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The words “diversity” and “inclusion” have, in recent years, become toxic buzzwords. Thanks to the rise of DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) programs, these terms have been weaponized by the Left to push radical, divisive policies in schools, corporations, and government.
What began as a supposed push for fairness quickly devolved into blatant discrimination — a system that punishes individuals based on skin color while rewarding others solely to check a political box. DEI bureaucracies demanded racial and gender quotas, forcing Americans to endure lectures on “systemic oppression” and “unconscious bias” at every turn.
Americans finally had enough. In 2016, they elected Donald Trump with a mandate to tear down the toxic woke infrastructure. And Trump delivered. He moved swiftly to end DEI madness in government, issuing executive orders to ban racial and gender-based indoctrination programs, and pushed the DOJ to investigate discriminatory practices in the private sector.
Predictably, the Left went berserk. Their entire racket — from lucrative lawsuits to billion-dollar college grants — was suddenly in jeopardy.
Yet even as the woke mob clings to their narrative, O’Reilly attempted to reclaim the true meaning of “diversity” and “inclusion” — not as tools for division, but as principles rooted in merit and equal opportunity.
O’Reilly drew a sharp contrast between true diversity and the phony, leftist version:
“Donald Trump, the president, was very clear on NewsNation tonight that he does not want that. That if you are going to be admitted to a school or accepted for a job, you do it on merit, not on gender or skin color. What do you think about that?” he said.
Meritocracy — not quotas — was and remains at the heart of Trump’s vision for America. Trump made it clear: success should be earned, not handed out based on identity politics.
Former White House strategist Steve Bannon hammered the point home, reminding viewers that Trump’s message resonated across racial lines in 2020, as he captured a historic share of the Hispanic and Black male vote.
“I agree with him 100%. 100%. Also, but hang on, he also went out of his way to make sure that historic Black colleges and universities were well-financed and had a sound financial footing, right? So people get opportunities and get access to college,” Bannon emphasized.
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Bannon also praised Trump’s commitment to putting all Americans first, not slicing them into racial categories:
“President Trump has gone out of his way to do that. President Trump is somebody for every American. It’s about being an American citizen, and he’s fighting for that every day,” Bannon said.
While O’Reilly’s remarks stirred debate, they ultimately highlighted a critical battle inside America’s culture wars: will we be a country that judges by character and merit — or a broken society where woke ideology trumps all?
One thing is certain: President Trump’s America First movement isn’t backing down.



