• White Supremacist Suspect Pedophile Politician's Contempt For The Ameri

    From Little Tommy Is A Pedo@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 11 01:09:01 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.immigration, alt.politics.nationalism.white
    XPost: alt.politics.usa, alt.politics.trump

    Republican Senator Has No Problem With White Nationalists: “I Call Them Americans”
    Tommy Tuberville is defending racists in the military.

    Senator Tommy Tuberville doesn’t really see the difference between white nationalists and Americans.

    The Republican senator said that white nationalists should be allowed in
    the U.S. military because blocking any ideological group from serving
    would weaken the institution.

    During an interview Monday with the Alabama radio station WBHM, Tuberville
    was asked if he thought white nationalists should be allowed to serve in
    the military.

    “They call them that,” he said, referring to the Biden administration. “I
    call them Americans.”

    “We are losing in the military so fast,” he continued. “Our readiness in
    terms of recruitment. And why? I’ll tell you why, because the Democrats
    are attacking our military, saying we need to get out the white
    extremists, the white nationalists, people that don’t believe in our
    agenda.”

    Tuberville also referred to the military as a “strong, hard-nosed, killing machine,” which is definitely how you want national leaders discussing
    their opinion of defense policy.

    His office released a statement Wednesday saying that Tuberville meant he
    was “skeptical” that white nationalists were in the military, not that he thought they should be in the military. But the Alabama Republican is
    wrong there, too.

    A month after the January 6 attack, Pentagon officials said in a report
    that white supremacist ideology had made significant inroads in the
    military. The report found that white supremacist groups would try to
    recruit active military personnel and veterans and group leaders would
    often try to enlist in order to get weapons and training. One Florida
    National Guard member co-founded a fascist group and said he was “100
    percent open” about being a neo-Nazi—and no one batted an eye.

    As for military readiness issues, Tuberville might want to take a look in
    the mirror: He has blocked nearly 200 military promotions since March over
    his objection to the Defense Department’s abortion policy. Defense
    Secretary Lloyd Austin warned in a letter to Senator Elizabeth Warren last
    week that Tuberville’s delay “harms America’s national security” and poses
    a “clear risk” to the military’s readiness.

    Tuberville’s apparent openness toward white supremacists makes sense when
    you think about his unwavering support for former President Donald Trump,
    who counted extremists Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller among his inner
    circle. Trump also infamously told the far-right Proud Boys to “stand back
    and stand by,” which prosecutors in the hundreds of January 6 lawsuits
    said the white nationalists interpreted as a call to action.

    Tuberville’s support for Trump remains unflagging, despite the former
    leader’s ongoing legal woes. On Tuesday, Tuberville said that a jury
    finding Trump liable for sexual assault and defamation “makes me want to
    vote for him twice.”

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