Rustic
Diamond Member
- Oct 3, 2015
- 58,769
- 5,894
- 1,940
- Banned
- #301
Got it. YOu called someone racist, and to you, that is all the justification you need.
You are the problem, not them.
Build the Wall. Seal the border. Problem solved.Here's the real problem and solutionGot it. YOu called someone racist, and to you, that is all the justification you need.
You are the problem, not them.
Build the Wall. Seal the border. Problem solved.
MAGA bigot.
Fuck your bullshit race card.Fuck your bullshit race card
Fuck your bullshit POTUS
White nationalists see Trump as their troll in chief. Is he with them?
If Trump was a white nationalists, you would have something more serious to complain about, then jokes of face book.
You are a fucking moron. Fuck you.If Trump was not sympathetic to white nationalism, he would still be selling steaks and laundering money for rich Russians:If Trump was a white nationalists, you would have something more serious to complain about, then jokes of face book.
White nationalists see Trump as their troll in chief. Is he with them?
"Normally a candidate for the US presidency would denounce such figures. Instead, Trump retweeted bigoted accounts and memes, including an image of himself as Pepe the Frog, a cartoon character the alt-right commandeered as its mascot.
"These 'gaffes' by Trump, as they were often characterized in media coverage—including his retweets of user @WhiteGenocideTM, phony statistics on black crime, and an anti-Semitic image featuring a Star of David and a pile of cash used to smear Hillary Clinton—were seen by the fringe right as an invitation to push deeper into the mainstream.
"With the exception of Ku Klux Klan figurehead David Duke and a white nationalist super-PAC, Trump did not personally disavow any among the horde of extremists who thrilled to him.
"On CNN, he even sympathized with white nationalists: 'They’re angry at the border, they’re angry at the crime.'
"In effect, he sprinkled his path to the presidency with a kind of far-right rhetoric that for decades had been unthinkable in national politics."