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July 18, 2023

White supremacy, according to Britannica, is a belief in the “natural superiority of lighter skinned or white human races over other racial groups.”

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Going further, white supremacist groups “espouse ultranationalist, racist or fascist doctrines.”

By that logic, Al Sharpton, must be a black supremacist for his racist comments including, “White folks was in the caves while we (blacks) was building empires.” Or this antisemitic gem, “If the Jews want to get it on, tell them to pin their yarmulkes back and come over to my house.”

Britannica also describes, “White supremacist groups often have relied on violence to achieve their goals.”

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What about black supremacists as in the violent BLM riots of 2020, causing hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage and mayhem in many American cities? Or black New York subway shooter Frank R. James who was “consumed with hatred of white people and was convinced of a looming race war”?

Since the abolition of slavery almost two hundred years ago, and the Civil Rights Act of the 1960s, there wasn’t much talk of white supremacy until Donald Trump came along and it became a resistance talking point. The (left wing) Atlantic claimed,

The language of white supremacy has become increasingly central to understanding the argument over the broad currents of Donald Trump’s ascendancy. Long before ESPN anchor Jemele Hill famously referred to Trump as a white supremacist on Twitter, the questions of just who is a white supremacist, and just what white supremacy is, have dominated the analysis of how he came into power, and what that power means.

Now the term white supremacy is firmly entrenched in the left’s lexicon. It’s just a label to criticize and immediately put the accused on the defensive, especially Trump supporters, shutting down any substantive discussion.

The left’s tactic is out of Saul Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals, specifically, rule 11, “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, polarize it.” Going further, According to Alinsky, “The main job of the organizer is to bait an opponent into reacting.”

Naturally one would react vociferously if called a racist or white supremacist, but instead the right should use another Alinsky rule, number 5, “Ridicule is man’s most potent weapon. It’s hard to counterattack ridicule, and it infuriates the opposition, which then reacts to your advantage.”

So when Time beclowns itself by writing in 2022, “The white supremacist origins of exercise” it’s ridicule time. Likewise when MSNBC tweets, “The far right’s obsession with fitness is going digital” over their recent editorial nonsensically claiming, “Physical fitness has always been central to the far right,” ridicule is the only remedy.

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