The son of a Sept. 11, 2001, terror attack victim said people had criticized him, calling him a racist, after he blasted Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) during his speech at the 18th-anniversary memorial service of the attacks at Ground Zero yesterday.
Nicholas Haros Jr. attracted the media’s attention when he delivered pointed criticism to the freshman congresswoman for her “some people did something” remarks. Omar had been heavily criticized for using those words to describe the deadliest terrorist attacks in American history that claimed the lives of nearly 3,000 innocent people.
“That hurt. I am a victim’s son, and I decided to take 9/11 as my one day, of perhaps, credible standing to make that statement, which many people have told me, it represented their views,” he told Hannity.
The Fox host responded saying that he thinks Haros Jr. has the standing to make his statement in response to Omar.
“You have credible standing on this issue. You lost your mother. She died that day; you saw it happen before your eyes,” Hannity said.
Haros Jr. then revealed that not everyone agrees with his remarks during his speech, with some accusing him of being a racist.
“It’s not very nice, and maybe the worst thing that was said about me today was that I was a cranky old man with a bad haircut,” he said. “But seriously, charges of racism?”
“The fact that these people are women of color has nothing to do with it,” he continued. “If she were a Martian and were green it would not make a difference. That she is a woman doesn’t make a difference. That she is a Muslim doesn’t make a difference. These are Wikipedia facts that have to be said and she needed to respond.”
“Madam, objectively speaking, we know who and what was done. There is no uncertainty about that. Why your confusion?” he continued. “On that day 19 Islamic terrorists, members of al Qaeda, killed over 3,000 people and caused billions of dollars of economic damage. Is that clear? But as to whom, I was attacked. Your relatives and friends were attacked. Our constitutional freedoms were attacked and our nation’s founding on Judeo-Christian principles did. That’s what ’some people' did.”
“Got that now?” he added.
Earlier in the year, Omar received widespread condemnation after part of a speech she made at a Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) fundraiser—during which she said the radical Muslim group was founded after the terror attacks—surfaced on social media.
Omar immediately received backlash for the comments from politicians, congressional candidates, first responders, and from the president.
“It was a slap in the face to the people that lost their lives there and the first responders in general,” said Kelley, who was deployed once during Operation Desert Storm and twice during Operation Iraqi Freedom. He said the comments were disrespectful to the thousands of people who lost their lives and first responders who worked tirelessly in the aftermath of the tragedy.