On Monday, August 14 , President Donald Trump addressed the weekend's violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, condemning the white nationalist groups whose demonstrations resulted in the one death and numerous injuries. Trump faced much criticism in his first comments on the events, when he avoided naming the hate groups specifically and instead blamed the violence "on many sides."

But for some, Trump's second address was too little too late. Before he specifically called out the hate groups responsible for the weekend violence Senator Kamala Harris, a Democrat from California, made clear that there are no "many sides" when it comes to white supremacy — there's only one side.

In a Facebook post on Sunday, August 13, Harris said that while many are shocked that this kind of racial violence could happen in America in 2017, others understand that it was an explicit showing of attitudes and ideas that have persisted in the United States for years. Those ideas, Harris wrote, aren't held on many sides.

"I often advocate that we look at many sides of an issue, walk in someone else’s shoes, and identify and reject false choices. But there are not 'many sides" to this," she wrote. "'Many sides' suggests that there is no right side or wrong side, that all are morally equal. But I reject that. It’s not hard to spot the wrong side here. They’re the ones with the torches and the swastikas."

Harris was referencing the white nationalists who marched on University of Virginia's campus on Friday, August 11, carrying TIKI torches and some displaying swastikas on flags. Further evidence that there aren't "many sides" is the reason behind the rallies — to protest the removal of Confederate monuments.

"Let’s recall what led to the march in Charlottesville in the first place: the removal of Confederate statues, which celebrated men who fought for an America that kept human beings enslaved. That’s an America in which I’d never be allowed to vote, much less be elected a U.S. Senator," she wrote. "The white supremacists who gathered in Charlottesville were there to protest so-called 'attacks' on their self perceived racial superiority. That’s it – that’s their grievance."

Harris was not the only one outraged by Trump's comments that violence over the weekend was to blame on "many sides." Many took to Twitter to declare there's only one side.

Related: Obama, Biden, & More React to Charlottesville White Nationalist Rally