Republicon & Demoncrat Deep-State scum conspired to oust the last hero in Congress – Iowa’s OPENLY pro-white, pro-gun Steve King

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CNN, reiterating the evil sentiments of mainstream media outlets from sea to shining sea, reported that Nebraska Congressman “Steve King’s colleagues on both sides of the aisle are ecstatic that the Iowa Republican will no longer be present in the House after 18 years” and that they will “no longer to have to listen to his hateful comments.

The incarnation of evil

And, why wouldn’t they be! 

Congressman King, who served as the U.S. Representative for Iowa’s Fourth Congressional District from 2013 to 2021 (and before that as the representative of Iowa’s Fifth Congressional District from 2003 – until redistricting) was one of the last decent men left in the House.

King was never one to fold when on the ropes or go quietly when attacked.
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Although King’s comments make Trump’s look tame by comparison, the national mainstream media (apart from “conservatives” like Ben Shapiro) wanted no part of “exposing” King while he was still in office.

Wouldn’t want the masses to know they aren’t alone!
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Instead, they worked tirelessly behind the scenes with the GOP Establishment to see that King and his opinions would disappear forever, allowing “conservative” shills like Ben Shapiro to perpetrate the in-house attacks.

The midget Shapiro with neo-con Nikki Haley


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And sadly, they’ve succeeded.
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This past week CNN wrote in an article covering King’s departure from Congress – some five months after his defeat in his district’s Republican primary – that “the easiest explanation for Iowa US Rep. Steve King’s loss was that voters rejected his xenophobic and white supremacist statements.”
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They added that both parties had “had enough of the Iowa Senator” [sic] and most in the Establishment were glad to see King gone, even making mention of the fact that “conservative” commentator, Ben Shapiro, called for King to be censured (after King’s alleged anti-Semitism). And King faced a huge  primary challenge back in May.
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CNN, though, implied that it was the Democrats that were behind the push to see a moderate Republican take King’s seat, and that King’s rhetoric in recent years was just too extreme for people on both sides of the aisle.  That, however, is farthest from the truth….
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First, a bit of what really got King into trouble.
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In July 2013, speaking about proposed immigration legislation, King said of illegal immigrants: “For every one who’s a valedictorian, there’s another 100 out there who weigh 130 pounds — and they’ve got calves the size of cantaloupes because they’re hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the desert.”
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In March 2017 King wrote, “Culture and demographics are our destiny. We can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies.”
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During the Ferguson, Missouri riots of 2018, King said blacks should “settle down”, “straighten up and fly right,” – and suggesting that a tattoo parlor was not damaged during the riots because of blacks’ “existing relationships with the owners” in an interview with conservative news website NewsMax.
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King even criticized Trump for not being tough enough on the rioters, saying the President needs to be an “unbending moral leader” during a crisis and speak up — whether it is popular or not.
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Although the media largely avoided covering King’s comments, they were working hard behind the scenes to see the man taken down.
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In early 2019 Democrats living in King’s district were urged to register Republican to vote for King’s primary opponents and against King.
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CNN even recently implied that King’s “incendiary” comments, in conjunction with pressure Iowa Democrats put on the GOP (as well as Dems voting in the primary), is the reason King lost.
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But that doesn’t begin to tell the real story, and just how badly Establishment Republicans also wanted King gone, or WHY they did. While Democrats have long denounced King over what they call “racist language, actions and rhetoric”, it was in fact his very own party that facilitated his departure.
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Although King’s near-double-digit defeat at the hands of State Sen. Randy Feenstra was without doubt influenced by a series of comments by the Congressman over the past decade, in which he said things like “white nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization — how did that language become offensive?” and “what does this diversity bring that we don’t already have?” – it had more to do with Republican traitors looking to harm King behind the scenes — because of his support for Trump and populist policy positions — than anything else.
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Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, in one of his first moves (one that was hardly covered by the media) as House Minority Leader, stripped King of all of his House committee assignments, citing King’s off-the-cuff remarks as justification.
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McCarthy, whom King is now trying to bring in front of an ethics committee (and he might in fact sue him), claimed that he made his decision only after King appeared to wonder when “white supremacist” and “white nationalist” became offensive terms during an interview. But anyone who has been following King’s career knows that this was just another example of Neo-cons and RINOs taking out their paleo-conservative enemies the moment they smell blood.
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When asked why he felt he had fallen out of favor with the GOP Establishment, King laughed and said, “I’m too honest”, “I fight for the people” and that he won’t budge on “the Second Amendment.”
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In fact, it was King’s belief that the Second Amendment is sacrosanct that angered some of the more “moderate” Republican members of the House.

Again, this had nothing to do with the Democrats.
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During a Sioux City, Iowa Town Hall event called “Pizza and Politics with Representative King,” the Iowa Congressman said people shouldn’t blame guns for gun violence and that any legislation restricting gun rights would “never be up for discussion on his watch”.
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“It isn’t the gun. There’s a whole series of things that are part of the violence that need to be addressed first,” King told the room of some 200 people, when asked about his thoughts on the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
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King had already gotten into trouble on social media with his own party for criticizing several of the Parkland students looking to exploit the tragedy for their own personal gain.
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King posted a meme on Facebook attacking Communist pig and teenage “activist”, Emma Gonzalez, that read,

“This is how you look when you claim Cuban heritage yet don’t speak Spanish and ignore the fact that your ancestors fled the island when the dictatorship turned Cuba into a prison camp, after removing all weapons from its citizens; hence their right to self defense.”

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When asked what he would do to protect people from mass shootings, King said, “I’d look at culture changes, the lack of prayer in schools, gun-free zones, family break-ups, Ritalin and video games. They play more of a role in gun violence than does access to guns.”
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That did not sit well with the Chris Christies and Paul Ryans of the GOP, who have proven time and time again they are open to passing legislation that infringes upon gun rights.
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Then there’s his very “dangerous” belief that a “war’s being waged against whites in both America and abroad”.
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Mother Jones reported that in 2018 King spoke to an Austrian far-right publication about “the great replacement” – something  “the New York Times described as a conspiracy theory on the far right that claims shadowy elites are working behind the scenes to reduce white populations to minorities in their own countries.


Then there was his little spat with RINO leader, Paul Ryan, and other GOP bigshots, bought and paid for by the ADL and AIPAC about his perceived anti-Semitic views.

No wonder little Ben Shapiro isn’t a fan. (Even Ted Cruz, who never went as far as condemning King was critical, urging King to tone it down on more than one occasion.)
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Evil Wikipedia writes that,
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“In late October 2018, after the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) sent the House speaker, Paul Ryan, an open letter calling on him to censure King, citing King’s relationship with far-right Freedom Party of Austria and other far-right groups in Europe.

Jonathan Greenblat

The letter accused King of engaging in anti-Semitic smearing of the Jewish investor and philanthropist, George Soros.

 It concluded, “Rep. King has brought dishonor onto the House of Representatives. We strongly urge you and the congressional leadership to demonstrate your revulsion with Rep. King’s actions by stripping him of his subcommittee chairmanship and initiating proceedings to formally censure or otherwise discipline him.”

Two leaders within the Iowa Jewish community also criticized King for being “an enthusiastic crusader for the same types of abhorrent beliefs held by the Pittsburgh shooter”.
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Oh, dear. Can’t have a man telling the truth now, can we?
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By stripping King’s membership on the House Agriculture Committee – a key post for a rural-district lawmaker – anti-gun McCarthy in effect doomed King’s re-election campaign.

This is, in fact, the crux of King’s ethics complaint his team has filed against McCarthy.
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Immediately after the GOP pulled King off “committee duty”, they funded ads attacking him for being powerless because he was no longer serving on the committees they had JUST banned him from!

In fact, they implied he’d stopped serving of his own accord!
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Then there was the Trump factor….
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Republicans recognized that in order to move on from Trump (yes, they were planning on moving on from our President 18 months before the election they helped rig for Biden) they needed to purge the House and Senate of Trump’s most ardent supporters, as well as the US Representatives who spoke in the same vernacular as our President.
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Politicians who oppose the toppling of statues are also opposed to immigration, are also ardent proponents of gun rights, and also believe that the “West is best” — and “that sort” are simply no longer welcome in the GOP (“Gay Old Pedophiles”)?

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Those that are seen as even remotely sympathetic to whites 100% HAVE to go!
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So, by stripping King of his ability to be effective – harming his constituents in the process – the GOP Establishment were able to castrate him in the run-up to the primary.
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And again, the Democrats had NOTHING to do with this.

They have about as much sway in rural Iowa as Rudy Giuliani does in downtown Detroit.
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Just as Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger (with assistance from Dominion Voting Systems, which is also used in Iowa for a varierty of applications) is behind Trump’s “losing” Georgia, and Cindy McCain behind Trump’s loss in Arizona, it was the Iowa RINO (“Republican In Name Only”) Establishment that took King out.
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By removing his powers and banning him from committees, this meant that King had zero influence within his party or among the broader Congress, and in turn, less with his constituents.
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It was this lack of efficacy and power that doomed him, as his GOP opponents — both Feenstra and outside groups funded by our oppressors — pointed out over and over again during the run-up to the primary.
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“Whatever you think of Steve King, it’s clear he’s no longer effective,” said longtime Iowa social conservative leader Bob Vander Plaats in a Feenstra ad. “He can’t deliver for America and can’t advance our conservative values.”
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Iowa’s Republican-led Chamber of Commerce attacked King in ads for being kicked off the House Agriculture Committee, “making it impossible for him to advocate for farmers amid the hit they have taken from the coronavirus pandemic.”
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Several local Republicans who challenged King for re-nomination in his Northwest Iowa district even attacked him openly for his “right wing views”.
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Yes, as Trump was attacking Biden for being an Antifa supporter, Iowa Republicans were attacking King for the same thing. They never mentioned Trump, as Iowans support Trump, but the GOP Establishment were still in effect attacking King for supporting the kind of ideas and rhetoric espoused by President Trump.
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And it worked.
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In early June, Iowa state senator Randy Feenstra beat King in the Republican primary, and months later, won the seat easily.

King was among only eight House members who lost re-nomination bids in 2020 – all of whom had fallen out with their parties and saw their re-election campaigns sabotaged from within!
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Although King was disappointed, he made it clear that he won’t go quietly into the night. Thankfully.
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In fact, King’s first step is the publication of a book, tentatively entitled, “Walking Through the Fire”.
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“I’ll probably spend the next few months writing and then pushing that book. And I’ll be doing radio scattered around in different locations,” King told The Washington Examiner. “And we’ll see from there, but truth is my cash flow gets better going home. And so there’s not an urgency there. We got plenty of time.”
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Back home in Iowa, King said, “I’m surrounded by three grown sons within ten miles of my house. We live out in the country and have eight grandchildren. That’s a pretty good network to have.”
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The Examiner continued:
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Looking back, King says he had not thought much of what kind of legacy he would have in Washington. However, he warns new members of Congress to prepare themselves if they plan to speak out independently.
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“You have to have three things,” King said. “Constituents who will support you, and you have to have a broad fundraising network that’s not dependent upon leadership or K Street. And the third thing is a national media voice, so when they decide to undercut you, you can go to the press and tell them the truth.”
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King doesn’t sound like a departing House member who will miss Washington.
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“I don’t want to imply that I’m walking out of this town with bitterness. But I’m walking out of this town with an understanding of how deep and how broad this swamp is and what some people will do for power,” he said.

“And I’ll never be able to understand why they put their souls at risk for power.”
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King’s long career in Washington did form bonds with a number of rank-and-file members, including one Congressional Black Caucus lawmaker who vouched for King.
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“You’ll never hear me calling [King] names. I don’t do that. …I don’t want to, you know, trespass into Republican Conference matters. All I can say is my personal relationship with him has not changed, and I don’t see any reason for it to change,” Missouri Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver said during a radio interview in April 2019.
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Cleaver continued, “I think he’ll tell you that we still joke. It’s as if nothing happened, and I’m very aware of all the issues, and I know that sometimes, and I never heard any of it, but I know sometimes Steve gets beat up for the way he says things.”
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The Iowa Republican has no current plans to run for office again, though he is not leaving the political arena completely. Pointing to his work on anti-abortion issues, gun rights and border security, King says he will remain politically active.
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“I’m not going to walk away from this. This cause is too important. So I’ll continue to add my voice where it needs to be added. And we’ll know I’ll write and talk and lobby my legislators, and continue to promote the ideas here,” he said.
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END ARTICLE
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List of controversial comments made by former Congressman King compiled by Wikipedia (verbatim):
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The Washington Post has described King as “the U.S. Congressman most openly affiliated with white nationalism”, while Vanity Fair has said his opinions in this direction are “barely veiled.”

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David Leonhardt, in an opinion piece for The New York Times, has explicitly identified King as being a “white nationalist”.
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King has stirred controversy and come to prominence by making statements that have been described as racist or racially charged. He is a staunch oponent of immigration and multiculturalism, and has supported far-right European politicians. According to The Guardian, King “has long been one of the most vociferously anti-immigration members of the House Republican caucus.”
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King has said that he is not a racist.
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In October 2018, the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, Steve Stivers, condemned King as a racist, saying that King’s actions and comments were “completely inappropriate” and constituted “white supremacy and hate.”[134]

The NRCC said it would not help King in his 2018 re-election efforts. Representative Carlos Curbelo described King’s comments and actions as “disgusting,” and said that he would never vote for someone like King.

Senator Ted Cruz called King’s rhetoric “divisive” but stopped short of condemning him.
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Other Republicans, such as House Agriculture Committee Chairman Mike Conaway, dismissed the idea that King is racist.
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In a January 2019 New York Times interview, King asked, “White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization—how did that language become offensive?”

He also said of the large increase in representation of minorities and women in the new Democrat-controlled House: “You could look over there and think the Democratic Party is no country for white men.”[11][136]

He was subsequently condemned by numerous Republican members of Congress, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and other members of the House Republican leadership.
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U.S. Senator Tim Scott criticized King harshly in a Washington Post op-ed, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called King’s remarks “unwelcome and unworthy of his elected position”.

After the interview was published, and following backlash from across the political spectrum, King issued a statement via Twitter stating that he was “simply a Nationalist”, that he did not advocate for “white nationalism and white supremacy”, and that “I want to make one thing abundantly clear: I reject those labels and the evil ideology they define.”
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King said The New York Times had misunderstood his comments, and that he did not question why “white nationalist” and “white supremacist” were offensive terms.

On Twitter, he later stated: “As I told The New York Times, ‘it’s not about race; It’s never been about race’.”

The House voted 416–1 to rebuke King’s comments; Illinois Representative Bobby Rush was the lone “nay” vote, but only because h,e believed a rebuke was too lenient and that King deserved to be censured.
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Immigration and multiculturalism
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King is a staunch opponent of immigration and multiculturalism.
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In April 2006, when asked if “the US economy simply couldn’t function without” the presence of illegal immigrants, King said that he rejected that position “categorically”. He said the 77.5 million people between the ages of 16 and 65 in the United States who are not part of the workforce “could be put to work and we could invent machines to replace the rest.”

In 2006, King called for an electrified fence on the US border, commenting that such fences were successful in containing livestock.
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In July 2013, speaking about proposed immigration legislation, King said of illegal immigrants: “For every one who’s a valedictorian, there’s another 100 out there who weigh 130 pounds—and they’ve got calves the size of cantaloupes because they’re hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the desert.”

Despite strong rebukes from both Democrats and other Republicans, including House Speaker John Boehner, who called his statements “ignorant” and “hateful”, and House majority leader Eric Cantor, who called the comments “inexcusable”, King defended his comments, saying he got the description from the Border Patrol.
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In July 2015, referencing HUD secretary Julian Castro’s remarks on how poorly the Republican Party was doing with Hispanic voters, King responded, “What does Julian Castro know? Does he know that I’m as Hispanic and Latino as he?”
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In 2016, a journalist for the Iowa Starting Line reported that King displayed the Confederate flag on his office desk, although Iowa was part of the Union during the American Civil War. He removed it after a Confederate flag-waver later fatally shot two Iowa police officers.

King attempted to block a bill that would remove Andrew Jackson and replace him with Harriet Tubman on the twenty-dollar bill.

King praised Bernie Sanders numerous times for his view on immigration, saying that it is similar to his views.
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In March 2017, King wrote “culture and demographics are our destiny. We can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies.” When asked about his comments, King stood by them, saying: “you need to teach your children your values” and “with the inter-marriage, I’d like to see an America that is just so homogenous that we look a lot the same”.

King was rebuked by members of his own party, including Speaker Paul D. Ryan, but praised by white supremacist David Duke and The Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi website.
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In July 2017, the House Appropriations Committee voted to fund the US-Mexico border wall, allocating $1.6 billion for it. King called for an additional $5 billion for the wall, to be paid for with federal dollars coming from Planned Parenthood, food stamps, and other federal welfare programs, saying, “I would find half of a billion of dollars of that right out of Planned Parenthood’s budget, and the rest of it could come out of food stamps and the entitlements that are being spread out for people who have not worked in three generations.”
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On November 5, 2018, King referred to Mexican immigrants as “dirt” while at a campaign stop. The Weekly Standard reported the comment; King denied saying it and called on The Weekly Standard to release audio of the remarks. The Weekly Standard then released a recording of the exchange, confirming that King had made the remarks.

In May 2019, King warned against “presuming that every culture is equal”. On September 4, 2019, King posted a video of himself drinking water from water fountains over toilets at migrant facilities. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez criticized the GOP as “anti-immigrant” following the video.
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President Barack Obama
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On March 7, 2008, during his press engagements to announce his reelection campaign, King made remarks about then U.S. senator and Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama and his middle name “Hussein”, saying:
I don’t want to disparage anyone because of their race, their ethnicity, their name—whatever their religion their father might have been, I’ll just say this: When you think about the optics of a Barack Obama potentially getting elected President of the United States—I mean, what does this look like to the rest of the world? What does it look like to the world of Islam? I will tell you that, if he is elected president, then the radical Islamists, the al-Qaida, the radical Islamists and their supporters, will be dancing in the streets in greater numbers than they did on September 11.”
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On March 10, King defended his comments to the Associated Press, saying “[Obama will] certainly be viewed as a savior for them… That’s why you will see them supporting him, encouraging him.”
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Obama said he did not take the comments too seriously, describing King as a person who thrives on making controversial statements to get media coverage. He said, “I would hope [Obama’s opponent] Senator [John] McCain would want to distance himself from that kind of inflammatory and offensive remarks.” The McCain campaign did disavowe King’s comments, saying “John McCain rejects the type of politics that degrades our civics… and obviously that extends to Congressman King’s statement.”[169]
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In mid-January 2009, King acknowledged that terrorists were not dancing in the streets, and had made statements opposing Obama. He said he found Obama’s decision to use his middle name “Hussein” when sworn in as the 44th President of the United States to be “bizarre” and “a double standard”.
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In 2010, King speculated that Obama’s immigration policies were influenced by racial favoritism toward black people.
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In February 2020 on Twitter, King insinuated former DHS official Philip Haney had been murdered as a reprisal for “archiving data that incriminated the highest levels of the Obama administration”.
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On June 14, 2010, King said on the House floor that racial profiling is an important component of law enforcement: “Some claim that the Arizona law will bring about racial discrimination profiling. First let me say, Mr. Speaker, that profiling has always been an important component of legitimate law enforcement. If you can’t profile someone, you can’t use those common-sense indicators that are before your very eyes. Now, I think it’s wrong to use racial profiling for the reasons of discriminating against people, but it’s not wrong to use race or other indicators for the sake of identifying people that are violating the law.”
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As an example of profiling, King described an instance when a taxi driver would stop for him before he had to hail a cab, just because he was in a business suit.

The same day, on G. Gordon Liddy’s radio program, King said that Obama’s policies favored black people: “The president has demonstrated that he has a default mechanism in him that breaks down the side of race—on the side that favors the black person in the case of Professor Gates and Officer Crowley.”
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On January 13, 2018, King tweeted that racial oppression was a “thing of the past”.
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On July 18, 2016, King participated in a panel discussion on MSNBC, during which a panelist from Esquire Magazine suggested that the 2016 convention could be the last in which “old white people would command the Republican Party’s attention”.

King responded, “This whole ‘old white people’ business does get a little tired, Charlie. I’d ask you to go back through history and figure out where are these contributions that have been made by these other categories of people that you are talking about? Where did any other subgroup of people contribute more to civilization?”
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Panel moderator Chris Hayes later described King’s comments as “odious” and “preposterous.”
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Panel member April Ryan described them as “in-my-face racism”. That evening, King was asked about his comments during an interview with ABC News. King said he had meant to say that “Western civilization”, rather than “white people”, is the “superior culture”:

“When you describe Western civilization, that can mean much of Western civilization happens to be Caucasians. But we should not apologize for our culture or our civilization. The contributions that were made by Western civilization itself, and by Americans, by Americans of all races, stand far above the rest of the world. The Western civilization and the American civilization are a superior culture.”
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Affirmative Action
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King opposes affirmative action. He has said:

“There’s been legislation that’s been brought through this House that sets aside benefits for women and minorities. The only people that it excludes are white men… Pretty soon, white men are going to notice they are the ones being excluded.”
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In 2015, King introduced a bill that would require colleges to report affirmative action.
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King supported Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, a right-wing populist and strong opponent of admitting migrants during the European migrant crisis. On December 8, 2017, King tweeted Orbán’s quote that “Diversity is not our strength. Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban, ‘Mixing cultures will not lead to a higher quality of life but a lower one’.”
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“Assimilation has become a dirty word to the multiculturalist Left. Assimilation, not diversity, is our American strength,” he tweeted.
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On August 24, 2018, King was interviewed by the Austrian website Unzensuriert (Uncensored), which is connected to the country’s Freedom Party, part of the First Kurz government.

He agreed with the interviewer that American financier George Soros is involved with the “Great Replacement”, a far-right conspiracy theory that claims to have identified a plot to replace white Europeans with minorities and immigrants.

[End]

 

.. An observation


PFrancois wrote me:

The fact is that no one knew King existed. He was being hidden from view so they could take him down internally.

He was persona non grata in the GOP for a decade. But it was kept quiet so they could take care of him quietly. That way they did not make a martyr of him. It was a quiet execution in the basement of the Lubyanka.

Now they’re going after US Representative Higgins. CNN invites the man on, a Congressman, only to have the “reporter” talk over and shout the distinguished guest down!

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/gop-lawmaker-cnn-anchor-battle-over-lack-of-evidence-for-fraud-claims/ar-BB1cuAfs?

This story corroborates what people said to me way back in the Seventies. “It’s gonna take another Hitler!”

The System crushes every vocal and serious heretic. It takes an inner upheaval and a sacred commitment with religious fervor to take the jew war machine down.

If you pussyfoot around like Trump or King, you do not mobilize the passion existing in our race.

Then the Jews, with all THEIR passion, aided by white traitors, will crush you to dust.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6 Comments

  1. (((They))) are ready to eliminate all of us that don’t want them in control. Trump isn’t a fighter. He won’t even try. At least Lin Wood has risked his own life to expose the worst corruption. It seems that Pence does not intend to be in Congress to keep electoral integrity. Biden will be accepted and the Communist genocide will begin in the streets of D.C. Americans not prepared to resist have been suckered into believing Trump will finally invoke the Insurrection Act to save the country. He wouldn’t even try to save King! Almost all of Congress should have been arrested for sedition and treason. Most Americans will not risk themselves and families to save save themselves. Fictional Hollywood American wild west sheriffs do not exist in this lawless country. Apparently, neither do loyal US Marines sworn to defend and protect Americans from domestic Communist enemies.

    • My experience at the Army Corps of Engineers hearing on the Apollo NUMEC radioactive clean-up was a severe warning to me, as I watched the masses, though highly affected by cancer in their own loved ones,  just stare at me, almost drooling in incomprehension. I saw, in a kind of epiphany, that the masses do NOT respond immediately to mentally forbidden truths.

      And they were already zombies way back in the year 2012. Now it is even worse, many chemtrails later, and with people more obese, more effeminate, and more used than ever to sitting there at some plastic keyboard instead of doing something in the real world.

      I suspect at this stage that the military has made it clear to Trump he will not be obeyed if he declares martial law, and large units will move on the White House to eject him should he not leave the White House by January 20.

      Insanely, Trump made this russophobic madman, Mark Milley, the Chairman in 2019 of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

       

      It would even start with this –-the very hostile, black-run DC government prosaically turning off the water and power.

      As to an uprising, it would be far preferable if the Commander-In-Chief led it. The man got at least 80 million votes, many literally love him, and he has many supporters in the lower military ranks.

      When the Americans rose up against King George III, he did not have satellites, killer drones and the ability to locate and identify enemies via their smartphones. Nor did Abraham Lincoln in his war against the “rebelllion” by the South. It was basically rifles against rifles, cannons against cannons, and horses against horses.

      Now say the entire UP of Michigan rose up under my leadership against the regime….

      A killer drone from some Air Force base located 1,500 miles from here could tail my car and fire one single smart missile from a position in the air a mile behind the vehicle, blowing the car up just as the Pentagon did with the Iranian general Suleimani a year ago.

      It would not matter if everyone in the tri-state region loved me.

      The drone would just fly over those people.

      If any planned uprising were to be discussed online, or by phone or even by old-fashioned letter, sent using the US Postal Service, or if cars began converging on some meeting place, the feds would find out, and do a series of night-time raids at 3 and 6 am BEFORE all that, and decapitate the whole leadership, which is what the bolsheviks did, hitting the individuals they feared when they were sleepy and groggy.

      Beyond that, the regular US military has vast experience in house-to-house fighting, both in WWII in Europe and in Vietnam and Iraq.

      If my goal were only to die heroically, the Pentagon could gladly arrange for that, and it would be a one-day little “burst of glory.”

      Should I run for the hills? Thermal detection drones would tell the Pentagon exactly where the heat sources would be located even in the deepest forest, such as people with body heat, vehicles with warm engines, and, of course, hot gun barrels. 😉

      NO, it has to be a mass movement, highly spiritual, and embued with suicidal determination — or it will flop before even Day One, because there will be pre-emptive mass arrests and thus no action at all, just preliminary talk.

      Clearly, Trump has toyed with declaring martial law, and heard about it from close advisors such as General Flynn and General McInerny, plus others.

      He fired his previous defense secretary, Esper, for another man, Chris Miller, who then put all US Special Forces under his direct command, an unprecedented move. Normally, Navy SEALs are under the Navy, Marine Force Recon undef the Marines, Delta Force under the Air Force, and Green Berets under the Army.

      [caption id="attachment_110463" align="aligncenter" width="1024"] Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, left, and others, applaud during a full honors welcoming ceremony for Secretary of Defense Mark Esper at the Pentagon, Thursday, July 25, 2019, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)[/caption]

      Why did Miller put them under his direct control?

      We shall see what happens, but I will not wait much longer.

      One thing is for certain: were I to do nothing, that would not remove the huge target that is painted on my specific back already.

      The nightmarish eight years of Obama-Biden would resume in spades for me under Biden-Harris.

      They could make “hate speech” a federal crime or “spreading dangerous disinformation about Covid-19 and the vaccine.”

      My goal is, however, to win, not to merely “go out in a blaze of glory,” though that might be exactly what happens.

      I ask for your prayers for great wisdom and courage. That is not some empty phrase. I am asking for your fervent prayers to God.

       

  2. Joe Biden is apparently on warfarin blood thinner, which causes his eyes to periodically fill with blood. When I saw this DS article, I thought he might be wearing black contact lenses, but had to investigate it further:

    https://dailystormer.su/will-joe-biden-come-in-and-briefly-chill-out-on-the-marxist-social-transformation-agenda

    Then I found this video, where his eyes look black, but are probably just filled with blood:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gptlaq-3qQA

    This Jewpost article says he “scratched his eye” – right:

    https://www.huffpost.com/entry/joe-biden-glasses_n_2673861

    Seems that he scratches his eye pretty often, then:

    https://newspunch.com/joe-bidens-eye-fills-blood-cnn-town-hall

    I had a family member, now deceased, who was on warfarin (also called coumadin) for heart failure, and this was a common side-effect of that medication. The main reason blood thinner is prescribed is for heart failure, and the blood, being much thinner, sometimes leaks into places it shouldn’t go, like the eyes.

    So, Joe Biden apparently has heart failure as well as senility, yet both of these serious health problems have been covered up by the Demoncrats. If Biden’s vote fraud election is allowed to stand, and he is inaugurated on 1/20/2021, it won’t be long before he either dies or resigns, and Queen Kamala takes over.

  3. Here is an article which mentions the Republican’s futile objections to the vote fraud, scheduled for 1/6/2021:

    https://www.wnd.com/2021/01/vicious-antifa-attacks-family-sen-josh-hawley-home

    The key part of the article are these two paragraphs:

    “Hawley is one of at least 13 senators and 140 House members who have said they will object to the certification of votes in at least six battleground states. An objection from at least one senator and one House member requires that each chamber engage in two hours of debate over each slate of electors to which they object. That means there is likely to be 12 hours of debate in both the House and the Senate in which the objectors will present their evidence.

    Critics of the objectors contend the exercise is futile because each chamber must vote on the objections, and Democrats control the House.”

    Democrats control the House. Meaning that they will of course use their majority vote to reject the Republican objections. And since apparently both the House and Senate must agree in order for the election results to be changed, they won’t be.

    So, this Republican “objection” to the vote fraud election will be pure theater and grandstanding, and nothing more. Get ready for Queen Kamala.

    • Thanks, but there is no reason to get totally cynical and say it is all theater and grandstanding. This perfectly constitutional procedure will fan the flames of white rage over the Stealection and force the Demoncrap House to solemnly commit a gigantic crime in public.

      Then it is not be just Jim Acosta of CNN, the leftist women on “The View,” or Nancy Pelosi, but the entire Demoncrap party voting for a massive criminal fraud and for treason, giving this country to Red China.

      And if, as expected, Pence betrays his president, his party, and this nation, this will show the Deep State is indeed a reality, not a nutty conspiracy theory.

      Today could be the turning point.

      And not just over this fraud, but also over the jews’ Moderna and Pfizer vaccines. Reports coming in from everywhere show a massive rejection of the vaccine. Let Biden-Harris try to make it mandatory. I hope, and I pray that they try. That will be “a bridge too far.”

      Then we have the primal fear that they will take our guns.

      The fear of communism.

      White fear of BLM and Antifa.

      The loathing for an ascendant China.

      This ain’t over yet, comrade, not by a long shot.

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