Condemning Roseanne Barr’s ugly, racist tweet from Tuesday morning about former Obama administration official Valerie Jarrett should be relatively simple. However, the panel on MSNBC’s Deadline: White House took things further and then some.

In the show’s B-Block, the panel linked the now-cancelled ABC star’s comments to Sarah Palin on the 2008 campaign trail, “borderline evil” people in the White House “hurting this country,” how “white people have lost their damn minds,” and Trump supporters are “moral monsters that are running around this country.”

After The Washington Post’s Ashley Parker observed that Trump rallies bring out “a frenzied, dark side in people,” host Nicolle Wallace found it worth dredging up how awful Sarah Palin made her life and that of panelist Steve Schmidt while overseeing the McCain-Palin campaign.

“[S]ome of that had its birth in the Sarah Palin crowds. I mean, you and I both saw it and while, across the Midwest, John McCain was reprimanding his supporters when they called President Obama — then-Senator Obama a Muslim. Sarah Palin reveled in what you just described,” Wallace sneered.

Schmidt agreed, slamming the people who actually did support the ticket as having “made us cringe.” The long-winded faux Republican then turned his aim to the Trump administration, shouting that “any of these people who are working in a political capacity in this White House, they are complicit with this” and “not serving the better angels of our country.”

As he’s prone to do, Schmidt continued uninterrupted for a few minutes and linked Roseanne to our discourse. He painted an apocalyptic present day with “deliberate,” “purposeful,” and “premeditated” actions carried out by the “borderline evil” people working in the White House to destroy America (click “expand”):

WALLACE: Do you call anybody out? Secretary Mattis? SCHMIDT: I carve out people in vital, national security functions that are serving in — WALLACE: Who? SCHMIDT: — non-political capacities? I’d put Secretary Mattis into that role. For example, when Pompeo goes out last week and he talks about, well, no, these words just kind of get thrown around out there. B.S. Part of a deliberate disinformation campaign by this President. We've never seen the level of lying. We've never seen the level of race-baiting. You know, we think about the greatest president this country has ever produced, Abraham Lincoln. We think about Lincoln calling to the better angels of our nature. Donald Trump, every day from the moment he wakes up to the moment he retires, summons our worst demons and the people in that White House are in on it with him. They are coarsening the country. The level of lying, the level of deceit, the level of attacks on our institutions, the sundering of the country for political purposes, all of it, it is deliberate, it is purposeful, it is premeditated. They know exactly what they're doing. There's a political strategy to it. It is not providential. It is not accidental and you either look at that and you recognize not only is it bad, it's borderline evil and it is hurting this country and last word about Valerie Jarrett, who served from the moment of President Barack Obama's inauguration to the moment of Donald Trump's inauguration. She served with dignity, with honor, with the qualities of probity and rectitude that are completely missing from anybody that is serving in this White House and so, Valerie Jarrett when we look at her conduct as a senior official of the government of the United States compared to these people, give me a break.

Princeton University professor and MSNBC contributor Eddie Glaude followed suit, telling Wallace that the President is “not the iceberg” of racism in this country but rather “the tip of the iceberg.”

“We could talk about the politics, we could talk about what's happening in the White House and folks who complicit with it. But for a lot of black folk in this country, it seems as if, in a generality, white people have lost their damn minds and we have to raise our children in the midst of this,” Glaude lamented.

Citing Barr’s unacceptable comments, plus two recent incidents at a Starbucks and Waffle House, Glaude linked those to previous generations of African-Americans being lynched. He then, in part, continued (again, click “expand” and emphasis mine):

We find ourselves in a historic moment right now where we have to worry about raising our kids. We have to worry about whether or not they will have opportunity. So we could talk about the politics, but there's something and Steve, you've get at this — you’ve touched on this. There's something deeply insidious that’s borderline evil here and it's not just simply Donald Trump. It's about the moral monsters that are running around this country and claiming it as their own and making so many people vulnerable and it’s — you know, my son just graduated yesterday on Sunday and I'm thinking about how joyous he was, how I saw that big beautiful smile and then I got to worry about him, Nicolle. We have to worry about — why? Because we can't seem to look the ugliness or who we are — not just simply Donald Trump, but who we are and who we have been so that we can imagine oust ourselves better...[B]ut we have to fight we have to fight for a better America and we can't cede it to these folk who are, in some ways, nurturing themselves in hate and that's going to require not only voting. It's going to require getting out and doing the heavy lifting in our neighborhoods with people who often don't look like us.

At the end of the day, don’t try and make the case that liberal media outlets like MSNBC want to unite the country. If anything, they only want to see further division to drive up ratings and satisfy corporate liberals who make up their advertising base.

To see the relevant transcript from MSNBC’s Deadline: White House on May 29, click “expand.”