


Actor Bryan Cranston told CNN's Chris Wallace that teaching critical race theory is "imperative" in a new interview.
"I think it’s imperative that it’s taught," he began on Who's Talking to Chris Wallace? "that we look at our history much the same I think that Germany has looked at their history involvement in the wars, one and two, and embrace it and say, 'This is where we went wrong. This is how it went wrong.'"
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"When I see the 'Make America Great Again,' my comment is: 'Do you accept that that could possibly be construed as a racist remark?'" he told Wallace.
"And most people, a lot of people go, 'How could that be racist? 'Make America great again'?" Cranston continued.
"I said, 'So just ask yourself, from an African American experience, when was it ever great in America for the African American? When was it great?' So if you're making it great again, it's not including them," he concluded.
Last month, Cranston got into a heated argument with late-night host Bill Maher over the subject.
In an appearance on Club Random with Bill Maher, the Breaking Bad actor similarly asked, "When was [the United States] great?"
At one point, Maher said, "The people who are running things, you know, I just don't think that their mindset is: 'Let's be racist to people of color.'"
"They don't understand it, but they are innately that way," Cranston told him.
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“Innately?" Maher asked. "Oh lord, what have you been reading? Is that White Fragility or some bull**** like that? … Like original sin? Like we’re toxically white, born racist?”
Later Maher told his guest that “the woke s*** doesn’t help any black people.”