brown, thanks so much. "outfront" now, wesley lowry, pulitzer prize winning reporter for the "washington post," david gergen, former adviser for four presidents, democrats and republicans, and andre bauer, former governor of south carolina. wes, you've covered race relations in this country extensively. what's your reaction to this -- president trump, you know, doubling down, tripling down, calling himself a nationalist. >> well, first of all, it was really interesting watching this whole riff where he's talking about globalists versus nationalists and in many ways, it's language that echoed steve bannon, and for anyone who's read breitbart.com, that's the exact type of framing and language that's often used, very often anti-semitic undertones to it, racist undertones. so you have two things. the president was giving voice and word and a term to his policies and how he's run his campaign. he started his campaign disparaging mexican immigrants as possibly rapists, refooused to condemn white nationalists and white supremacists. he resurfaced the term america first as a campaign slogan. so he was, in some ways, owning the term that really does encapsulate who he is both in the ways