For anyone who thinks CNN is dedicated to bringing the American people together, you’re sadly mistaken. Case in point two examples from CNN International on early Tuesday and Wednesday mornings where guest Segun Oduolowu declared the GOP to be neo-Nazis while leaders like Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell are “old slave owners” who ignored lynchings.

Let’s take the early Tuesday comments first. Oduolowu first lambasted the business CEOs who quit the President’s economic councils for even joining them to begin with because “this feels like fake outrage to me” since “[y]ou knew what this man was.” [Beginning at the 4:43 mark]

Oduolowu pivoted to addressing fellow Los Angeles-based guest and GOP strategist John Thomas, informing him that the neo-Nazis are the Republican Party and he’s “in bed” with them [emphasis mine]:

As a Republican, when you have basically sold your soul to the alt-right, to people who are marching the streets of a college town — an institution for high learning where slaves actually built that university. When they are marching and you own the presidency, you pretty much own the judiciary, you own most of the elected officials and the government, what country were they — are they losing? They are the GOP right now. They are the GOP. You are in bed. You are in bed with the enemy, John. So, please, look. I love you, brother, but defend what you’ve guys done.

Roughly 24 hours later, Oduolowu was back at it following President Trump’s controversial press conference saying that there were good people on “both sides” in Saturday’s antifa and neo-Nazi clashes that left well-being counter-protesters caught up in the violence.

Oduolowu argued that it’s unfair to state that “this rabid base of white nationalists and alt-right that support Trump is a small one, but I think it's larger than people really actually realize because when the leadership of the Republican Party are turning their heads and looking the other way when all of this is going on, it shows almost tacit agreement.” [Remarks start at the 6:12 mark]

Trashing House Speaker Paul Ryan’s condemnation of the President and Mitch McConnell’s lack thereof (at the time), Oduolowu declared the Republican leaders reminded him of “slave owners” and people who did nothing to stop lynchings of African-Americans [emphasis mine]:

These people that are surrounding him remind of the old slave owners in the South who knew that lynching and all of that stuff was bad but they prefer to turn their head and look the other way as long as they weren't the ones who were taking the front fire and they weren't the ones actually saying what Trump is saying. So I don't want to read the body language of generals anymore. I don't want the statements to be measured. I want to call those people who say that they're conservative but that they don't agree with the racism and the bigotry. How they can still keep supporting this man. Because to me it looks like that old Southern gentlemen turning his head while the black people got lynched. And that kid that got beaten in a parking garage didn't get any — didn't get the type of news coverage he was supposed to but a white girl that got run over by a car did.

How classy. And he received zero pushback for this from co-hosts Isaha Sesay and John Vause.

Earlier in the late-night Los Angles CNN Newsroom, CNN political commentator and conservative talk radio host John Phillips thrashed these neo-Nazi losers and even brought some humor to the discussion when it came to how no serious person should happen to stumble upon a neo-Nazi rally [Starts at the 1:28 mark]:

I think that if you went to that rally and you saw one swastika, you would turn around and leave. It's like if you go into a women's restroom by accident, you look around, if you don't see any urinals except for the sinks then you say those are really high urinals over there, you turn around and leave.

Oduolowu wouldn’t concede it to this writer on Twitter, but by suggesting all conservatives and Republicans are or are okay with neo-Nazis and slave owners, he’s making in-kind contributions to the President’s reelection campaign.

Insulting almost 63 million people who voted for the President isn’t a wise move. Then again, we know this is the media strategy because anything less than full suppression of conservative thought in favor of leftist rule with abortions for everyone, an anti-Israeli foreign policy, and single-payer health care.

Spoiler alert, conservatives and Republicans don’t have to become full-blown liberals in order to stand against the hate of these KKK, neo-Nazi, and white supremacist losers. Unfortunately, the media won’t be satisfied until there’s full dissension from the GOP and President Trump is called out by name.

Exit question for the lefties out there: Former Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush released a joint statement denouncing “racial bigotry, anti-Semitism, and hatred in all forms.” Because they didn’t mention President Trump by name, are they also racist cowards?

Here’s the relevant transcript from CNN International’s CNN Newsroom: Live from Los Angeles on August 15 and 16: