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Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
I don’t know about hydroxywhatever. But the demon stuff is definitely true. https://t.co/n2sjub2t2W — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
https://t.co/Sz55exa7Sj — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
RT @ZachG932: 1/n The Great Awokening: Twitter edition Credits to the folks at https://t.co/H40DCH41fh for compiling and sharing these da… — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
RT @CurtMills: Trump’s biggest problem isn’t wealthy suburbanites. It’s the white working class. https://t.co/R1yqFwHjeB — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
RT @MarkBrahmin: The censorship continues apace. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
@j_o_h_r_n I’ve thought about this, actually. I don’t know. Paleocons and the AltRight always talk about “protecting the working class.” The reality is that immigration is hitting the professional class—and will hit it harder soon. Interesting speculation. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
@TheCptBlackPill @heraclitean11 Do you have a higher resolution version of this map? Can’t see what it’s about. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
I'm a fan of David Lynch's *Dune*. A film that gets dissed, even by its own director! — PolitiTweet.org
⚡ 𝔸𝕣𝕪𝕒𝕟 ℝ𝕖𝕧𝕚𝕧𝕒𝕝 ⚡ @Aglaophamos
7 films, 7 people. Excalibur (h/t @RichardBSpencer and @MarkBrahmin) Dune (1984) The Empire Strikes Back Dark City… https://t.co/K6cItnB5RF
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
People who keep promoting this "populist GOP" (crypto-white nationalist) strategy need, at the very least, to address the fact that "Trumpism" stands on very shaky empirical grounds. And you have to understand the world, if you want to change it. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
As Unz points out, one of the most remarkable aspects of the dramatic social change we've seen over the past three months is that it hasn't involved the immigration question in the slightest. It's all about "Whites and their sado-masochocistic relationship with Blacks," as usual. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Thirdly, and most importantly, focusing on immigration seems to give White Nationalists this false sense of achievement. As if, in an imaginary world, if the Hispanic issue can be solved, the Black, Jewish—and, most importantly, White—issues will vanish into thin air. They won't. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Secondly, I think that immigration restriction actually is on its way. The problem is, it will be geared towards high-skilled (high IQ) immigrants from Asia, India, and Africa. These new immigrants will ruthlessly displace the White middle-class. Not good. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
First, since around 2011, the majority of births have been to non-White mothers. Ergo, demographic change is baked into the cake—even if immigration were halted tomorrow morning. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
As I've been saying for a decade, "immigration reform" as a central focus of the broader movement is fatally flawed. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Yes, Trump made plenty of mistakes. But here we had a wildly popular, 100% name-recognition candidate defining himself and the GOP on the immigration issue? This is about as close to scientifically disproving a strategy as we can reasonably get. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
I understand Trump hasn't disproven the "Sailer Strategy" in a scientific-laboratory-type way. But I would ask, what exactly can one hope to see in real-world politics? — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
In the 2010 "Tea Party" election, the GOP won 65% of the White vote. By the 2018 Midterm, it won 55%. We'll get a fuller picture of the trend after 2020, but it doesn't look good for the "Sailer Strategy," to put it mildly. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
The problem is, Trump's coalition launched or exacerbated a dominant trend—suburban White professional's abandonment of the GOP. "In-reach" to Whites was simply not achieved; Trump, in fact, drove Whites out of the party. 2016 can thus only be understood as a deceptive victory. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Trump succeeded in 2016 by winning *different* Whites—many of whom previously voted for Obama—and establishing an Electoral College path that the modern GOP hadn't quite imagined, as they had been relying on the old Dixiecrat bastion for decades. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
What were the results of Trump's Sailer-esque campaign? He won a slightly smaller percentage of the White vote than Mitt Romney did in 2012. He also slightly increased the GOP's share of minority votes, for what it's worth. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Trump's presidential run was forever defined by his initial speech in 2015: "They're not sending their best." He was *the* immigration candidate and, in the eyes of the mainstream media, a force of White nationalism, which they had always saw brewing in the GOP. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
In 2016, Trump both activated the "Sailer Strategy" in the most obvious manner—and disproved it in one fatal swoop. A remarkable achievement! — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
That said, the "Sailer Description" has been largely accurate up until 2016. Two-thirds of working-class White once voted for Bill Clinton. By the mid-2000s, this group was solidly Republican. The Party itself has become 90 percent White—remarkable in a multiracial environment. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
This "strategy" is largely a description of the emerging composition of the Republican Party since realignment, particularly since the '94 Midterms. Calling it a "strategy" is mostly self-serving, offering people on the margins the fantasy that they're pragmatic winners. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
The so-called "Sailer Strategy" (named by Brimelow, not Sailer) derives from Sam Francis's short book *Ethno-Politics*. It posits that Republican "outreach" to Blacks and Hispanics is fruitless. Instead, the GOP should "in-reach" to Whites, particularly on the immigration issue. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
RT @TheCptBlackPill: Massive F — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Apocalypto (2006): underrated — PolitiTweet.org
MarkBrahmin☀️ @MarkBrahmin
My unpretentious list: 1. Excalibur 2. Bladerunner 3. Braveheart 4. Good Fellas 5. No Country for Old Men 6. S… https://t.co/8vgYLTb7Hm
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Some favorites from the postwar age, in chronological order... 1. Sunset Blvd. (1950) 2. The Searchers (1956) 3. On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969) 4. Solaris (1972) 5. Barry Lyndon (1975) 6. Conan The Barbarian (1982) 7. The Lion King (1994) @MarkBrahmin — PolitiTweet.org
PunishedMarcus2 🌹 @Marcus2Punished
@labor_national @Thamster2 @KoenigRiver @Zero_Schizo @RupertVonRipp @NRxNazBol @trajan_decius Remember I have a thr… https://t.co/mf0Nhr18u8
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
There's a reason White Christians have never been in power, even when they've been in power. — PolitiTweet.org
Richard Spencer @RichardBSpencer
Demographics is never destiny. While it's tempting to say the "strongest rule," that's not quite right, even in nature. The most sophisticated, often the most ruthless, the most totalizing and domineering rule over others who are, in fact, born to serve. — PolitiTweet.org
River Koenig 🇨🇦🇺🇸 @KoenigRiver
The first part of this article, and this quote in particular, is spot on at least Imagine thinking “demographics is… https://t.co/USJEqDgJVP