Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
April 1, 2018
Wow are these brothers running against each other? They sure do look alike…
You would think that with all the issues Puerto Rico has been having as of late, the election would be about something bigger than gay marriage.
Oh right. This is Costa Rica. Different country.
I guess they really don’t have anything at all going on in that country, so literally the only thing they have to discuss is gay marriage.
Costa Ricans vote Sunday in a presidential runoff between the ruling party’s candidate and an evangelical pastor who has capitalized on the backlash against talk of legalizing same-sex marriage in the Central American country.
Carlos Alvarado of the incumbent Citizen Action Party has garnered the support of Costa Ricans who see rival Fabricio Alvarado’s discourse as homophobic. The latter went from also-ran to leading candidate after he came out strongly against same-sex marriage in the face of international pressure for Costa Rica to allow gays to wed.
Recent polling showed the candidates — who are not related despite sharing the same last name — in a statistical tie heading into the vote. They were the top vote-getters in a first round election in early February.
The gay marriage question became the race’s focal point after the Inter-American Court of Human Rights said in January that Costa Rica should allow same-sex marriage.
Political scientist and analyst Francisco Barahona said Fabricio Alvarado’s message of restoration – he heads the National Restoration party – uses a loaded term that suggests he wants to put Costa Rica’s institutions in line with his brand of religious fundamentalism.
This is a big test to see if we should bring millions of these people into America.
Because if they vote against gay marriage, then they will naturally be conservatives, and could shore up the GOP support base against the liberal Mexicans.
We need natural conservatives in this country.
Too many globalists and liberals.
The only way to fix our problems is to find large foreign populations to transfer into our country.