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House Republicans seem to have a permanent slot for a designated white nationalist member in their ranks these days. Steve King, the Iowa congressman who finally stepped aside in the election, used to play the role. Nowadays, Paul Gosar of Arizona seems to have become the go-to guy.
Gosar was the keynote speaker in Orlando, Florida, at the America First Political Action Committee (AFPAC) conference organized by white nationalist troll Nicholas Fuentes, leader of the alt-right “Groyper Army.” He followed that up Monday by tweeting out a meme featuring the group’s motto, “America First is Inevitable.” And just as they largely did right up until King wondered aloud what was wrong with the phrase “white supremacist,” Republicans pretended as if nothing had happened.
Tue, 09 Mar 2021 00:00 UTC
The spider discovered a wasp escaping his gossamer web. He is furious. How dare she? The wasp had been caught, bonded, poisoned. She is ready to be killed and eaten. And all of a sudden she wakes up and tears the spider web. You are a Neanderthal, the enraged spider exclaims, and you will end like the Neanderthals did, dead as a dodo and extinct.
This is what Biden said to the people of Texas who dared to break free from his mask regime. Biden, the King of the Dead and his team were sure the world was under their control; they planned to lead mankind to the Great Reset, to the grim end of Homo Sapiens, to the cruel dystopia of masked slaves ruled by Google algorithms. But the Texans had changed the course of history. They were immediately followed by Mississippi, Iowa, Montana and North Dakota; the states that voted for Trump and freedom.
GP Columnist Scott Montgomery explores the life of one of America s most celebrated myth makers and how he helped pave the way for Trump s politics.
In this year’s Conservative Political Action Committee (CPAC) meeting, held over three days during the last week of February, there was little talk about strategy. Much love, however, was reserved for a single individual. For three days, a pantheon of Republican leaders and personalities, from Sen. Ted Cruz and House Minority leader Keven McCarthy to ex-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, vigorously upheld every lie, conspiracy, and personal attack that the loved one, Donald Trump, had put forth in his final days in office. Above all, the lie of a rigged election sailed high and bound the speakers and the audience in a way that made it clear there is no deep rift in the GOP, only a handful of apostates.