Comments by "Meh Pluribus Unum" (@pluribus_unum) on "'Millions of people absorb this garbage': Acosta calls out Carlson for dangerous rhetoric" video.
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@scabcrawler632 - Your fantasies aren't a counterpoint.
There is no equivalent extremism on the left. Period.
" First, right-wing attacks and plots accounted for the majority of all terrorist incidents in the United States since 1994. In particular, they made up a large percentage of incidents in the 1990s and 2010s. Second, the total number of right-wing attacks and plots has grown substantially during the past six years. In 2019, for example, right-wing extremists perpetrated nearly two-thirds of the terrorist attacks and plots in the United States, and they committed over 90 percent of the attacks and plots between January 1 and May 8, 2020. Third, although religious extremists were responsible for the most fatalities because of the 9/11 attacks, right-wing perpetrators were responsible for more than half of all annual fatalities in 14 of the 21 years during which fatal attacks occurred."
Center for Strategic and International Studies: June 17th, 2020
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@tonyboxofdonuts - Please stop spreading white nationalist propaganda. It makes you look like an irresponsible bigot.
Unless of course, that is what you are.
The violence of white terrorist mobs has always frustrated and weakened US democracy and undermined our founding principles.
It used to be the Democratic party which made a home for the white nationalist terrorists, but after the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act, the Republican party became their chosen refuge.
They should have no place in any major political party because the public should progress beyond the colonial thinking that retains that place for terrorism in politics.
Alas, individuals like you delay that day, but can't deny it its inevitable dawning.
"More than 70 years ago, a U.S. senator published a book warning of the same destruction of White civilization [as The Great Replacement Theory lie]."
"Theodore G. Bilbo, a Democrat, had twice been governor of Mississippi before he served in the U.S. Senate from 1935 to 1947, when “the growing intolerance among many whites toward public racism and anti-Semitism” led to his fall, according to an account in the Journal of Mississippi History."
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