White supremacist Trump followers are conservative republicans. On one hand, they and their pseudo-religious neanderthal evangelicals of the dumbass southern United States love Israel beyond measure, but at the same time, they hate the Jews for rejecting Jesus as the Messiah and are anti-semitic Nazis of the first kind. There are two explanations for this contradiction:
- They love Israel - Zionist-occupied Palestine - because it serves them as a dumpster in which they hope to get rid of their Jews in the form of settlers.
- The imbecilic morons of the Trump evangelical movement believe that by the creation of Israel and the
"return" of the biblical Hebrews to Jerusalem, the Messiah Jesus will
also return to usher the end of times, Armageddon, at which point the Jews will
be faced with two options: Convert to Christianity or be killed. Evangelical
morons love Israel to death, literally.
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Nazis mingle openly at CPAC, spreading antisemitic conspiracy theories and finding allies
Ben Goggin
Updated Sat, February 24, 2024
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — Nazis appeared to find a friendly reception at the Conservative Political Action Conference this year.
Throughout the conference, racist extremists, some of whom had secured official CPAC badges, openly mingled with conference attendees and espoused antisemitic conspiracy theories.
The presence of these individuals has been a persistent issue at CPAC. In previous years, conference organizers have ejected well-known Nazis and white supremacists such as Nick Fuentes.
But this year, racist conspiracy theorists didn’t meet any perceptible resistance at the conference where Donald Trump has been the keynote speaker since 2017.
At the Young Republican mixer Friday evening, a group of Nazis who openly identified as national socialists mingled with mainstream conservative personalities, including some from Turning Point USA, and discussed so-called “race science” and antisemitic conspiracy theories.
One member of the group, Greg Conte, who attended the deadly 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, said that his group showed up to talk to the media.
Another, Ryan Sanchez, who was previously part of the Nazi “Rise Above Movement,” took photos and videos of himself at the conference with an official badge and touted associations with Fuentes.
Other attendees in Sanchez’s company openly used the N-word.
For several years, CPAC and its supporters have attempted to temper the most extreme fringes of the conservative movement, and have welcomed the continued debate between Trump and more moderate conservatives.
This year, however, some attendees and former attendees have expressed frustration with the conference’s stronger association with Trump and his wing of the party.
In one of the most viral moments from this year’s conference, conservative personality Jack Posobiec called for the end of democracy and a more explicitly Christian-focused government. While Posobiec later said his statements were partly satire, many CPAC attendees embraced his and others’ invocations of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.
CPAC organizers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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