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Top Dem accused of ‘Biden levels of fabulism’ in tales about family past
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:37 am
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:37 am
‘Hoo boy!’ Top Dem accused of ‘Biden levels of fabulism’ in tales about family past
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat widely hyped as a future White House contender, is finding himself on uneasy ground as questions mount over a dramatic family story he has repeatedly used to frame his rise — and America’s past.
For years, Moore has told audiences that his grandfather was driven from South Carolina by the Ku Klux Klan, a tale meant to underscore both the nation’s racial sins and Moore’s own historic ascent as Maryland’s first Black governor. The story has been a staple of his public persona, invoked in interviews, podcasts, and glossy magazine profiles.
“I am literally the grandson of someone who was run out of this country by the Ku Klux Klan, right?” Moore told Time magazine in 2023 while discussing how he balances patriotism with America’s “racist past.”
“Right? So the fact that I can be both this grandson of someone who was run outta this country by the Ku Klux Klan, and also be the first Black governor in the history of the state of Maryland.”
Moore has consistently identified that relative as his grandfather, James Thomas, a minister who served in South Carolina in the early 20th century. In a 2020 appearance on the Yang Speaks podcast — tellingly titled “Wes Moore on how the KKK ran his family into exile” — Moore described Thomas as being forced to flee Winnsboro, South Carolina, under threat from the Klan, eventually relocating to Jamaica.
But a recent report from the Washington Free Beacon throws cold water on that version of events.
According to the report, church archives, diocesan records, and contemporaneous newspaper accounts paint a far less cinematic picture. Rather than a covert escape prompted by racial terror, Thomas’s move to Jamaica appears to have been a formal, public reassignment within the Protestant Episcopal Church after he was appointed to replace a deceased pastor.
The records further suggest that Thomas’s church in Pineville, South Carolina, was well regarded by the local White community for its medical outreach, with no documented references to racial conflict or Klan intimidation during his tenure. Not exactly the stuff of a midnight flight from hooded mobs.
LINK
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat widely hyped as a future White House contender, is finding himself on uneasy ground as questions mount over a dramatic family story he has repeatedly used to frame his rise — and America’s past.
For years, Moore has told audiences that his grandfather was driven from South Carolina by the Ku Klux Klan, a tale meant to underscore both the nation’s racial sins and Moore’s own historic ascent as Maryland’s first Black governor. The story has been a staple of his public persona, invoked in interviews, podcasts, and glossy magazine profiles.
“I am literally the grandson of someone who was run out of this country by the Ku Klux Klan, right?” Moore told Time magazine in 2023 while discussing how he balances patriotism with America’s “racist past.”
“Right? So the fact that I can be both this grandson of someone who was run outta this country by the Ku Klux Klan, and also be the first Black governor in the history of the state of Maryland.”
Moore has consistently identified that relative as his grandfather, James Thomas, a minister who served in South Carolina in the early 20th century. In a 2020 appearance on the Yang Speaks podcast — tellingly titled “Wes Moore on how the KKK ran his family into exile” — Moore described Thomas as being forced to flee Winnsboro, South Carolina, under threat from the Klan, eventually relocating to Jamaica.
But a recent report from the Washington Free Beacon throws cold water on that version of events.
According to the report, church archives, diocesan records, and contemporaneous newspaper accounts paint a far less cinematic picture. Rather than a covert escape prompted by racial terror, Thomas’s move to Jamaica appears to have been a formal, public reassignment within the Protestant Episcopal Church after he was appointed to replace a deceased pastor.
The records further suggest that Thomas’s church in Pineville, South Carolina, was well regarded by the local White community for its medical outreach, with no documented references to racial conflict or Klan intimidation during his tenure. Not exactly the stuff of a midnight flight from hooded mobs.
LINK
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:39 am to djmed
When the demand for racism exceeds the supply......
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:41 am to djmed
Politicians lie, more at 11.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:42 am to djmed
The USA got rid of the KKK and adopted the NAACP. Is there a NAAWP?
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:43 am to djmed
I would say 90% of these types of stories are false, its why the Bolshevists were sending communist operatives from CCCP cells in NYC to the South in the 1960's.
Rosa Parks, MLK and most others were either operatives of the global Bolshevists or unwitting tools.
They were giddy when Schwerner and Goodman were killed, they were the Pretti's of their time.
Rosa Parks, MLK and most others were either operatives of the global Bolshevists or unwitting tools.
They were giddy when Schwerner and Goodman were killed, they were the Pretti's of their time.
This post was edited on 2/11/26 at 9:45 am
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:43 am to djmed
There are multiple 'discrepancies' in Moores self-professed personal history. His 'scholarship' on Islam, his bronze star, his upbringing in Baltimore, and more. Any one of these might be explainable, but the guy seems to have fabricated his entire history or at a minimum embellished every significant event in his life. What's remarkable is that this comes out AFTER he's been elected governor.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:46 am to djmed
The Left doesn’t care. This will actually make him more a potential candidate for them. Welcome to your new America.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 9:46 am to djmed
It’s not a lie if he believes it.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 10:03 am to Hetfield
quote:
will actually make him more a potential candidate
YEP = now he will be portrayed as someone being hounded by the right wing media for his past.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 10:20 am to ChineseBandit58
"They're scared of an accomplished black man....."
Posted on 2/11/26 at 10:20 am to ChineseBandit58
Drumpfh's father may have been the KKK leader - CNN
Posted on 2/11/26 at 10:46 am to djmed
This sounds as real as Clinton's fantasy black church burnings in Arkansas. He was never challenged on that lie.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 10:49 am to djmed
Almost every white person is a few generations removed from some injustice inflicted upon an ancestor. Big deal. My great grandfather probably had it worse from the klan than this guy and our family is about as white as it comes. The klan tried to bully lots of people so you aren't special (if it even happened). My grandfather had a cross burnt on his lawn with his kids inside because he said something to his congregation that rubbed the local klan the wrong way. Big deal. Interesting family story but I had nothing to do with it and isn't some pivotal moment in my family history I point at to blame anything and everything wrong in the world. My family.....gasp..... moved on. Hard concept i guess.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 11:45 am to djmed
Before I popped it up to read I thought it might have been Moore telling that he was the son of lonely sharecropper Cornpop
Posted on 2/11/26 at 11:48 am to djmed
quote:
Top Dem accused of ‘Biden levels of fabulism’ in tales about family past
Given today’s Democratic Party, definitely sounds like an up and comer for them.
Posted on 2/11/26 at 11:58 am to djmed
quote:
forced to flee Winnsboro, South Carolina,
Winnsboro is mostly a black town. They had to close the towns Walmart because of all the stealing.
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