Ken Burns: Trump using Nazi playbook

Ken Burns: Trump using Nazi playbook


Ever since the American people kicked the Democrats out of the White House and every majority in government, the liberals have thrown out what little civilized restraint they had: Now they'll call names, call everyone Nazis, accuse everyone of unspeakable crimes, etc, you name it.

When the going gets tough, these people turn into hate-filled monsters.

We kicked them out just in time.
 
Ken Burns: Trump is using Nazi playbook - CNN Video

I really, really hope that he is wrong, but this is very scary.
Ken Burns is a f*ing idiot.

The libs have milked the 'Nazi' 'fake news' BS as far as it can go, but they refuse to let it go. Manipulators like Burns dish out the BS and bitter, sore-loser, butthurt snowflakes who still haven't gotten over Hillary's loss are far too willing to eat it up and partot it like it was the gospel.

Sad.
 
As Per Wikipedia;

Kenneth Lauren "Ken" Burns[1] (born July 29, 1953)[1] is an American filmmaker, known for his style of using archival footage and photographs in documentary films. His most widely known documentaries are The Civil War (1990), Baseball (1994), Jazz (2001), The War (2007), The National Parks: America's Best Idea (2009), Prohibition (2011), The Central Park Five (2012), and The Roosevelts (2014). He was also executive producer of both The West (1996, directed by Stephen Ives), and Cancer: The Emperor of All Maladies (2015, directed by Barak Goodman).[2]

Burns was born on July 29, 1953 in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Lyla Smith (née Tupper) Burns,[3] a biotechnician,[4] and Robert Kyle Burns, at the time a graduate student in cultural anthropology at Columbia University in Manhattan.[3] The documentary filmmaker Ric Burns is his younger brother.[5][6] He is a distant relative of Scottish poet Robert Burns.[7][8]

Burns's academic family moved frequently. Among places they called home were Saint-Véran, France; Newark, Delaware; and Ann Arbor, where his father taught at the University of Michigan.[4] Burns's mother was found to have breast cancer when Burns was 3 and died when he was 11,[4] a circumstance that he said helped shape his career; he credited his father-in-law, a psychologist, with a signal insight: "He told me that my whole work was an attempt to make people long gone come back alive."[4] Well-read as a child, he absorbed the family encyclopedia, preferring history to fiction. Upon receiving an 8 mm film movie camera for his 17th birthday, he shot a documentary about an Ann Arbor factory. He graduated from Pioneer High School in Ann Arbor in 1971.[9] Turning down reduced tuition at the University of Michigan, he attended Hampshire College, an alternative school in Amherst, Massachusetts, where students are graded through narrative evaluations rather than letter grades and where students create self-directed academic concentrations instead of choosing a traditional major.[4] He worked in a record store to pay his tuition.[4]

Studying under photographers Jerome Liebling and Elaine Mayes and others, Burns earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in film studies and design[10] in 1975.

Burns is a longtime supporter of the Democratic Party, with almost $40,000 in political donations.[15] In 2008, the Democratic National Committee chose Burns to produce the introductory video for Senator Edward Kennedy's August 2008 speech to the Democratic National Convention, a video described by Politico as a "Burns-crafted tribute casting him [Kennedy] as the modern Ulysses bringing his party home to port."[16][17] In August 2009, Kennedy died, and Burns produced a short eulogy video at his funeral. In endorsing Barack Obama for the U.S. presidency in December 2007, Burns compared Obama to Abraham Lincoln.[18] He said he had planned to be a regular contributor to Countdown with Keith Olbermann on Current TV.[19]
 

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