Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 17, 2017
“Everyone I don’t like is a Russian agent” is the motto of the entire government these days.
At this point, whenever you hear anyone say anything about Russia, you can write them off as a shill.
CNN:
Sen. John McCain accused Sen. Rand Paul of “working for Vladimir Putin” on the Senate floor Wednesday, leading some to wonder if the Arizona Republican had violated Rule 19, a Senate regulation evoked earlier this year when one senator imputes the honor of another.
McCain’s comments came after Paul objected to a resolution that would allow Montenegro to join the NATO alliance. McCain responded by lobbing accusations at his fellow GOP senator multiple times, both before and after Paul objected to the vote, though the Kentucky senator did not add additional defense Wednesday.
Pointedly singling out the “gentleman from Kentucky,” McCain said those who object “are now carrying out the desires and ambitions of Vladimir Putin.”
When Paul formally objected, McCain reiterated his opinion.
“The senator from Kentucky is now working for Vladimir Putin,” he said.
The sharp attack had some congressional observers wondering how McCain hadn’t violated Rule 19, when Sen. Elizabeth Warren had when she criticized former-senator-now-Attorney-General Jeff Sessions earlier this year.
McCain himself, obviously, is an Israeli agent.
He has attacked the President himself while on foreign soil, demanding other countries do something to stop the leader of his own country. That is the textbook definition of treason.
And yet he has the nerve to accuse someone who is supporting American interests of being a traitor.
Because seriously – why should we pay for the welfare program of yet another Eastern European country?
What do we gain from NATO?
In my opinion, anyone who supports NATO is anti-American.
Here’s Mark Dice’s take.