Right wing nuts thread

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    As an atheist, it's times like this that I would hope there is indeed a Hell for people like this to rot in for eternity. Miserable, pathetic butt crevasses.
    People got fired for merely quoting Kirk in his own words without further comment. There are multiple lawsuits over it from people who were fired for protected speech or fired illegally.
     
    People got fired for merely quoting Kirk in his own words without further comment. There are multiple lawsuits over it from people who were fired for protected speech or fired illegally.

    If it pisses someone off more that people quoted Kirk's hateful rhetoric than Kirk actually spewing that hateful rhetoric, I would suggest a deep, introspective look at oneself.
     
    If it pisses someone off more that people quoted Kirk's hateful rhetoric than Kirk actually spewing that hateful rhetoric, I would suggest a deep, introspective look at oneself.
    And people acting like the rhetoric was from a secretly recorded conversation between Kirk and his wife or friends in his own house

    Nope, from his podcast and interviews

    He was proud of his views and very much wanted them out there
     
    I said in the Kirk thread that what we saw after Kirk’s death going to be exponentially worse when Trump passes, especially it happens during this term

    MAGA is going to want the total ruination of anyone who says anything bad about dearly departed beloved leader (or happy about his passing)

    What happened after Charlie Kirk will look like a walk in the park in comparison
     
    I said in the Kirk thread that what we saw after Kirk’s death going to be exponentially worse when Trump passes, especially it happens during this term

    MAGA is going to want the total ruination of anyone who says anything bad about dearly departed beloved leader (or happy about his passing)

    What happened after Charlie Kirk will look like a walk in the park in comparison
    I really don’t think so. I think so many people will be outright celebrating they won’t be able to do anything. I’m talking spontaneous street parties, fireworks, total joy.
     
    I really don’t think so. I think so many people will be outright celebrating they won’t be able to do anything. I’m talking spontaneous street parties, fireworks, total joy.
    not like this country doesn't have a history of whitewashing history (all those confederate statues/monuments put up in the 1900s - deifying/romanticizing their side)
     
    Wasn’t sure where to put this
    ==============

    Which way, western man?

    That was the title of a racist tract published in 1978 by William Gayley Simpson, a former leftist Christian pastor turned one of the most influential neo-Nazi ideologues in American history.

    The book helped radicalize an entire generation of white supremacists in the US, with its vicious antisemitism, opposition to all forms of immigration and open praise for Hitler.

    The purpose of the book, wrote Simpson, was “to reveal organized Jewry as a world power entrenched in every country of the white man’s world, operating freely across every nation’s frontiers, and engaged in a ruthless war for the destruction of them all”.

    In recent decades, Which way, western man? has become a popular meme – but only on the far-right fringes of the internet.

    Until, that is, the return of Donald Trump to the White House. Last August, the X account of Trump’s Department of Homeland Security (DHS) posted an ICE recruitment poster featuring an Uncle Sam figure holding a “law and order” sign while standing by a crossroads post featuring arrows reading “invasion” and “cultural decline”. The DHS caption? “Which way, American man?”

    Shocking? Yes. Coincidence? Nope. Earlier this month, the official White House Twitter account posted a cartoon of Greenlandic huskies with Danish flags on their sleds facing a choice between the White House on one side and China’s Great Wall and Russia’s Red Square on the other. The White House’s caption? “Which way, Greenland man?”

    It should be one of the biggest stories in the United States, if not the world. Eighty years after the death of Hitler and the defeat of Nazi Germany, the US government, in the form of the Trump administration, has a Nazi problem.

    Think I’m exaggerating? Consider the copious amounts of evidence. On social media, as recent investigations by CNN, NBC News and PBS NewsHour have all confirmed, official government accounts can’t stop posting Nazi imagery and memes, using dehumanizing language about migrants, and leaning heavily into fascist aesthetics.

    The Department of Labor posted a video with the caption “One Homeland. One People. One Heritage”, recalling the Nazi slogan “Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer” (“one people, one realm, one leader”).

    Another tweet from the Department of Labor announced that “America is for Americans,” which sounds a lot like another notorious Nazi slogan: “Deutschland den Deutschen (“Germany for Germans”).

    And the Nazi rhetoric goes far beyond internet memes. Earlier this month, DHS secretary Kristi Noem stood behind a podium which said “One of ours, all of yours” – a phrase that “seems related to the practice (although not the explicit policy) of collective punishment used by the Nazis against their enemies”, according to Holocaust historian Page Herrlinger.

    Last year, the White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller gave a demagogic speech at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service that sounded like it had been plagiarizedfrom Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels’s 1932 speech The Storm is Coming.

    Even the myth-busting website Snopes could not help but “observe the similarities” between Miller and Goebbels’s fascist rhetoric.

    Then there is the staffing issue. In February 2025, it emerged that James Rodden, an ICE prosecutor in Texas, had been running a social media account praising Hitler and declaring that “America is a white nation”.

    This is a federal prosecutor – not a teenager or a troll – pushing Nazi ideology. He was pulled from his post after the story first broke, but this month it appears he returned to work.

    When the Texas Observer, which broke the story, called Rodden for comment, he had none, and referredreporters to his press office.…….

    To be clear: this isn’t about calling everyone the left disagrees with a Nazi, as Trump administration spokespersons like to claim;

    it’s about recognizing when actual Nazis are not just right in front of us but in power.

    So here’s a simple rule for Trump and his friends: if you don’t want to be called Nazis, stop hiring Nazis, quoting Nazis and posting Nazi imagery………

    Don’t take my word for it. Last year, Dalton Henry Stout, founder of the neo-Nazi Aryan Freedom Network, said the quiet part out loud:

    “[Trump] awakened a lot of people to the issues we’ve been raising for years. He’s the best thing that’s happened to us.”

    Stout went even further: “Our side won the election.”………

     
    Wasn’t sure where to put this
    ==============

    Which way, western man?

    That was the title of a racist tract published in 1978 by William Gayley Simpson, a former leftist Christian pastor turned one of the most influential neo-Nazi ideologues in American history.

    The book helped radicalize an entire generation of white supremacists in the US, with its vicious antisemitism, opposition to all forms of immigration and open praise for Hitler.

    The purpose of the book, wrote Simpson, was “to reveal organized Jewry as a world power entrenched in every country of the white man’s world, operating freely across every nation’s frontiers, and engaged in a ruthless war for the destruction of them all”.

    In recent decades, Which way, western man? has become a popular meme – but only on the far-right fringes of the internet.

    Until, that is, the return of Donald Trump to the White House. Last August, the X account of Trump’s Department of Homeland Security (DHS) posted an ICE recruitment poster featuring an Uncle Sam figure holding a “law and order” sign while standing by a crossroads post featuring arrows reading “invasion” and “cultural decline”. The DHS caption? “Which way, American man?”

    Shocking? Yes. Coincidence? Nope. Earlier this month, the official White House Twitter account posted a cartoon of Greenlandic huskies with Danish flags on their sleds facing a choice between the White House on one side and China’s Great Wall and Russia’s Red Square on the other. The White House’s caption? “Which way, Greenland man?”

    It should be one of the biggest stories in the United States, if not the world. Eighty years after the death of Hitler and the defeat of Nazi Germany, the US government, in the form of the Trump administration, has a Nazi problem.

    Think I’m exaggerating? Consider the copious amounts of evidence. On social media, as recent investigations by CNN, NBC News and PBS NewsHour have all confirmed, official government accounts can’t stop posting Nazi imagery and memes, using dehumanizing language about migrants, and leaning heavily into fascist aesthetics.

    The Department of Labor posted a video with the caption “One Homeland. One People. One Heritage”, recalling the Nazi slogan “Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer” (“one people, one realm, one leader”).

    Another tweet from the Department of Labor announced that “America is for Americans,” which sounds a lot like another notorious Nazi slogan: “Deutschland den Deutschen (“Germany for Germans”).

    And the Nazi rhetoric goes far beyond internet memes. Earlier this month, DHS secretary Kristi Noem stood behind a podium which said “One of ours, all of yours” – a phrase that “seems related to the practice (although not the explicit policy) of collective punishment used by the Nazis against their enemies”, according to Holocaust historian Page Herrlinger.

    Last year, the White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller gave a demagogic speech at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service that sounded like it had been plagiarizedfrom Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels’s 1932 speech The Storm is Coming.

    Even the myth-busting website Snopes could not help but “observe the similarities” between Miller and Goebbels’s fascist rhetoric.

    Then there is the staffing issue. In February 2025, it emerged that James Rodden, an ICE prosecutor in Texas, had been running a social media account praising Hitler and declaring that “America is a white nation”.

    This is a federal prosecutor – not a teenager or a troll – pushing Nazi ideology. He was pulled from his post after the story first broke, but this month it appears he returned to work.

    When the Texas Observer, which broke the story, called Rodden for comment, he had none, and referredreporters to his press office.…….

    To be clear: this isn’t about calling everyone the left disagrees with a Nazi, as Trump administration spokespersons like to claim;

    it’s about recognizing when actual Nazis are not just right in front of us but in power.

    So here’s a simple rule for Trump and his friends: if you don’t want to be called Nazis, stop hiring Nazis, quoting Nazis and posting Nazi imagery………

    Don’t take my word for it. Last year, Dalton Henry Stout, founder of the neo-Nazi Aryan Freedom Network, said the quiet part out loud:

    “[Trump] awakened a lot of people to the issues we’ve been raising for years. He’s the best thing that’s happened to us.”

    Stout went even further: “Our side won the election.”………

    My dear Mehdi.

    It's not a problem. it's the point.
     

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