Four months ago, MSNBC’s Ali Velshi was in Minnesota, covering social-justice protests in the wake of George Floyd’s killing. As video helped show, police tried to disrupt a May 30 protest, culminating in Velshi getting hit by a rubber bullet.
At a campaign rally in Minnesota on Friday night, Trump celebrated what transpired.
“I remember this guy Velshi. He got hit in the knee with a canister of tear gas and he went down. He was down. ‘My knee, my knee.’ Nobody cared, these guys didn’t care, they moved him aside. And they just walked right through. It was the most beautiful thing. No, because after we take all that crap for weeks and weeks, and you finally see men get up there and go right through them. Wasn’t it really a beautiful sight? It’s called law and order.”
This is where we find ourselves in 2020: an American president defines “law and order” by pointing to an incident in which police fired on a journalist, without warning or provocation. In the Republican’s eyes, it was “a beautiful sight.”
For his part, Velshi wrote on Twitter, in a message to Trump, “[Y]ou call my getting hit by authorities in Minneapolis on 5/30/20 (by a rubber bullet, [by the way], not a tear gas cannister) a ‘beautiful thing’ called ‘law and order.’ What law did I break while covering an entirely peaceful (yes, entirely peaceful) march?”
MSNBC — my employer — added in a statement, “Freedom of the press is a pillar of our democracy. When the President mocks a journalist for the injury he sustained while putting himself in harm’s way to inform the public, he endangers thousands of other journalists and undermines our freedoms.”








