After Donald Trump's unhinged press conference yesterday974 Archives where he said both sides were to blame after the domestic terrorism incident in Charlottesville, Virginia, various public figures are speaking out with a different kind of message.
At his annual Family Foundation event last night, Cleveland Cavaliers all star LeBron James spoke out against Trump's comments.
SEE ALSO: Charlottesville really happened. Don't look away.James called for change through love, saying it's not about Trump, "it's about us."
ESPN's David McMenamin tweeted James' entire speech:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Lebron said that he felt responsible for using his status to get this message across.
"I have this platform and I’m somebody that has a voice of command, and the only way for us to get better as a society, and for us to get better as people, is love. And that’s the only way we’re going to be able to conquer something as one."
Hours before the events, James tweeted his thoughts on how Trump's presidency ignited these hateful and violent events.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Though James comment's were not without controversy on Twitter, his message of love will hopefully not be lost on his fans.
Thomas Mann’s Brutal Review of His Older Brother’s NoveliPhone 15 Pro Max: Reports about burnWordle today: The answer and hints for October 17Staff Picks: Brenda Shaughnessy, Bernadette Mayer, Rivka GalchenCNBC segment goes off the rails with barking dogs, man in underwearBest Apple Watch Ultra deal: $70 off Apple Watch UltraGlen Baxter Week, Day Three: Sex, Trees, Florists, ProgressThomas Mann’s Brutal Review of His Older Brother’s NovelShark vacuum deal: Save $150 at AmazonHow do antidepressants affect your orgasms?Before ASCII Art, There Was … This 19thHow We Imagined a Female President Would Look in 1992Shark vacuum deal: Save $150 at AmazonInstagram meme creators demand more transparent positing guidelinesWordle today: The answer and hints for October 17Best speaker deal: The Bose SoundLink Micro is on sale for under $100Raving Maniac of the Cinema: Jonas Mekas’s AntiTaxicab Confessions: Sure, I’d Kidnap a Celebrity!Staff Picks: Brenda Shaughnessy, Bernadette Mayer, Rivka GalchenMy Autobibliography: Building a Library in Saint Lucia Beatlemania in Yugoslavia by Slavenka Drakulić No Walk Is Ever Wasted by Matthew Beaumont The Fabulous Forgotten Life of Vita Sackville Almost Eighty by Adrienne Kennedy Ways to Open a Door: An Interview with Destiny Birdsong by Claire Schwartz My Gender Is Masha Gessen Inside the Order Is Always Something Wild by Elizabeth Alexander Redux: It’s Almost Next Year by The Paris Review More Primitive, More Sensual, More Obscene by Marina Benjamin A Collision with the Divine by Helen Macdonald A Little Patch of Something by Imani Perry The Shadows below the Shadows The Art of Distance No. 36 by The Paris Review America’s First Connoisseur by Edward White Redux: Morning Full of Voices by The Paris Review Ladies of the Good Dead by Aisha Sabatini Sloan I See the World by Jamaica Kincaid The Art of Distance No. 37 by The Paris Review The Feminine Pillar of Male Chauvinism by Lucy Scholes A Masterpiece of Disharmony
2.6021s , 10101.6328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1974 Archives】,Fresh Information Network