Friday, June 5, 2020

Odds and Ends, 6/5/20

In der news.  In all cases, emphasis added.

In the 2016 election, we voted for a “law and order” president after the Black Lives Matter shooting of police officers in Dallas and the previous round of race riots in Ferguson, Baltimore, Charlotte and Milwaukee. As a matter of policy though, the Trump administration has turned a blind eye to Antifa violence, launched an unprecedented state crackdown on White Nationalists, banned bump stocks and spent its political capital on criminal justice reform. Donald Trump has relentlessly pandered to blacks who didn’t vote for him in other ways with policy concessions like when he turned the arrest of ASAP Rocky in Sweden into an international incident between the United States and Sweden.
Instead of “moving the Overton Window” and making National Populism more acceptable in American politics, the Trump era is coming to a close and it is littered with paleocon bodies. Steve King has joined Tom Tancredo in the political wilderness. Steve Bannon was fired by Trump and lost his perch at Breitbart. Donald Trump is trying to destroy the political career of Jeff Sessions who is running for his old Senate seat here in Alabama. The herd of deviant paleocons in Congress has been thinned.
But, as Greg Johnson tells us, Donald Trump is sincere and is a man of genuine greatness.

Wrong, wrong, they’re always, always, always wrong – about everything.

In the 2016 election, my attitude toward Donald Trump was essentially trust, but verify. I voted for him and encouraged others to do so. I was willing to give him a chance. He seemed to represent the arrival of populism and nationalism in the United States. I thought he representated a positive trend. I was overly excited by Trump’s rhetorical assault on mainstream conservatism in the 2016 primaries. I took him at his word. I even went to Washington, DC to attend his inauguration. While I had trusted Donald Trump enough to vote for him in both the Republican primary and the 2016 election, I immediately shifted into verify mode after he won the presidency.
In contrast, my view of Trump was that he was a fraud and a vulgar ignorant buffoon, but I endorsed him solely for the reason that his election would destabilize the multicultural system – which it did.

Notice that none of these Quota queens – not a single one of them – can be man enough to admit that Sallis was 100% right about Trump (and about the Alt Right as well), while they, as usual, were wrong, wrong, wrong.

The single most important thing for “movement” “leaders” is preserving Der Movement’s ethnic affirmative action policy.  Without that, if they were to be judged solely on merit, they would be laughingstocks.

Truer words never written – “his opinions (*) are all defined by his opposition to Richard Spencer” -
Dart
FEBRUARY 1, 2020 AT 8:42 PM
Greg was also defending Ricky Vaughn (Douglass Mackey) a few days ago, too. I’m pretty sure he only does this because his opinions are all defined by his opposition to Richard Spencer.
*Including the lurch toward petty nationalism.

Some good news for a change.  Hope hell is not too hot for you, Kev.

The military is “on our side,” right? Deluded fools.  NO ONE is on “our side.”  After the Alt Right and their “God Emperor” (“the last chance for White America”) had their run, Whites are objectively in a worse posiiton now than they were under Obama. Good work!

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