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The Muslims Are The GOP-Nazi's "Jews" (Or The Phenomenon Of The Muslim Narrative In America Part 2)

Background:
1. The Phenomenon Of The Muslim Narrative In America (OR Debunking Fox News Lies About Muslims Part 1)
2. Trump's America: Trump, The GOP & Fox News Managed To Make Nazis Mainstream (Hitler Is Probably Laughing In His Grave At His Afterlife Win Of WW2!)

4. Corporate Media's Iraq War Coverup: Incontrovertible Proof Of Network News & The Beltway Media Covering Facts About The Iraq War For Their GOP Masters

When you put all the facts together there is only one logical conclusion. the Muslims are the modern form of Hitler's Jews. GOP/Right-Wing are the Nazis (or close enough to call it another form of Nazism), as the backgrounds above prove and will behave as Muslims are the worst thing in the world to rally their herd around them like Hitler did by demonizing Jews - same concept). This post walks you through this reality.

Lets start with Fox News as it's the GOP-Nazi's chief propagandists...

Right-wing media’s outrageous coverage of Muslims in 2017


Anti-Muslim hate crimes increased for the second consecutive year in 2016, according to the latest FBI numbers. During this climate of bigotry, the right-wing media figures used their platforms to blatantly spread fear and misinformation, demonizing Muslims all over the world. Some explicitly called for American Muslims to be put in internment camps, while others denied the existence of Islamophobia in our schools (Islamophobia actually increased in 2016), and claimed that Muslim immigration means more terrorism (there's no connection).
Here is a glimpse of some of the most absurd things the right-wing media figures said about Muslims in 2017. 



This one segment shows how differently Fox treats Christians and Muslims when it comes to terrorism Fox hosts attack media for calling on Christian leaders to condemn violence in Charlottesville, but Fox routinely demands that all Muslims apologize for terrorism committed by Muslim extremists

In a notably hypocritical segment on Fox & Friends, the hosts and their guest, David Brody of the Christian Broadcasting Network, attacked media outlets that called on Christian leaders to denounce white supremacy and the recent violence in Charlottesville, VA. Fox & Friends highlighted articles that noted that many white evangelical leaders have been silent since white supremacists in Charlottesville attacked counter-protesters on August 12 and that historically many Christians and Christian organizations have enabled systemic racism, from slavery to Jim Crow and into the current era. Co-host Pete Hegseth asked why the articles were “trying to make that link” and “rush[ing] to say” that “pastors or churches … are to blame.” Fellow co-host Abby Huntsman said that “people are pointing fingers” and “you have some journalists that are blaming white Christians.” And Brody claimed that “the fix is in, if you will, against evangelical Christians, white evangelical Christians in this country.”
For years, Fox personalities have demanded that Muslims denounce, apologize, and atone for terrorism committed by ISIS and other Muslim extremist groups, even though Muslim groups have often been quick to criticize and denounce these acts of terror. From the August 15 edition of Fox News' Fox & Friends:


ABBY HUNTSMAN (CO-HOST): Well, David, after the horrific events on Saturday in Charlottesville, as it always happens, people are pointing fingers, wanting to blame certain groups of people for what happened. And now you have some journalists that are blaming white Christians for these violent attacks. This is a headline from The Daily Beast It says, "Time for all Christians to denounce white supremacy.” The Washington Post says this: "After Charlottesville, will white pastors finally take racism seriously?" And, finally, The Atlantic, "How will the church reckon with Charlottesville?" What's going on here?
DAVID BRODY: Well, look, a couple things. First of all, most evangelical leaders, if not all of them -- I say all of them, obviously, in air quotes -- but most all denounced it, first of all. And true biblical Christianity has nothing to do with white supremacy. It's a lazy narrative by the mainstream media. No doubt about it. Remember, even in the Bible, even Matthew, Jesus talked about how people -- he won't even know people that call themselves Christians. In other words, people that are claiming to be Christians doesn't mean that you are a Christian, and that's very important. These white supremacists like to claim Christianity. Well they can be shown the door. They have nothing to do with true biblical Christianity.
PETE HEGSETH (CO-HOST): Well why are they trying to make that link then? Why rush to say, "Well, it's the pastors or churches that are to blame for this or should be apologizing for it?”
BRODY: Well, look, I think the fix is in, if you will, against evangelical Christians, white evangelical Christians in this country. And here's what I mean by that. If you are a white evangelical Christian who voted for Donald Trump and who may have some problems with affirmative action policies in this country and want to crack down on illegal immigration, what, all of a sudden you're part of this grand narrative that you're either racist or a bigot? I mean, give me a break. The whole thing is preposterous, and it's time that the church and evangelical leaders really speak out more forcefully about this.
HUNTSMAN: Yeah. You've got to be so careful in lumping groups of people together. 


None of the news channels go after Fox News for lieing to the public and disturbing democracy and thus the peace (or the GOP, as I've shown), we watch stuff like this...

CNN's "both sides" problem infects coverage of Trump's anti-Muslim retweets


On CNN Newsroom with John Berman and Poppy Harlow, CNN contributor Ben Ferguson stated, “If I would have seen these videos … I would have probably tweeted that out and said to myself, ‘This is something the world needs to see.’”
On CNN Newsroom with Brooke Baldwin, CNN political commentator Andre Bauer claimed the U.S. has gotten “numb to the continual victimization of American people by people that come over to this country to cause us harm” and praised Trump for “continu[ing] to remind us about it.”
On The Lead with Jake Tapper, CNN political commentator and former Trump campaign strategist David Urban dismissed “the notion that somehow we’re radicalizing folks in the rest of the world” through the spread of anti-Muslim propaganda.
On Anderson Cooper 360, panelist James Schultz, who served as White House ethics lawyer under Trump, attempted to defend the president by asserting that “radical Islamic terrorists do bad things.” Schultz claimed, “It’s not the best choice of videos. Without a doubt, they are fake videos. But for you to say [Trump’s] characterizing all Muslims that way, it’s just flat out wrong.”
And on CNN Tonight with Don Lemon, CNN political commentator Ed Martin said the series of tweets was “not a very good move,” but that critics of the tweets were “missing the forest for the trees. No one that looks with a serious eye at Europe doesn’t recognize that there is a problem with Muslim and Islamic fanatics.” Martin contended that Trump’s tweets were helping the problem by “starting a conversation.”
CNN’s “both sides” panel structure assumes that every issue has two valid sides, and that often those sides are best defined along partisan lines. In the case of Trump’s tweets, that is patently false. These tweets are bigoted and misleading, and anyone who says otherwise is not being intellectually or morally honest.
By introducing two sides to this debate, CNN is muddying the truth about these videos. Given that we now live in an age where the president often takes his cues from what he sees on cable news, CNN’s “both sides” strategy is irresponsible and potentially dangerous.


I would like to point out that pushing bigots tweets (as per its PARTY platform) is a normal thing for Fox News...

Tucker Carlson defends racist Britain First Twitter account retweeted by Trump Carlson: "Fransen is being targeted by authorities because her views are unpopular"



TUCKER CARLSON (HOST): There is nothing actually fascist about re-tweeting a video but there is creeping fascism out there. It’s the steady death of free speech in the West. Jayda Fransen has been repeatedly been punished by British authorities for saying what she thinks out loud. That used to be legal. She’s been banned from at least one English city for handing out anti-Islamic literature there on the grounds that her opinion caused quote, “community tension.”
[…]
Fransen is being targeted by authorities because her views are unpopular. You would think this would horrify reporters here in the U.S., you would think they would have an interest in defending free speech but no, instead as you just heard they are citing her arrest as evidence that her views ought to be suppressed. She is a quote, a “hate speech person.” She ought to shut up and disappear, guardians of the First Amendment cheering on its destruction. That is terrifying but it’s not confined to Britain. Throughout the U.K. and Western Europe and in Canada too by the way, citizens have been arrested for expressing political views the authorities don’t like.
[…]
The civilization that gave us free speech, the West, has suspended the concept because it conflicts with the diversity agenda. That seems like the real story here.
Related:
Who is Britain First's Jayda Fransen, the U.K. far-right, anti-islam leader who Trump retweeted?
Previously:
Far-right trolls and white nationalists rally around Trump's anti-Muslim video retweets
Fox & Friends gave almost no airtime to Trump’s anti-Muslim retweets
CNN's "both sides" problem infects coverage of Trump's anti-Muslim retweets


Compare, for example, how media sensationalizes terror...

TEAM TRUMP LISTS "UNDERREPORTED" TERROR ATTACKS FEBRUARY 7, 2017 - The Trump administration releases a list of terrorist attacks they claim the media ignored, but noticeably absent are incidents committed by white extremists. (7:28)


Case in point;




... VS. white supremacists/Nazis (the ORIGINAL domestic terrorist group )...

Cable news almost silent on neo-Nazis allegedly attempting to murder counterprotesters at Richard Spencer rally


NBCNews.com reported that three of Spencer’s apparent neo-Nazi supporters -- Tyler Tenbrink, William Fears, and Colton Fears -- were arrested outside of Spencer’s speech, after one of them fired “one shot, which hit a nearby building” after the others in the car urged him “to shoot at the protesters.” NBC News also noted that the supporters “displayed Nazi salutes and shouted chants about Hitler.”
Spencer is “one of the country’s most successful young white nationalist leaders” and was one of the leading forces behind the violent August 12 white supremacist and neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, VA, where 32-year-old counterprotester Heather Heyer was killed

John Whitehouse / Media Matters

Across the three cable networks, MSNBC’s AM Joy was the only program that mentioned that the Spencer supporters were arrested after they “literally fired shots at anti-fascist protesters.” During the segment, ProPublica reporter A.C. Thompson noted that he had interviewed Tenbrink after his involvement in the Charlottesville rally, and that Tenbrink told Thompson, “‘I hate the leftists. The leftists are evil. They’re bringing degeneracy to our country. … I’m fighting against multiculturalism, the press of multiculturalism on Western society, and I’m fighting for my children.’” Thompson added, “Fast forward to this week, he shows up in Florida at the Richard Spencer event, and according to police, opens fire on counterprotesters with a handgun.”
Terrorism perpetrated by right-wing extremists and white nationalists is often undercovered in the media. When the Trump administration released a list of supposed “underreported” terror attacks, it neglected to include numerous instances of terror and killings committed by white nationalists. In fact, white extremists are currently more dangerous than other extremist groups in the United States. As Foreign Policy reported in August, “the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security in May warned that white supremacist groups had already carried out more attacks than any other domestic extremist group over the past 16 years and were likely to carry out more attacks over the next year”


Another view;


WHY WASN'T DONALD TRUMP'S BIGOTRY A DEAL-BREAKER? 11/9/2016 Hasan Minhaj gives his shell-shocked take on Donald Trump's presidential victory and shares his fears about the rising tide of Islamophobia in America.



More research on this matter;

NPR's Mara Liasson calls out Trump's double standard in politicizing shootings by Muslims

JAMES ROSEN (GUEST HOST): We may be tempted to believe that we've seen this movie before in terms of a push for gun control after some horrific mass shooting like this. Is this going to end the same way? 
MARA LIASSON: I think so. If after Sandy Hook, when you had all those little kids gunned down there was no push or no receptivebility for gun control in the U.S. Congress. I would say this will probably meet the same fate. However, Donald Trump has made policy prescriptions, you could call that politicizing right after other mass shootings, generally if they were committed by a Muslim, he said this shows we need the Muslim ban. So there is precedent for talking about a policy solution after a mass shooting.
Previously:
Dana Perino says if Vegas shooter was connected to ISIS it “takes the NRA piece off the table"
Fox & Friends host speculates that Las Vegas shooter's motive was that he "didn't have a god"
Rush Limbaugh claims the NRA "probably works harder than anybody to prevent" mass shootings

THE THREAT IS REAL: TRUMP'S ISLAMOPHOBIC TWEETS SPARK OUTRAGE 11/30/2017 After President Trump retweeted Islamophobic videos from a nationalist British group, Hasan Minhaj explains why his administration doesn't care that the tweets are inaccurate.


Fox & Friends calls student "brave" for writing Islamophobic letter demanding Muslim student group condemn ISIS terror Brian Kilmeade: "You know what's amazing? You shouldn't even have had to write that letter. They should have stepped out right away to say that's the terror part of Islamic extremism, and we are not that."

AINSLEY EARHARDT (CO-HOST): Tell us what happened. You sent this letter to the Muslim Student Association?
BRANDON JONES: Yeah. So, I sent them a letter just simply asking them to condemn the violence that happened in Barcelona, and, boy, did they flip out. 
EARHARDT: What's wrong with that?
JONES: Well, the funny thing is that they're more worried about a letter that I wrote than they are about radical Islamic terrorism. 
BRIAN KILMEADE (CO-HOST): You know what's amazing? You shouldn't even have had to write that letter. They should have stepped out right away to say that's the terror part of Islamic extremism, and we are not that. But instead you got a violent reaction?
JONES: Yeah. I got a couple threats via text message and phone calls basically saying that I better watch my back and that I've turned the campus into a war zone. 
EARHARDT: Well, in this day and age, you're very brave not only to come on national television and talk about it, but you sent a letter and I understand your phone number was attached to that letter and that letter was made public. Why do you think it's so important to come out publicly?
JONES: I think it's important to come out publicly because really what it did was it just kind of exposed the left-wing indoctrination that conservative students are battling on college campuses. And, so, for us to come out, and for me and my team to stand on the front lines and combat that, that's really what we're about. 
KILMEADE: The Young Democrat Socialists call you -- call this letter cruel and bigoted. 
JONES: Yeah, the socialists -- anything with the name "socialist" in it, I don't really pay too much attention to. 
KILMEADE: Bernie Sanders somehow just passed out wherever he is.
[...]
[San Diego State University] say they’re going to provide for your safety. Do you feel as though the school has stepped up for you?
JONES: I do think -- I will say that the university reached out and gave me a phone call. The dean of students there, Corporal Peterson, they have made sure I have the necessary resources available. But we are definitely watching our backs on campus. There's been a target put on my back. There's been a target put on all of our members' backs.





Related:
The San Diego Union-Tribune: SDSU Republican letter to Muslims gets harsh backlash
Previously:
Conservative media misinformation leads to violent threats against professors
This one segment shows how differently Fox treats Christians and Muslims when it comes to terrorism
Charlottesville reveals dangerous new phase in right-wing assault on college campuses
What Fox won't show you: Muslim leaders are condemning the Paris terror attack


THE CONDEMNOLOGISTS 1/12/2015 Following an insensitive tweet from Rupert Murdoch about Muslims, Jason Jones, Jessica Williams and Hasan Minhaj condemn those responsible for the Charlie Hebdo attack.



One of CNN's Trump shills endorses Muslim ban, "no-go zone" myth while defending Trump's racist tweets Andre Bauer: "We do need to restrict certain people, and we do need travel bans"

From the November 29 edition of CNN Newsroom with Brook Baldwin:
Previously:


This post first appeared on Culture & Society, please read the originial post: here

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The Muslims Are The GOP-Nazi's "Jews" (Or The Phenomenon Of The Muslim Narrative In America Part 2)

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