The Military That Cried 'White Supremacy'
In retrospect, maybe the military should have spent a little less time worrying about "white supremacists" and paid more attention to black Muslims. As you've no doubt heard by now, an Army veteran, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, who happened to be a black Muslim, slaughtered 14 New Year's revelers in New Orleans last week.
For the past four years, the Pentagon, the Department of Homeland Security and President Biden have warned about the looming threat of white supremacy amid constant references to Jan. 6 -- but not to BLM, in which police officers actually died. Apart from getting more girls and transgenders into the military, it seems like rooting out "white supremacists" has become the military's full-time job. (Proposed new U.S. Marines' slogan: "We're looking for a few good men ... who think they're women.")
Biden, repeatedly: "According to the intelligence community, terrorism from white supremacy is the most lethal threat to the homeland today. Not ISIS, not al-Qaida -- white supremacists."
To deal with the crisis, the greatest fighting force in the world scoured the social media accounts of its white troops, in search of "ties to white supremacists or violent extremists." Considering the vast amounts of truthful information censored from social media under Biden -- e.g., about COVID, masking, social distancing, Biden's senile dementia, Hunter Biden's laptop -- I'd love to see what the military considered evidence of "ties to white supremacists."
Even before Biden was sworn in, the Pentagon made a big point of announcing that troops guarding the inauguration -- especially those who would be close to Biden and Kamala Harris! -- would be carefully vetted. (I just hope that crack unit of muffin-topped........
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