Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
June 21, 2016
Newsflash: if women and minorities weren’t allowed to vote, there would be no contest.
But then, if women and minorities weren’t allowed to vote, we wouldn’t be in this situation in the first place and would already have some manner of Hilter-like dictator.
We would also presumably already have colonies on Mars and a city on the Moon.
A recent round of polls in battleground states shows the contest between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump much tighter than national polling.
Traditional swing states show a battle similar to the fight in 2012 between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney, with one exception. The emergence of Pennsylvania as a toss-up contest has already shifted the landscape ahead of November.
On Thursday, Democrat-leaning firm PPP released a poll of Virginia voters showing Clinton leading Trump by 3 points in the Old Dominion. Last year, PPP showed Clinton leading Trump by 10 points in Virginia. Since then, Clinton’s favorablity has decreased, while Trump’s has improved.
Trump is still slightly more unpopular than Clinton in Virginia, yet the head-to-head match-up is within the margin of error. Barack Obama defeated Mitt Romney by just 4 points in Virginia, essentially the same result currently polled between Trump and Clinton.
So, even though 60 percent of voters have an unfavorable view of Trump, he is tied with Clinton in Virginia. Clinton leads among women by just 11 points, only slightly better than Obama’s 9-point margin with women against Romney. Trump leads Clinton by 4 points among men, the same margin that Romney won against Obama.
When third-party candidates Gary Johnson and Jill Stein are added to the match-up, though, Trump’s edge among men jumps to 7 points, while Clinton’s edge among women remains at 11 points.
A PPP survey of Pennsylvania conducted in early June shows a very close race in the Keystone State. A head-to-head match-up between Clinton and Trump is tied, with each drawing 44 percent support. There is an enormous gender gap in the commonwealth, with Trump holding a slight edge.
Clinton leads Trump by 20 points among women in Pennsylvania. Trump, however has a 22-point lead among men. With third party candidates included, Clinton has an 18 point lead among women, while Trump has an 18 point lead among men.
Of course, when I talk about banning women from voting, I don’t mean to say that every single woman is incapable of voting properly. However, we are not dealing with individual women, we are dealing with statistics. Pointing at some woman who is capable of making sound and logical decisions as proof women should be allowed to vote is like pointing at Thomas Sowell as proof Blacks are a race of intellectuals. Individuals are irrelevant to sociological trends.
And despite the fact that we do have some great right-wing women on our side, the majority of women will always vote for communism and ethnic displacement.
It’s just an objective fact.
I didn’t invent human nature, and therefore I am not responsible for this objective fact.