Uygur’s segment focused on Rep. Peter King‘s recent comments on Islam and what he perceived to be a lack of communication between the authorities and Muslim groups. Uygur wondered why Rep. King put such an emphasis on Muslim groups when the reality, according to Uygur, was that right-wing hate groups were far more active in America than Muslim extremists.
“Let me introduce real facts here so that Congressman King can be educated,” Uygur boasts before showing a number of statistics from various research groups. Rep. King wasn&
“Topping the list,” he began, “[are] the Ku Klux Klan with 221 groups. They are followed with Neo-Nazi groups with 170 groups, and”– at this point Uygur stops for a beat, before ending the list with “that doesn’t make any sense.” What doesn’t make any sense? That the third largest hate group contingent in America are black separatist groups. Not exactly the first type of political group conjured up by the phrase “right-wing,” unless Uygur was willing to argue that the social conservatism often found in black separatist groups somehow made them right-wing or some other similarly stretched-out argument. Of course, the socially conservative black separatist groups on the SPLC’s list mostly appear to be chapters of the Nation of Islam, and slamming them would not exactly strengthen Uygur’s argument that focusing on Islamic groups is a waste. Uygur smartly didn’t try to argue that, but at its expense failed to argue anything at all, responding to
The segment via MSNBC below: