Republicans kicked the racist out of their party. He tried to stay anonymous

angora24.pl 8 months ago

Luke Meyer, an worker of Donald Trump serving as manager of the Republican Party's Western Pennsylvania field office, was released on Friday erstwhile his views on white supremacy were revealed. Politico portal reported that he identified Meyer, a 24-year-old Pennsylvania worker who worked for the erstwhile president for 5 months as an online nationalist acting under the pseudonym Alberto Barbarossa.

According to reports, Meyer co-hosts the podcast Alexandria together with Richard Spencer, the organizer of the union the Right neo-Nazi rally held in 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia. Meyer regularly expresses racist views in him.

He was hiding from Republicans.

Why can't we make fresh York white again, for example? Why can't we clean up and get Miami back? – asked Barbarossa in June while recording the podcast. – I'm not saying we should be 100% homogeneous. I'm not saying we should be North Korea or Japan or anything. Back to 80%, 90% of white people would most likely be the best we could hope for, to any extent.

After Politico presented him with evidence linking him to Barbarossa, Meyer admitted that he had actually utilized this alias. He besides admitted that he was hiding his identity online from members of Trump Force 47, the Trump run squad liable for mobilising volunteers.

Meyer was hired in June by the Republican organization in Pennsylvania, but was released last week. This information was confirmed by the Republican organization in a text message sent to the Washington Post.

What is white supremacy?

White supremacy is the belief that white people are better than another races and should so dominate them. They argue inter alia the mixing of breeds, considering it as demolition natural evolution. Maintenance blood purity This is simply a key dogma of specified groups, although 1 cannot talk about a single set of views and principles. any say that they do not want to harm people of another races, but only to prosecute genetic purity. In German speaking countries, white supremacy frequently takes the form of neo-Nazi groups.

Some racist movements mention to Christianity or neo-Paganism, but not all. The most popular group from the US, Ku Klux Clan, proposes racial segregation not based on spiritual motives.

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