gosh, how many times have we heard this in just the 20th century alone?"
There has always been a fear in America that some marginalized group was undermining American values and seeking to fundamentally change it for the worse. And as long as that fear as existed, there have been politicians willing to feed that fear. Donald Trump is just one in a long line that will probably continue into the future.