GOP Senate hopeful reveals how Dems are making America 'weaker' in viral video ahead of Thanksgiving
A Kentucky businessman attempting to replace former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is ripping the left's woke trend of offering up "land acknowledgments," arguing the narrative behind it is...
By Fox News · Fox News
A Kentucky businessman attempting to replace former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is ripping the left's woke trend of offering up "land acknowledgments," arguing the narrative behind it is misleading and "anti-American." Nate Morris, a multimillionaire and former CEO of one of the largest software companies in Kentucky, argued in a video posted to X that America was "negotiated for" and "fought over," not stolen as the left often claims. Meanwhile, Morris referred to the trend as "one more left-wing attempt to weaken America from within." "We bought Alaska from Russia and the Lousiana Purchase was purchased from France," Morris pointed out. "We negotiated, traded and signed treaties covering millions of acres. Compare that to how Europe, Asia, or the Middle East shifted borders for thousands of years … the left wants to judge America by standards no other nation in history could meet." DNC OPENS SUMMER MEETING WITH LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT, CLAIMS THAT US SUPPRESSES INDIGENOUS HISTORY Meanwhile, Morris blasted those on the left engaging in these land acknowledgments for not even knowing the history of the American-Indians they claim to want to defend. "The Apache and the Sioux – they weren't into Disney movies – they were warrior nations. Heck, even the Comanche were cave dwellers in Wyoming until they got horses and conquered half of the United States," Morris pointed out, adding that it is peculiar how "all the people trying to acknowledge this land" aren't leaving it. Morris continued that anyone who tells you America was "stolen," not "conquered," is either trying to "rewrite history" or "make America weaker." "It was fought over, and it was settled by ancestors who believed in private industry and law and order – manifest destiny," the Senate candidate argued. ‘AMERICA FIRST’ ATTORNEY GENERAL DISTANCES HIMSELF FROM MCCONNELL — HIS FORMER BOSS — AS KENTUCKY RACE DEFINES GOP FUTURE As a Republican, Morris likely has many supporters that agree with hi…