This article originally appeared on WND.com
Guest post by Bob Unruh
“They are the most racist, xenophobic, anti-immigrant, homophobic, and geo-demographic group.”
One academic, a member of that layer of mostly left-wing elites on American campuses who are more than happy to tell others what to think and how to live, now claims that it is rural white people who pose the real threat to the nation.
The details of this rant by Tom Schaller, who works at the University of Maryland, were documented on the Trending Politics website.
Schaller was joined in the interview by Washington Post writer Paul Waldman, who colluded with him in a new book promoting their ideology that condemns an entire segment of the American population.
The report notes that Schaller “wasted no time in launching into a long anti-white tirade, in which he randomly described rural white voters as 'Christian nationalists' who despise democracy and engage in 'election denial,' among other things.”
He cited the book's claims about the nation's “quadruple threat” from white rural voters.
“They are the most racist, xenophobic, anti-immigrant, anti-LGBTQ geo-demographic group in the country. Second, they are the most conspiratorial group. Support and subscribe to QAnon, election denial, coronavirus denial, scientific skepticism, Obama's birth.”
“Third, anti-democratic sentiment. They do not believe in independent journalism and freedom of expression. They are more likely to say that the president should be able to act unilaterally without any oversight from Congress, the courts, or the bureaucracy.
It may be ironic, but it is the Democratic Party, Joe Biden, and his political cronies who have been attacking citizens' rights to free speech for years. The government tried to create what was essentially a “Ministry of Truth” like the one in “1984” that committed nothing but lies, and repeatedly conspired with social media companies to suppress ideas that Biden did not like.
The worst thing?
Schaller said there are a large number of “white nationalists and Christian nationalists.”
Furthermore, he claimed that they were more likely to “excuse or justify violence as an acceptable alternative to peaceful public debate.”
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