2024-10-06 18:35:44
Jan Kaliba, a former correspondent of Czech Radio in the United States, recalls a meeting with supporters of ex-president Donald Trump in the American Dream podcast. It is said that it sometimes gave him chills.
Excerpt from the American Dream podcast with Jan Kaliba. | Video: Martin Novák
“When Trump talks about the execution of political opponents, and we can say a hundred times that he means it as an exaggeration, then these people talk to you and openly say to your face that yes. I am for executions in the United States those who are against Donald Trump,” says Kaliba, how some of the American ex-president’s staunchest supporters adopt his rhetoric.
For example, the reporter spoke with them in the period after the 2020 election, in which Trump was defeated by the current President Joe Biden, and before the attack on the Capitol on January 6, which was behind Trump supporters. “They were people convinced that someone was stealing their election. They believed from the bottom of their hearts that Trump had won,” he describes. The re-electionist Republican presidential candidate has never acknowledged the four-year-old defeat and calls the then-election rigged without proof.
You can listen to The American Dream on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and other apps:
Kaliba spoke to people who, for example, were in favor of firing dozens of people from top positions in all government agencies and offices and replacing them with people loyal to the former head of the White House.
Kaliba also mentions in the podcast that he met many Donald Trump voters among emigrants from the former Czechoslovakia. “There is perhaps some inertia in that the Republican Party was more against communism and Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush Sr. were Republicans who led the world to the collapse of the Soviet Union,” he says.
According to him, the result of the elections held on November 5 cannot be predicted. Although Kamala Harris leads in national polls and in some decisive states, Kaliba does not consider her victory far from certain. He points out that, according to recent polls, he stands poorly among trade unionists.