'Dangerous, offensive, disgusting': Senator Tim Scott crushes 'The View's' race-baiting words about him being the 'exception not the rule'



Senator Tim Scott appeared on talk show "The View" to combat comments made by the show's hosts just two weeks prior that he didn't quite grasp what it's like to be black in the United States, despite being a black man himself. Scott also called remarks that his life was an "exception" for black people, not a rule, "dangerous" and "disgusting."

Host Joy Behar recently claimed that Scott and other black Republicans didn't acknowledge systemic racism to the degree that she believes they should and implied that "pulling yourself by your bootstraps" was an unrealistic viewpoint.

"He's one of these guys, who, you know, he's like [Supreme Court Justice] Clarence Thomas, black Republican, believes in pulling yourself by your bootstraps rather than, to me, understanding the systemic racism that African-Americans face in this country, and other minorities," Behar said.

Scott recently announced that he was running for president, and appeared on "The View" on June 5, 2023, to combat the narrative the hosts were schilling about him. However, Behar did not appear on the episode for his rebuttal — instead, co-host Sunny Hostin had the most contentious exchange with the South Carolina politician.

"You have indicated that you don't believe in systemic racism," Hostin asked. "What is your definition of systemic racism?"

"One of the reasons I'm on the show is because of the comments that were made frankly on this show that the only way for a young African-American kid to be successful in this country is to be the exception and not the rule," Scott began. "That is a dangerous, offensive, disgusting message to send to our young people today, that the only way to succeed is by being the exception."

"I will tell you that if my life is the exception, I can't imagine —" Scott continued before Hostin interrupted, saying "It is."

"But it's not actually," Scott declared. "It's been 114 years," the host added.

"The fact of the matter is we've had an African-American president, African-American vice president, we've had two African-American secretaries of the State, in my home city the police chief is an African-American who's now running for mayor. The head of the highway patrol for South Carolina is African-American," Scott listed. "In 1975, there is about 15% employment in the African-American community. For the first time in the history of the country it's under 5%."

\u201cThis is phenomenal. @SenatorTimScott just went on The View and absolutely dunked on the hosts on their own show. Enjoy:\u201d
— Clay Travis (@Clay Travis) 1685982850

America can be "measured in generations," Scott went on. "I look back at the fact that my grandfather, born in 1921 in Sally, South Carolina, when he was on a sidewalk, a white person was coming. He had to step off and not make eye contact. That man believed then, with some doubt now, in the goodness of America because he believed that having faith in God, faith in himself, and faith in what the future could hold for his kids would unleash opportunities in ways that you cannot imagine."

The senator went on to remark on how every major news network in the country has "African-American and Hispanic hosts." While he did not agree that "America has met its promise," he said the country should always strive to become a more perfect union.

Scott took issue with the program cutting to commercial during his responses and even faced boos after he said he took issue with what children were being "indoctrinated" with in regard to Disney.

\u201cThe audience BOOS Senator Tim Scott when he pushes back against woke indoctrination.\n\nWHOOPI: "Do not boo! This is The View!"\u201d
— Townhall.com (@Townhall.com) 1685982182
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Dem Senate candidate Gary Chambers accuses GOP Sen. Tim Scott of supporting 'racist political ideology against his own people for a 'seat at the table''



Gary Chambers, a Democrat seeking election to serve as a U.S. Senator from the state of Louisiana, has declared that Republican Sen. Tim Scott's vote against confirming Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to serve on the Supreme Court "is a disgrace."

"There are 3 Black men in the U.S. Senate, 1 of them, Tim Scott voted no on confirming Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court. There is always one of us, who thinks they know better than the rest of us Black folks. His no vote is a disgrace. Yea I said it," Chambers tweeted.

"Votes from Scott consistently show he will chose racist political ideology against his own people for a 'seat at the table,'" Chambers said in another tweet.

South Carolina is ranked 41 of all states, in the bottom 10 over all. \n\nTim Scott and Lindsey Graham equally contribute to that ranking in the bottom. \n\nVotes from Scott consistently show he will chose racist political ideology against his own people for a \u201cseat at the table.\u201d
— Gary Chambers (@Gary Chambers) 1649355596

The Senate confirmed Jackson in a 53-47 vote on Thursday, and Scott was one of the 47 GOP lawmakers who voted against confirmation. Scott, who in June, 2021, voted against confirming Jackson to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, issued a statement this week noting that he would vote against confirming Jackson to the high court. Jackson is slated to fill Justice Stephen Breyer's seat later this year after he retires.

Earlier this year, Chambers released a campaign ad that featured footage of him smoking marijuana. "Most of the people police are arresting aren't dealers, but rather people with small amounts of pot, just like me," Chambers said in a voiceover during the video.

The candidate later released an ad in which he burned a Confederate flag and claimed that "remnants of the Confederacy remain" throughout the American south.

My first campaign ad, \u201837 Seconds.\u2019 #JustLikeMe\n\nI hope this ad works to not only destigmatize the use of marijuana, but also forces a new conversation that creates the pathway to legalize this beneficial drug, and forgive those who were arrested due to outdated ideology.pic.twitter.com/G0qKvmUGKD
— Gary Chambers (@Gary Chambers) 1642510936

Left-wing MSNBC host Joy-Ann Reid attacked Scott in a tweet on Tuesday. "He let @LindseyGrahamSC & the sheriffs dog-walk him and destroy police reform after pretending to work on it and now he'll go along with Lindsey's barking-dog racism against Judge Jackson because: he's Tim Scott," Reid wrote.

All accuracy here. Not surprised by anything @SenatorTimScott does. He let @LindseyGrahamSC & the sheriffs dog-walk him and destroy police reform after pretending to work on it and now he'll go along with Lindsey's barking-dog racism against Judge Jackson because: he's Tim Scott.https://twitter.com/DarrellPMWest/status/1511344974306103296\u00a0\u2026
— Joy-Ann (Pro-Democracy) Reid \ud83d\ude37 (@Joy-Ann (Pro-Democracy) Reid \ud83d\ude37) 1649174384

Scott responded to Reid's remarks during an interview on Fox News.

"What is so offensive about what Joy is saying is that a black man cannot think for himself. I have to follow somebody else. That is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard," Scott said.

"There are millions of Americans who happen to be black, who want to think for themselves, who will think for themselves, but the power of the liberal elite wants to attack us like vicious dogs because they do not want anyone standing up" against "what they are doing, leading our country in the wrong direction," Scott said.

Senator Tim Scott Responds to Backlash Against His Opposition to Ketanji Brown Jackson Nomination www.youtube.com

Sen. Tim Scott punches back at Joy Reid over 'vile' insult for opposing Ketanji Brown Jackson: 'The most ridiculous thing I've ever heard'



Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) responded to MSNBC host Joy Reid on Thursday after she accused him of being the pawn of fellow South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham (R).

What did Reid say?

On Monday, Scott announced that he would vote against the Supreme Court confirmation of Ketanji Brown Jackson. Scott explained his decision saying that "ideology must be the determining factor—not identity—when considering such an important lifetime appointment."

In response, Reid claimed Scott is being "dog-walk[ed]" by Graham and law enforcement, essentially calling him a stooge for Graham's "barking-dog racism."

"Not surprised by anything @SenatorTimScott does," Reid tweeted. "He let @LindseyGrahamSC & the sheriffs dog-walk him and destroy police reform after pretending to work on it and now he'll go along with Lindsey's barking-dog racism against Judge Jackson because: he's Tim Scott."

All accuracy here. Not surprised by anything @SenatorTimScott does. He let @LindseyGrahamSC & the sheriffs dog-walk him and destroy police reform after pretending to work on it and now he'll go along with Lindsey's barking-dog racism against Judge Jackson because: he's Tim Scott.https://twitter.com/DarrellPMWest/status/1511344974306103296\u00a0\u2026
— Joy-Ann (Pro-Democracy) Reid \ud83d\ude37 (@Joy-Ann (Pro-Democracy) Reid \ud83d\ude37) 1649174384

How did Scott respond?

During an interview on "Fox & Friends," Scott exposed the offensive implications of Joy's accusation.

"What is so offensive about what Joy is saying is that a black man cannot think for himself, that I have to follow somebody else," Scott explained. "That is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard."

Just as problematic, Scott said that Reid's criticism demonstrates how Democrats believe black people should be a political monolith.

"It reinforces the liberal elites' approach to minorities who will not fall in line and do what they tell us to do. There are millions of Americans who happen to be black, who want to think for themselves, who will think for themselves," Scott explained. "But the power of the liberal elite wants to attack us like vicious dogs because they do not want anyone standing up opposed to what they are doing, leading our country in the wrong direction.

"It is vile, it is offensive, and we should stop allowing the liberal media to push these stories by their hosts that want one thing and one thing only: progressive, liberal policies that make it harder for African-Americans — not easier," he added.

Sen. Scott: Liberal elites are leading our country in the wrong direction www.youtube.com

On Thursday, the Senate confirmed Jackson's nomination by a vote of 53-47. The only Republicans who supported Jackson were Sens. Mitt Romney (Utah), Susan Collins -Maine), and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska).

Jackson will begin serving on Oct. 3 after the Supreme Court returns from its summer recess.

Texas Democratic official faces demands to resign after calling Sen. Tim Scott racial slur



A Texas Democratic official is facing widespread backlash and demands for his immediate resignation after he disparaged Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) with what is being characterized as a racial slur.

Democrats lashed out at Scott last week after he declared that America is "not a racist country."

What did the Democrat say?

Reacting to Scott absolving America from being inherently racist, Lamar County Democratic Party chair Gary O'Connor called Scott an "oreo" in a now-deleted Facebook post, Fox News reported.

"I had hoped that Scott might show some common sense, but it seems clear he is little more than an oreo with no real principles," O'Connor wrote.

Image source: screenshot via Rep. Pat Fallon.


By calling Scott an "oreo," O'Connor was suggesting that Scott — the lone black U.S. senator — is black on the outside, but white on the inside.

What was the reaction?

Texas Rep. Pat Fallon (R), whose congressional district includes Lamar County, rebuked O'Connor for his "racist behavior," and called on him to immediately resign from his leadership position.

"Gary O'Connor's comment against Senator Tim Scott is abhorrent, insulting, and unforgivable. Both he and the entire Lamar County Democratic Party should be ashamed of this racist behavior," Fallon said in a statement. "O'Connor must apologize and step down immediately."

"Additionally, I call on both the Democratic Party of Texas and the NAACP to condemn these words, and the state party should take swift action to censure him," he added. "This kind of behavior is not tolerable in Texas, the United States, or any political party."

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) had a similar reaction.

"This is disgusting, hateful, and completely unacceptable. O'Connor must apologize to @SenatorTimScott & step down immediately. @texasdemocrats censure him," Abbott said on Saturday.

Anything else?

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris did not receive similar condemnation from O'Connor, despite both Democratic leaders expressing agreement with Scott's statement.

"I don't think the American people are racist," Biden said last week. "I don't think America is racist, but I think the overhang from all of the Jim Crow — and before that, slavery — have had a cost, and we have to deal with it."

"No. I don't think America is a racist country," Harris said, 'but we also do have to speak truth about the history of racism in our country and its existence today.

WaPo fact-checks whether GOP Sen. Tim Scott actually went from 'cotton to Congress' — gets rightfully torched by critics



The Washington Post on Friday decided to publish an extensive probe of Republican Sen. Tim Scott's history to fact-check if the South Carolina lawmaker's family actually went from "cotton to Congress," prompting critics harsh criticism from commentators on the left and right.

What are the details?

"Tim Scott often talks about his grandfather and cotton. There's more to that tale," wrote Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler in the Friday morning hit piece on Scott, who was recently tapped to deliver the Republican Party's response to President Joe Biden's first address to a joint session of Congress next Wednesday.

Scott often touts his family's journey from cotton to Congress in one lifetime as proof of the opportunity America affords to enterprising individuals who work hard to get ahead, regardless of their skin color. But that message runs counter to modern progressive ideology, which teaches that America is inherently racist and restrictive to minority classes.

With that in mind, the Post set out to investigate the authenticity of Scott's claim, digging through the annals of history to decipher whether his grandfather, Artis Ware, was in fact forced out of elementary school to help on the farm and pick cotton.

In the exhaustive 1,800-word article, Kessler enlists the help of historians and draws from numerous census and property records to ultimately suggest on admittedly flimsy data that Scott, while speaking truthfully, may not be providing the entire context of his family's situation.

"Scott's "cotton to Congress" line is missing some nuance, but we are not going to rate his statements," Kessler declared, opting not to award Scott any Pinocchios.

"Scott tells a tidy story packaged for political consumption, but a close look shows how some of his family's early and improbable success gets flattened and written out of his biography," he continued. "Against heavy odds, Scott's ancestors amassed relatively large areas of farmland, a mark of distinction in the Black community at the time. Scott, moreover, does not mention that his grandfather worked on his father's farm — a farm that was expanded through land acquisitions even during the Great Depression, when many other Black farmers were forced out of business."

What else?

The post immediately drew backlash from commentators on social media.

"Who thought this was a good idea?" tweeted CNN commentator and former Democratic South Carolina state lawmaker, Bakari Sellers.

Who thought this was a good idea? https://t.co/019Sxf9V9l
— Bakari Sellers (@Bakari Sellers)1619193526.0

Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley added, "What WaPo did to @SenatorTimScott is shameful. When minorities refuse to be victims, disagree with liberal talking points, and think for ourselves, the media shames us and questions our credibility. It's why we must fight harder for conservative values that lift us all up."

What WaPo did to @SenatorTimScott is shameful. When minorities refuse to be victims, disagree with liberal talkin… https://t.co/asN5phSDA9
— Nikki Haley (@Nikki Haley)1619190227.0

"Senator Scott deserves an apology for this," political strategist Rory Cooper wrote. "It's everything wrong with the fact checking industry. The targeting. The lack of good faith. The personal side of it. It's bad."

Senator Scott deserves an apology for this. It's everything wrong with the fact checking industry. The targeting. T… https://t.co/DmDJIxMRw6
— Rory Cooper (@Rory Cooper)1619184427.0

"If you find yourself telling the grandson of a Depression-era Black man who spent his youth picking cotton to check his privilege, please for the love of all that is holy log off, WaPo," Washington Examiner executive editor Seth Mandel tweeted.

If you find yourself telling the grandson of a Depression-era black man who spent his youth picking cotton to check… https://t.co/zeSwxPO5UV
— Seth Mandel (@Seth Mandel)1619187992.0

Daily Wire reporter Cabot Phillips summarized the story this way: "A white man telling a black man his ancestors weren't ***actually*** that poor or oppressed ... If this story were about a Democrat, half the Washington Post editorial board would have been forced to resign by now.

A white man telling a black man his ancestors weren't ***actually*** that poor or oppressedIf this story were abo… https://t.co/OLI0HDyOHx
— Cabot Phillips (@Cabot Phillips)1619187303.0

Republican strategist Matt Whitlock noted that many readers will only see the headline in front of the Washington Post's paywall and assume that Scott is lying despite the fact that the outlet ended up admitting the senator's statement is true.

It’s quite a choice to publish this when A) your conclusion is that everything he said.. is true B) you’re argu… https://t.co/n655KK3g0g
— Matt Whitlock (@Matt Whitlock)1619188763.0

One self-described independent wrote, I "really don't think this is necessary or appropriate...Bad look by @washingtonpost."

Emmy-nominated sports reporter fired after he called GOP Sen. Tim Scott an 'Uncle Tom'



A TV sports reporter was fired on Wednesday after he called Republican Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.) an "Uncle Tom."

Fred Gerteiny, a sports reporter for the News 12 Connecticut network, wrote the racial slur in a since-deleted post on Twitter. Gerteiny replied to a tweet by The Hill's Twitter account that linked to an article about Scott commenting on President Donald Trump's remarks during the first presidential debate regarding the Proud Boys.

Gerteiny wrote, "Thanks Uncle Tom," in the now-deleted tweet.

deleted, but the List comes for all, @FredGerteiny.✍🏼✍🏼✍🏼 https://t.co/2ktrow7JuM
— Siraj Hashmi (@Siraj Hashmi)1601492251.0

On Wednesday, Gerteiny issued an apology on his Twitter account, which has since been deleted.

"Earlier today, I tweeted a racially insensitive comment, when I referred to @SenatorTimScott as an 'Uncle Tom.' I apologize to the Senator, my colleagues @News12CT, and anyone else I may have offended with this deeply offensive tweet," Gerteiny wrote.

Gerteiny, who is white, claimed that he also "wrote an email to Senator Scott" to apologize for the comment.

Gerteiny was fired by News 12 Connecticut for the "racially insensitive comment" on Wednesday.

"News 12 Connecticut learned on Wednesday afternoon that one of its anchors acted inappropriately on social media. After reviewing the incident, the network released sports reporter, Fred Gerteiny, as a result of a racially insensitive comment," News 12 Connecticut said in a statement. "News 12 Networks has a zero tolerance policy for racism or improper conduct based on race, and prides itself on being an objective and unbiased multi-platform news company."

Gerteiny's profile has been scrubbed from the News 12 Connecticut website.

An "Uncle Tom," is a "Black person, especially a man, considered by other Black people to be subservient to or to curry favor with white people," according to the definition provided by Dictionary.com.

Scott told reporters on Wednesday that he believed President Trump "misspoke" during the presidential debate.

"White supremacy should be denounced at every turn," Scott said. "I think the president misspoke, and he needs to correct it. If he doesn't correct it, I guess he didn't misspeak."

President Trump has since clarified his comments from Tuesday's debate. On Wednesday, President Trump said he didn't know who the Proud Boys are and noted that the group should "stand down and let law enforcement do its work."

Earlier this year, Scott predicted that black support for President Donald Trump would increase by 50% in 2020 compared to 2016.

"President Trump will see a 50 percent increase in his African-American support," Scott told Fox News host Neil Cavuto in February. "It will go from 8 percent in 2016 to a minimum of 12 percent in 2020. He may even get to 15 percent of the African American vote, and that is game over."

.@SenatorTimScott to Neil: President Trump will see a 50% increase in his African American support, it will go from… https://t.co/7UsSJmwnSR
— Neil Cavuto (@Neil Cavuto)1582237933.0

Another black conservative had racial slurs thrown at him in the past week. Women's March co-founder Tamika Mallory called Republican Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron a "sellout negro" for not charging the two police officers in the death of Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky.

Daily Beast columnist and CNN commentator Sophia A. Nelson called Cameron an "Uncle Tom," who "is a disgrace to his people and his community."

Twitter flooded with racist smears, 'Uncle Tom' attacks after Sen. Tim Scott delivers RNC speech



GOP Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.) closed out the first night of the Republican National Convention Monday night with a rousing and hopeful speech about how, in America, anyone has the opportunity to succeed if they work hard and how his family went from "cotton to Congress in one lifetime."

The speech drew high praise from many for its fresh reminder of the promise of the American dream.

But unfortunately, in what is becoming a regular occurrence when Scott speaks, countless users online also flooded Twitter with racist smears and "Uncle Tom" attacks against the black senator.

Here is just a small portion:

@chipfranklin Uncle Tom, oh l mean Tim Scott...
— Jacquella Morrison (@Jacquella Morrison)1598282817.0
Every time I see TIM SCOTT with that plantation Negro slave grin on his face, I feel nauseous. TRUMP caused HERMAN… https://t.co/FenqJb7qfb
— Jearlean (@Jearlean)1598368910.0
This dude Tim Scott a straight up Uncle Tom. #UncleTom
— #BlackLivesMatter #DefundThePolice #NFAC (@#BlackLivesMatter #DefundThePolice #NFAC)1598339556.0
@StewardshipAmer @realDonaldTrump @SenatorTimScott Tim scott is the Uncle Tom of the trump* party https://t.co/2uYSgXAiSl
— Darryl Stewart (@Darryl Stewart)1598327450.0

One elected Democratic official, Rep. Steve Cohen (Tenn.), even liked a tweet that said Scott "might as well be white" given what his message is.

Democrat @RepCohen just liked a tweet saying Tim Scott 'might as well be white' https://t.co/VpIua2Ja9I
— Jack Posobiec 🇺🇸 (@Jack Posobiec 🇺🇸)1598327384.0

And then there were many more:

Uncle Tom...#RNC #TimScott https://t.co/E2M7kUkVc5
— JSS (@JSS)1598323411.0
Sen. Tim Scott’s such an Uncle Tom!
— Scotian Man (aka Phil) (@Scotian Man (aka Phil))1598314792.0
Uncle Tom Tim Scott invokes Breonna Taylor, George Floyd in Trump convention speech https://t.co/vissvPguLu
— WTF (@WTF)1598355273.0

Sadly, these types of attacks against Scott are nothing new.

Earlier this year, Scott called out the racists on Twitter for heaving racial slurs at him after he was tapped to lead the Republican police reform legislation effort following the death of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers in late May.

In the hours after the announcement was made that he would lead the effort, Twitter users had allegedly referred to Scott as "token," "boy," and argued that he was "being used." He would later show some of the hate-filled messages to GOP colleagues at a private lunch.

(H/T: RedState)