An online conspiracy By Dominic Casciani, BBC Home Affairs correspondent The document is called "The Great Replacement" - it's not something just dreamt up, but the title of a loose global movement that has been rapidly growing online. The central tenet of the conspiracy is that "European peoples" are dying out and being "replaced" by immigrants with a different, inferior and dangerous culture. This is basically a code for hatred or fear of Muslims. Part of the theory is that states and corporations are encouraging "white genocide" by pushing up immigration rates purely to keep global capitalism going. Occasionally, the theory dips into anti-Semitism and neo-Nazi beliefs by blaming Jews for the world economic system. The phrase The Great Replacement first emerged in France. Its most public advocates include followers of Generation Identity, a European anti-Islam movement. But more importantly, the conspiracy is a central part of a vast and growing range of online forums - particularly hidden groups on Facebook and other social media platforms. It's in these groups that believers, divorced from facts and trusted reputable sources of information, share fake news links and reinforce their own fears.
12 replies to this thread. 11 of them from you. Entire first page is just you responding to yourself. You know only deranged people do that, right?
So? I never expected you fellow MAGA's to express regret or sorrow over what your deranged cult has become, all fact based hard hitting threads will be completely ignored by your brain dead cult.
Update on another Magalover https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/15/us/cesar-sayoc-expected-to-plead-guilty/index.html Mail bomb suspect Cesar Sayoc expected to plead guilty (CNN) The man accused of sending mail bombs to prominent Democrats last fall is expected to plead guilty in federal court next week, according to the US Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York. Cesar Sayoc was indicted on federal charges last November in connection with a series of mail bombs he allegedly sent to Democratic politicians, including former President Barack Obama, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sens. Kamala Harris and Cory Booker. CNN's New York bureau was evacuated in October after a package with an explosive device, addressed to former CIA Director John Brennan, was discovered, officials said. None of the devices detonated and no one was injured. Sayoc was previously expected to appear in court next week for a pretrial hearing, but is now scheduled for a plea hearing, prosecutors said. The trial was expected to begin in July. Following a four-day nationwide manhunt, FBI agents found and arrested Sayoc in Plantation, Florida, where they also seized his van, which was plastered with pro-Trump and anti-Democrat memes. Sayoc faces a series of charges, including five counts of use of a weapon of mass destruction and five counts of interstate transportation and receipt of explosives. It's not clear what charges the plea will involve. CNN was reaching out Friday to a defense attorney for comment
He is 28 but the ballwashing inbred looks more like 48 . . . . this is how he describes himself : In a brief biographical sketch included in his manifesto, Tarrant describes himself as “just a ordinary white man… born in Australia to a working class, low income family”. His childhood was “regular” and, he insisted, issue-free. He “barely” achieved a passing grade in school and had no interest in pursuing higher education.