Yids Flip Lids Over Trump’s “I am a Nationalist” Declaration

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 24, 2018

Monday in Texas, Trump said a sentence heard round the world.

“I am a nationalist.”

He was asked about it last night – no apologies.

The kike establishment has gone into an apoplectic fit.

CNN‘s Chris Cillizza sums up why this is driving yids out of their bloody minds:

At a rally in Houston Monday night for Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, President Donald Trump said this:

“A globalist is a person that wants the globe to do well, frankly, not caring about our country so much. And you know what? We can’t have that. You know, they have a word. It sort of became old-fashioned. It’s called a nationalist. And I say, really, we’re not supposed to use that word. You know what I am? I’m a nationalist, OK? I’m a nationalist.

“Nationalist. Nothing — use that word. Use that word.”

Yeah. That happened.

On its face, Trump seemed to simply be saying that while past presidents — and politicians — cared a lot about other countries and what other countries thought about the United States (i.e. globalists), that he cares primarily about the US and what is good for us (nationalist).

The problem, of course, is that words matter. And the American president referring to himself as a nationalist has all sorts of problems wrapped up in it.

Chris then gives us the dictionary definition of “nationalism” before moving on to what he is certain Trump actually meant: literal Hitler.

Then there the historical context of the word “nationalism.” It primarily conjures two close associations: Nazism and white nationalism.

The roots of Adolf Hitler’s rise were built around his emphasis on extreme nationalism — the idea that the only way Germany could be great again was to seize onto the superiority of the German people and drive out those across Europe who refused to acknowledge that superiority.

White nationalism, which reared its ugly head in Charlottesville, Virginia, last year is organized under the principle that Caucasians are inherently superior and in order for society to truly prosper, the agenda of whites needs to be recognized as a first priority — at the necessary expense of anyone who isn’t white.

AKSHUALLY

Let me interject here, since we’re being discussed.

The principle was that white people have a right to exist, something which is not being represented currently by the Jewish media and was not represented by the government policies of Barack Obama.

Whether people THINK that whites are “inherently superior” is irrelevant. Most white nationalists will tell you they don’t think that, necessarily, they just think that we have a right to have our own thing – just like Africans, Asians, Jews, etc. have their own thing.

Saying that whites are “supremacists” who want to oppress everything they think is lesser than them is really a projection of Judaism onto white activists – “this must be what they want because it’s what we want.”

Jews believe they are “God’s chosen people” with a divine right to subjugate the “goyim,” whom they view as animals. White people, generally, just want to be left the hell alone and not be buried under brown third worlders.

But “white people just think they deserve to have their own countries” sounds too reasonable, so they have to frame this as some kind of diabolical agenda.

Now, do I think that Donald Trump was thinking about all of that linguistic and historical context when he called himself a “nationalist” in Houston on Monday night? Probably not. My guess is he was channeling his one-time political guru Steve Bannon

The big problem with Trump’s (and Bannon’s) open embrace of nationalism is all of the history and context that comes with it. Nationalism is not a new concept. And history suggests that it has often been used not just to promote pride in one’s country and values but also to subjugate those who don’t share those values — sometimes with absolutely devastating consequences.

You mean fake shower rooms that are actually gas chambers, Chris?

Let me add a bit of context here:

The fact of reality is that every group, ever, in all of history – long before the concept of a “nation-state” ever existed – sought to promote its own group interests first and foremost. Yes, obviously that sometimes led to war, because if you are promoting your own group interests first and the people beside you are promoting their own group interests first, there is potential for conflict.

To put this in context, there is violence throughout the natural world, and the struggle to survive and promote your own self-interest over the interests of other lifeforms is the defining cause of evolution of all life on earth.

Framing this as “evil” really requires a lot of work.

There is absolutely no precedent in all of human history, and in the history of all life on the planet, for putting someone else’s interests above your own. This is a concept that was completely and entirely invented by Jews and sold through emotionally-driven marketing campaigns to white people in the 20th century.

For those who say Trump just used the word “nationalism” and was totally unaware of all that goes with that idea, I say two things.

First, he’s the President of the United States.

Second, Trump himself makes clear that he knows that he probably shouldn’t call himself a nationalist. Here’s Trump: “You know, they have a word. It sort of became old-fashioned. It’s called a nationalist. And I say, really, we’re not supposed to use that word.” That quote should put to rest the idea that Trump didn’t know what he was doing with his word choice. He knew — and said! — that he probably shouldn’t use the word, but did so anyway.

Look, I get that Trump sees moments like the one last night in Houston as a chance to flout political correctness, to “own the libs” by purposely jabbing at their easily offended natures.

Wait, you get that now?

This is the real story here: you getting that.

And I get that the crowd gathered for a Trump rally loves when he does just that. (Following Trump’s insistence that he was a nationalist, an extended “USA!” chant broke out in the crowd.)

But let me repeat: Words matter. Especially when those words are coming out of the mouth of the President of the United States. Because he knows that calling himself a nationalist will get the crowd going, Trump uses the word.

Yes, as the old saying goes: “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will gas me in a fake shower room and turn me into a lampshade.”

But, as President, he should realize that when he embraces an ideology with such incredibly negative historical (and current) connotations, he plays a very dangerous game with few possible positive outcomes for the country at large.

The fact he doesn’t speaks volumes about his lack of understanding that the presidency isn’t just a job but a beacon of moral leadership both in the country and in the world.

HA!

No one gives a fuck about your “beacon of moral leadership” gibberish anymore, CNN. They don’t care because it is both fake and gay.

  • Fake: You people promote children getting shot up with hormones and cutting their dicks off then you want to whine about morality. Framing self-destruction and national suicide as “moral” is nonsensical.
  • Gay: The President’s job absolutely is not to be any kind of “beacon” to or of anything. His job is to protect the US Constitution and the people of this country. He is not a Sunday school teacher or a marriage counselor.

Cillizza claims to be a half Irish, half Italian Catholic kikesucking race traitor (he sure as hell looks like a Jew to me, but sometimes people who worship Jews appear to take on their physical form).

Whatever the case, he is the singer and dancer of the Jew agenda. Lately they’ve been sending out their buttgoys to make some of the more outrageous statements, but understand: this is the official Jew line regarding Trump’s “nationalist” statement: it is an official declaration that he is both a Hitlerian Nazi and a White Nationalist.

And they are literally arguing that the word “nationalist” can only mean those two things, and actually always means both those things at once.

It’s probably more likely that Trump just meant what he said – that he’s a nationalist in that he is opposed to globalism and believes in putting America before other countries.

But then: I don’t think they distinguish between the two. Any opposition to globalism is now Hitler Nazism in the mind of the kikes and the kikesuckers.

But here’s the kicker:

More and more, because the Jews are pushing that so hard, they are creating a divide where the people on the other side are beginning to view it the same way. They are not going to dress up in Nazi costumes, but they are starting to identify more and more with whiteness, because they are being attacked as whites.

Here are some blue checks losing their shit over Trump’s sentence.

(That bitch there might be a little bit confused about the party line on this one, lol.)

And it just goes on and on and on.

This is the most outrage I’ve seen them since… I dunno, maybe since “grab em by the pussy.”

These people are so dumb. They actually don’t get that he can direct their outrage in ways that are beneficial to his agenda.

Which is exactly what he is doing here.

He is getting the media to shout, aggressively: “it is pure evil that Trump wants to put the interests of America before the interests of foreign countries!!!!!! HE MUST BE STOPPED!!!!!!”