Jewish Former Trump Aide Comes Out and Condemns Him

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 30, 2015

Sam Nunberg, a Jewish former advisor to Trump, is coming out and attacking him.
Sam Nunberg, a Jewish former advisor to Trump, is coming out and attacking him.

Well, this was predictable.

Daily Beast:

Look at the polls, and Donald Trump is crushing his Republican opponents. But from the perspective of Sam Nunberg, a political advisor who worked for Trump until earlier this year, the Donald’s campaign is losing — and just a couple months from total disaster.

“What I’m worried about is, I don’t know what his inner circle is telling him. I hope they’re being honest. I’m more worried, I’m not optimistic,” Nunberg told The Daily Beast. “Under the scenario that I’m laying out, I do not think that he will win… This is what I would say from a ‘glass half-empty’ perspective if I were talking to Mr. Trump.”

Falling poll numbers in the first key states, a lack so far of reserved advertising, a low net favorability and underperformance in the college-educated voting bloc which dominates the early presidential contests — all these contribute to a darkening forecast for the Trump campaign, Nunberg argued.

Nunberg began consulting for Trump as early as 2011, and became a full time advisor in Trump’s office in 2014. But Nunberg was fired over the summer due to a series of racist Facebook rants, including one 2009 post in which he called the president a “Socialist Marxist Islamo Fascist Nazi Appeaser”. So he is not exactly an impartial observer, despite his protestations to the contrary.

I agree with virtually everything The Donald says, but I have publicly disagreed with his choice to allow Jews to be close to him. Not because I believe in a conspiracy where he is secretly controlled by these Jews, but because I believe that when it comes down to it, they will all try to destroy him.

The Donald presumably had profitable business relationships with Jews, which led him to hold the opinion that “they’re not all bad.” Presumably, he thought that this profitability of business relationships with certain specific Jews would carry over to politics.

Now, he is learning the hard way that this is not the case.