White nationalists rallied in Charlottesville, Virginia, this weekend against the removal of Confederate statues in public spaces. White nationalists attacked counterprotesters on Friday night, punching and kicking them and (reportedly) pepper-spraying them. One counterprotester was killed and several were injured when a car rammed into them after accelerating for more than a block.

President Trump blamed both sides.

In a statement read before a scheduled bill signing for the Department of Veterans Affairs, he did everything but say “All Lives Matter” to avoid talking about who had perpetrated the violence. And he left plenty of opportunity for people who are inclined to assume that the problem lay with counterprotesters to do just that.

Here is how the president began his statement:

We're closely following the terrible events unfolding in Charlottesville, Virginia. We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides, on many sides. It's been going on for a long time in our country. Not Donald Trump, not Barack Obama, this has been going on for a long, long time. It has no place in America. What is vital now is a swift restoration of law and order and the protection of innocent lives. No citizen should ever fear for their safety and security in our society. And no child should ever be afraid to go outside and play or be with their parents and have a good time.

This is not just a failure to condemn the white nationalists who were responsible for the bulk of the violence and disorder in Charlottesville with the same vehemence that Trump condemns “radical Islamic terrorism” during any attack of any size in the US or abroad. It is an actively misleading account of what happened.

It implies that both rally-goers and counterprotesters were equally to blame for violence, leaving the door wide open for Trump supporters to assume that “the left” started it. It implies that the “hate and division” are equally distributed, and that the counterprotesters seeking to stand up to the rally-goers are every bit as hateful as the rally-goers sporting swastika pins. And by calling for the “swift restoration of law and order,” it implies that the problem is disrespect for police — encouraging the misinterpretation that this is somehow the fault of anyone but the white nationalists themselves.

When asked about the “many sides,” remark, an anonymous White House official continued to push this misleading narrative, saying that “there was violence between protesters and counter protesters today” without acknowledging that the initial violence, the bulk of the violence, and the most serious violence was all on one side.

I asked the White House what @POTUS meant by "on many sides." The response, from a WH official --> pic.twitter.com/pw3WZAMG1A — Hallie Jackson (@HallieJackson) August 12, 2017

Trump took a tangent in the middle of his remarks, bragging about his record on jobs and trade:

Our country is doing very well in so many ways. We have record -- just absolute record employment. We have unemployment, the lowest it's been in almost 17 years. We have companies pouring into our country, Foxconn and car companies and so many others. They're coming back to our country. We're renegotiating trade deals to make them great for our country and great for the American worker.

This characteristic Trumpism, in context, was an insult. It’s an insult to the Americans who have felt unsafe since Trump was elected to office, and to whom he has offered only tepid acknowledgment of their fear, at best. All he has told them — during his inauguration, and again today — is that “many sides” must put aside their own prejudices just as much as anyone else, and come together as Americans, and everything will be hunky-dory.

The president’s unwillingness to understand the rise of the alt-right, overt racism, and street violence as anything other than a need for “both sides do it” head shaking and finger wagging isn’t just obtuse. It leads him to say things that, inadvertently or otherwise, end up signaling to the white supremacists that he is on their side.

When President Trump says that Americans have cause for unity because “We love our country. We love our God. We love our flag. We're proud of our country. We're proud of who we are,” he’s using the same words that the people who are trying to “protect” American “identity” from nonwhite and non-Christian Americans use. When he says “we must cherish our history” in response to a rally that was initially convened to protest the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee, it sure sounds like he’s siding with the people who want to keep the statue.

In the mouth of a more deliberate president, one would have to call these deliberate dog whistles. After all, Trump loves his base, and is always very wary of doing anything that might upset them — and acting as if there is any connection between the “alt-right” and Nazis, or any case in which the right engages in unprovoked violence against the left, would do just that.

But it’s not clear that Trump is deliberately sending signals to the alt-right that he’s still on their team. It’s not clear he thought that much about it. That’s exactly the problem.

Six months into a presidency in which he has shown less concern for governing on behalf of people who did not support him politically than any president in recent memory, President Donald Trump still appears sufficiently unconcerned with a threat to the well-being of US citizens to understand it or name it.

Someone died in Charlottesville today, and the president refused to name the killer.

Here are his remarks in full: