'The View' Cast Stand Up To Goldberg Lies About Justice Thomas
The View host Whoopi Goldberg was advocating for the left and insisting that viewers vote 'blue' to save democracy. Goldberg claimed that Republicans are coming for their rights.
"Democrats seem to be running on is also protecting everyone's rights regardless. Whoever you love or whoever you're married to, or if you’re married, I don't know. But they're trying to make sure that the rights you are so easily, you know, able to give away, we're trying to hold on and say, actually, you can't do that.," she claimed.
She followed that crazy propaganda up with another massive lie claiming that Justice Clarence Thomas has publically gone after interracial relationships. She's not the first lib I've heard claim this but she was brazen enough to claim that he published his intentions—Never happened.
Co-host Sunny Hostin broke out the books on Bloomberg and read off Thomas's public opinion on rulings he felt needed to be looked at—Can you guess what wasn't in there?
Goldberg was pissed and blamed her co-costs, "No, but I'm telling you when he spoke about all the things that could go, this was one of the things he brought up. You all brought it up at the table several weeks ago!'
Watch
Transcript
WHOOPI GOLDBERG: Jim Jordan, I know you don't really pay attention to much, but I will say that what the Democrats seem to be running on is also protecting everyone's rights regardless. Whoever you love or whoever you're married to, or if you’re married, I don't know. But they're trying to make sure that the rights you are so easily, you know, able to give away, we're trying to hold on and say, actually, you can't do that.
Especially for a lot of folks who are also married interracially which is coming up, you know, bobbing its ugly head around; talking about moving that.
JOY BEHAR: Clarence Thomas is not going to move on that one because his wife is white.
GOLDBERG: Well, let’s find out. He’s the one who sort of brought it up.
BEHAR: Well, he didn't bring that one up.
GOLDBERG: Yeah, he brought that one up.
BEHAR: Did he?
GOLDBERG: Yes, he did. Yes, he did.
SUNNY HOSTIN: What he did say was in his concurring opinion that overturned federal abortion rights, he wrote that similar cases should be reconsidered. He said Griswold should be considered.
BEHAR: Which is what?
HOSTIN: Which is the right to contraception. He said Lawrence v. Texas should be reconsidered, the right to same-sex intimacy, and Oberefell – I think I pronounced that incorrectly –
[Collective attempts to pronounce “Obergefell”]
HOSTIN: Which is the right to same-sex marriage. But he did not talk about Loving v. the United States [sic].
BEHAR: No, Loving he didn’t bring up.
SUNNY: Which was interracial marriage.
GOLDBERG: No, but I'm telling you, when he spoke about all the things that could go, this was one of the things he brought up. You all brought it up at the table several weeks ago.