How insane does someone have to be to draw a connection between one of America’s fastest-growing sports and slavery? Come see for yourself.
Jim Acosta has not taken his fall from CNN prominence gracefully. We thought he hit rock bottom the day he decided to ‘interview’ an AI model of one of the kids killed in the Parkland School shooting of 2018. You can imagine our shock to learn that the AI emulator of the deceased kid just happened to share all the same political opinions about gun ownership and law changes that any other lefty might have.
His most craven act of journalism may have been helping push the ‘very fine people’ hoax when he himself asked the question, and heard Trump explicitly exclude white supremacists from his definition of ‘very fine people’ who he also identified as people with a personal connection to the park and the name on a historical civil-war era statue there. Acosta himself tweeted Trump’s statement that ‘racism is evil’.
But the brainworms have done their work and for all Acosta’s attempts to ruin the president, Jim has become a defeated man who’s now only a shell of whatever he once imagined himself to be in those grandiose displays of self-importance that once dominated the White House pressers.
We have a clip of him sitting down with Heather Cox Richardson, who is apparently a history professor at Boston with a specialty in the Civil War. She has previously taught at MIT and Amherst.
What are they talking about? The only topic such people ever seem capable of talking about — Trump.
In this case, they are joining every other lefty in reacting to the UFC event at the White House. They’re not talking about the huge turnout.
Or the flyover.
A flyover during the national anthem for a UFC event on the White House lawn
AMERICA 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/AFWPJeKt98
— Barstool Sports (@barstoolsports) June 15, 2026
Or the iconic photo that was taken in the lead up to the fight.
Fight night energy is taking over DC.
UFC Freedom 250 is almost here. 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/Zdqv8eS2HY
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 13, 2026
They’re talking about… lynchings.
‘Historian’ Heather Cox Richardson tells Jim Acosta:
“It’s not really a stretch to say that the same impulse that created the UFC fight on the white House lawn…
…is the impulse that really pushed lynching in the late 19th century.”
Acosta nods right along with this batsh*t… pic.twitter.com/dd9aJUR6Mz
— Western Lensman (@WesternLensman) June 16, 2026
These are the very same sort of people that get duped (or are cynically lying) to advance the blatant historical lies on which the 1619 project was founded.
I wonder if she even realizes that there’s a lot more to the history of lynching than just the slavery angle?
Tuskegee University now houses the nation’s most complete record of lynchings occurring in the U.S. during an 86-year period spanning 1882 to 1968. During this time, 4,743 people were lynched — including 3,446 African Americans and 1,297 whites. — Tuskegee U. study
Yeah… probably not.
If Acosta’s bobbing his head along with her, there’s a good chance she’s yet another instrument that only sounds one note — the left’s Current Thing narrative, whatever that happens to be.
