Kenosha murderer Kyle Rittenhouse wants to ‘sit down’ with Biden over ‘white supremacist’ claim
By Edward Era Barbacena
Kenosha shooter Kyle Rittenhouse said he wants a showdown with President Biden to put him right for branding the teen a “white supremacist.”
Because of the convincing drama with 'WHITE TEARS' ,the 18-year-old cleared Kenosha gunman was asked by conservative commentator Glenn Beck in a nearly hour-long interview if the commander-in-chief had ever called him “to apologize.”
“He hasn’t,” Rittenhouse told Beck in his show on The Blaze.
“I would like to sit down with the president and have a conversation with him and tell him the facts of what happened,” insisted the teen.
Biden had used a photo of Rittenhouse brandishing the AR-15 that Rittenhouse claimed he used to defend himself at Wisconsin Black Lives Matter riots in August last year in a presidential campaign push the following month.
“There’s no other way to put it: the President of the United States refused to disavow white supremacists on the debate stage last night,” he wrote, referring to rival Donald Trump.
Rittenhouse — who was cleared of all charges over shooting dead two protesters and injuring another while in the moment that he claimed that he was under attack — accused Biden of “actual malice, defaming my character” with his words.
The teen has long insisted that race had nothing to do with his case — with all three men he shot being white — saying it was instead purely about the right of self-defense.
He has also insisted that a photo of him posing with members of the racist proud boys was set up by his lawyer at the time, who was fired over the photo op and is the focus of Rittenhouse’s current plans for lawsuits.
Still, the White House has refused to take back the “white supremacist” comment by the president, who also said he was “angry and concerned” at the jury’s verdict clearing the teen.
Rittenhouse also told Beck he is unsure if he will ever again pick up a gun — but stressed that he still believes “everybody has a Second Amendment right. I believe in the Constitution.”
He then cleared up his ongoing plans to attend Arizona State University, saying he only temporarily unenrolled on compassionate grounds during his trial.
“I’m gonna go in-person in Arizona State University,” he said defiantly when asked about socialist student groups protesting his planned attendance.
“That’s where I wanna go. I don’t want people to control what I do and where I go to school,” he told Beck.
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