Samenwerking tussen echte mensen, dus ook niet
gehersenspoelde soldaten en sergeanten, van europa,
rusland, turkije, israël, palestina, syrië, irak, iran, egypte,
beide amerika's (mexico city droogt nu al uit), china,
taiwan, japan, zie whole world wide web kan de
mensheid en de wereld redden concludeerden Turkse
slimme Emet en ik, geen liegende huichelende valse
hebzuchtige bezitterige ijdele vvd ggg ss dictators meer,
zoals the usual suspects, v.poetin, d.trump, g.wilders,
m. rutte en zijn gore gluiperige discriminerende racistische
mammon kanker bureaucraatvriendje smerige schijtkopf stef blok :
liegen en de werkelijkheid verdraaien en arme mensen
en ~ of de islam, de joden, de katholieken, de buitenlanders
de schuld geven .. dan heb je een verwaande verrotte domme
doodse animal farm varkenskop, zo zien ze er ook uit,
van die liefdeloze varkenskoppen, en verspreid je de zwarte pest
mammon kanker ziekte van nu
PACE E BENE PER TUTTI
Here's What North Carolina Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson Said About
Adolf Hitler, Jews and the Holocaust
On March 5, 2024, North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson was declared the Republican Party's winner in the state's race for the governor's mansion. Days earlier, his campaign was endorsed by former U.S. President Donald Trump. "This is Martin Luther King on steroids," Trump told a crowd that he said of Robinson. "I think you're better than Martin Luther King. I think you are Martin Luther King times two."
In the aftermath of Robinson's victory — and in the months that preceded Super Tuesday — some of his past comments about a variety of subjects were resurfaced online, in the news and on late-night TV shows including "Late Night with Seth Meyers," "The Daily Show" and "Last Week Tonight with John Oliver."
On Oct. 12, 2023, the Raleigh, North Carolina-based NBC affiliate WRAL reported, "Robinson in a past Facebook post called reports of the Holocaust 'hogwash.'" The article also included a quote from a spokesperson for Stein — the state attorney general and 2024 Democratic primary winner — who said, "Mark Robinson called the Holocaust 'hogwash' and now uses the slaughter of Israelis and Americans to perform a transparent political stunt. This is as close as he should ever get to being governor."
From our reading of Robinson's full, original post — as well as Robinson's own comments that he added under the post in the hours and days that followed — it did not appear in this specific instance he had said he believed concentration camps and the Holocaust were "hogwash." Rather, the three-sentence post appeared to be an attempt to make a point about gun-control measures.
The full post read, "The center and leftist leaning Weimar Republic put heavy gun ownership restrictions on German citizens long before the Nazis took power. This foolishness about Hitler disarming MILLIONS of Jews and then marching them off to concentration camps is a bunch of hogwash. Repeating that hogwash makes the conservative argument against the current attempts by liberal Marxist to push Unconstitutional gun control measures in this Nation look FOOLISH."
In October 2015, PolitiFact looked at the claim that gun-control measures allowed the Nazis to carry out the atrocities of the Holocaust and rated it as "false." One of the specific pieces of information that the story focused on concerned a passage in Dr. Ben Carson's book "A More Perfect Union." At the time, Carson was one of several Republican candidates for president.
The passage in Carson's book read, "German citizens were disarmed by their government in the late 1930s, and by the mid-1940s Hitler's regime had mercilessly slaughtered six million Jews and numerous others whom they considered inferior. Through a combination of removing guns and disseminating deceitful propaganda, the Nazis were able to carry out their evil intentions with relatively little resistance." The PolitiFact writer called Carson's claim "a misreading of history."
Additional Notes
The aforementioned reporting from Jewish Insider said that Mark Walker, one of the Republican candidates facing off against Robinson in the governor's race, had denounced Robinson's past comments. "His history of antisemitic remarks is troubling," Walker told the publication. "His denial of the Holocaust reaches a whole different level and should be strongly condemned in every aspect possible."
The stories also made note of other past Facebook posts from Robinson about the 1977 TV miniseries "Roots," the 2018 feature film "Black Panther" and other subjects.
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