GOP slouches into the Crazy -IMMIGRATION | Trump Firehose of anti-immigrant posts and rhetoric

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Old conservative grievances never die; they go on forever and ever. Especially with this asshole continuing to fan the flames:

 
Old conservative grievances never die; they go on forever and ever. Especially with this asshole continuing to fan the flames:


These people (or their current ideological descendants) are still fighting the New Deal from the 1930s and Progressive Era legislation passed over a century ago under Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. I'll give them this - they are tenacious and persistent as hell, which is why they so often eventually get their way.
 
Here comes the fascism...

 


That is some first rate sniveling, trying to make light of Trump repeatedly accusing your dad of assassinating JFK … hilarious!

Ted Cruz Texas GIF by GIPHY News
 


That is some first rate sniveling, trying to make light of Trump repeatedly accusing your dad of assassinating JFK … hilarious!

Ted Cruz Texas GIF by GIPHY News

I don't know. I think it's pretty funny. As much of an ass as Ted Cruz is, he's got a sense of humor. Or one of his staffers does, at least.
 
Not the roast beef 😂😂😂

Laura’s depo transcript was just posted:





Q Can you explain to me what it means to say

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to her that "the Arby's in her pants"?

8

A

Well, Arby's --

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MR. KLAYMAN: Objection. Relevancy.

10


BY MS. BOLGER:

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Q Answer the question.

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A

Arby's sells roast beef.

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Right. Can you tell me what -- why you were

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talking about "the Arby's in her pants"?

A. Well, it's just a -- an expression.

Q. What is the expression trying to convey?

A. It conveys the reason why she got a divorce by her own admission.

Q. Because she had roast beef in her pants?

A. Yeah.

Q. She'd put roast beef in her pants; that's
what you're trying to say there? You're literally

saying she put Arby's in her pants?

A. I'm saying she literally -- it's so ridiculous. I'm saying she literally put Arby's in her pants. Yes.

MR. KLAYMAN: Objection. Relevancy.

BY MS. BOLGER:

Q You're not making a slur about her?

A No.

Q. You're literally saying she put an Arby's sandwich in her pants; is that right?

A Yes. That's correct. That's correct.

Q. Why are you laughing?

A Because I just think it's so funny.

Q What is your basis for saying she put Arby's in her pants?

A I just think it's so funny. I just think it's so funny.

Q What is your basis for saying she put Arby's in her pants?

A She carries roast beef in her pockets.

Q What is your basis for saying she puts roast beef in her pockets and in her pants?

MR. KLAYMAN: Objection. Relevancy. Harassment.

THE WITNESS: Because I know she likes roast beef.

BY MS. BOLGER:

Q So what is your basis for saying she had Arby's in her pants?

A. Because I know she likes to eat at Arby's.

Q. And she likes to put it in her pants; you know that?

A. Yeah.

Q. She puts Arby's in her pants?

A. Yeah. She does.

Q. Okay. If I ask Marjorie Taylor Greene, she would tell you that she puts Arby's in her pants?

A. I -- it's my best belief that she would tell you that. Yes.

Q Okay. Are you making a derogatory comment about her sex life by talking about Arby's in her pants?


A No. I'm talking about Arby's, the sandwiches. I'm talking about Arby's. I would -- I'm a very direct person. If I was making a derogatory comment, I would have said it.




 

A group of Americans are building a “whites only” community in rural Arkansas they call the Return to the Land. They believe that white people and Western culture are facing extinction due to an influx of immigrants and minorities, and according to the group’s founder, access to the community is open only to people of white European ancestry who share common views on topics such as segregation, abortion, and gender identity.

Video footage shared by the group on its social media accounts show a bucolic setting with animals and children running around their 160-acre site, while members of the community build timber-frame homes, churches, and other facilities. A “few dozen” people are already living there full time, says Eric Orwoll, the group’s president.



Though the organization claims that Return to the Land is nothing more than a peaceful settlement of like-minded people, the online histories of the group’s leaders tell a different story. Members have espoused virulently racist and antisemitic views and repeatedly praised Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party. One of the leaders says he is currently under criminal investigation in Ecuador. Orwoll himself has spoken about the coming of a second Hitler and praised KKK leader David Duke. He is also closely aligned to an international network of far-right influencers, extremists, and white supremacists, including Thomas Sewell, a neo-Nazi living in Australia who was the founder of a group that influenced the Christchurch, New Zealand, shooter.


Despite this, the Return to the Land community has been lauded by far-right influencers and has already raised hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations.

Return to the Land, which was first reported on by The Forward and Sky News, is actively scouting for other locations to create a network of similar communities across the country, with a development in Missouri apparently in the works. Inspired in part by the Silicon Valley-based concept of the “network state” and by a white separatist community in South Africa known as Orania, the group promotes itself on its website as a community designed to “promote strong families with common ancestry, and raise the next generation in an environment that reflects our traditional values.”
 
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