Rep.
Steve King (R-Iowa) has again flirted with being an open white
nationalist. In a tweet Friday, the congressman lashed out at
multiculturalism.
“Diversity is not our strength,” the congressman wrote, linking to an article on a deeply dubious anti-immigration
website called Voice of Europe, which quotes Hungary’s far-right prime
minister, Viktor Orban, as saying that “mixing cultures will not lead to
a higher quality of life but a lower one.”
But where have we heard this phrase before?
Well,
David Duke, the former KKK grand wizard and prominent American white
supremacist, has used it when exploiting tragedies or acts of violence:
Thomas
Robb, current national director of the KKK, told Slate earlier this
year that “diversity is not our strength. Diversity will kill
us.” Here’s Robb at a cross-burning rally in Texas:
Thomas Robb speaks at a KKK cross-burning rally in Hico, Texas. (Gregory Smith via Getty Images)
Billy
Roper, a prominent American neo-Nazi, wrote in his book “The Big
Picture” that “Diversity is not our strength. Neither is being
outnumbered and outgunned.” Here’s Roper at an Aryan Nations-sponsored
White Heritage Days Festival in Alabama:
Billy Roper, chairman of an Arkansas-based white nationalist group. (David S. Holloway via Getty Images)
Related SearchesWhite NationalistWhat Is A White Nationalist
Brad Griffin, also known as Hunter Wallace, a leader of a white nationalist group based in Alabama, tweeted
“diversity ISN’T our strength” last month. Griffin organized a “White
Lives Matter” rally in Tennessee recently, which featured
neo-Confederate, southern secessionist, and neo-Nazi participants.
In 2011, writer Peter Brimelow, the white nationalist behind the racist site VDARE, told
CNN that “Diversity is not strength.” He uttered the phrase previously
in 2004, while praising a book by conservative blogger Michelle Malkin
that defended the mass incarceration of Japanese-Americans in
concentration camps during World War II. The rationale for imprisoning
thousands of people in the camps, he told The Denver Post, was “very
straightforward. Racial profiling always makes sense. It’s just that,
you know, diversity is not strength, it’s weakness. It’s impossible to
discuss it honestly, though.”
Here’s Brimelow at a recent conference
of the National Policy Institute, the “think tank” of the so-called
“alt-right,” a loose association of fascists and white supremacists.
That’s him second from the left, in between his white nationalist pals
Richard Spencer and Jared Taylor:
From left to right, Richard Spencer, Peter Brimelow, Jared Taylor and "Millenial Woes." (The Washington Post via Getty Images)
And
in 2007, Gordon Baum, co-founder and then-CEO of the racist group
Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC) — whose website has referred to
blacks as “a retrograde species of humanity” — told the Birmingham News that “diversity is not our strength, it is our calamity, our downfall.”
“Diversity
is not our strength” has been seen on white nationalist fliers in
Pennsylvania. There’s also a whole thread called “Diversity is not our
strength” on the popular white supremacist hate site Stormfront.
And
variations of the phrase appear most commonly today on alt-right
Twitter accounts, often paired with cherry-picked news stories of
non-white people committing crimes.
Mark
Pitcavage, senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation League’s
Center on Extremism, told HuffPost that the phrase isn’t a white
supremacist slogan, “as much as it is an obvious thing for them to
say.”
It’s
a response to hearing liberal politicians and academics praise
diversity, he said. And the phrase isn’t the sole provenance of
self-proclaimed white supremacists. There are hard-right figures and
anti-immigration groups, some of them bordering on extremist, who have
used the phrase.
Not only does that [phrase] speak against the whole American experiment, it sends a clear message to anybody who is not white or is in some way a minority. Mark Pitcavage, senior research fellow at the ADL's Center on Extremism
Co-founder
of Vice Media, Gavin McInnes, the “Alt-Lite” figure and self-proclaimed
“western chauvinist” founder of the Proud Boys has also used it. In a
video posted earlier this year, he talks about how he thinks other
countries’ food is yucky, and he really doesn’t like it! The video was
titled “Diversity is NOT our strength (and shut up about
restaurants).”
Gavin McInnes, the “Alt-Lite” figure and self-proclaimed “western chauvinist” founder of the Proud Boys. (Screenshot)
And Michael Anton, the controversial White House aide selected by President Donald Trump to serve on the National Security Council, used the phrase
last year in an essay in which he defended the America First Committee,
a World War II-era isolationist group known for its anti-Semitism.
“‘Diversity’
is not ‘our strength;’ it’s a source of weakness, tension and
disunion,” Anton wrote. “America is not a ‘nation of immigrants’; we are
originally a nation of settlers, who later chose to admit immigrants,
and later still not to, and who may justly open or close our doors
solely at our own discretion, without deference to forced pieties.”
Pitcavage said it’s alarming to see an elected official like Rep. King make the statement.
“It’s
problematic, first of all because it suggests that diversity is a bad
thing, which suggests that people should work to remove diversity,”
Pitcavage said. “Not only does that speak against the whole American
experiment, it sends a clear message to anybody who is not white or is
in some way a minority or is not part of whatever selected pool Mr. King
approves of.”
“How
are his constituents supposed to feel?” he continued. “He’s from Iowa.
Iowa is not the most diverse state in the country, but there are people
of different faiths and ethnicities and he’s supposed to represent
them.”
Heidi Beirich, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project, which monitors hate groups,
says she’s heard white supremacists say the “diversity is not our
strength” expression since at least 1999, when she joined the SPLC.
King, she said, “clearly is a racist who shares some views with white nationalists on things like immigrants for example.”
King
has a long history of signaling support of white nationalism. He keeps a
Confederate flag on his desk, even though he is from Iowa, which was
not part of the Confederacy. He has said America shouldn’t apologize for
slavery. He has called putting emancipator Harriet Tubman on the $20
bill “racist” and “sexist.” He, of course, has indulged in birther
beliefs, once suggesting President Barack Obama was born in Kenya.
[Steve King] clearly is a racist who shares some views with white nationalists on things like immigrants for example. Heidi Beirich, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project
Racial
profiling in Ferguson, Missouri, during protests over the police
shooting of Michael Brown, King once said, was not an issue because all
the protesters were of the same “continental origin.” He has argued that
most undocumented immigrants are “drug mules.”
“For
every [undocumented immigrant] who’s a valedictorian, there’s another
100 out there who weigh 130 pounds—and they’ve got calves the size of
cantaloupes because they’re hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the
desert,” he said.
He
once tweeted a photo of himself standing with Geert Wilders, the
rabidly Islamophobic far-right Dutch politician, with the caption:
“Cultural suicide by demographic transformation must end.”
And
in March of this year, King tweeted “Wilders understands that culture
and demographics are our destiny. We can’t restore our civilization with
somebody else’s babies.”
This prompted gushing praise
from white nationalists. “Steve King is basically an open white
nationalist at this point,” Andrew Anglin wrote on his popular white
supremacist site, The Daily Stormer.
“OUR
civilization and SOMEBODY ELSE’S babies. Not really any nuance there,”
Anglin wrote. “Steve King should be Speaker of the House. Period. There
[sic] is as plain as the nose on your face. He is /ourguy/.”
Richard
Spencer, the alt-right figurehead, wrote that “King is more /ourguy/
than Trump has ever been, but would he be saying these kinds of things
without Trump? We can only hope these kinds of statements serve to
embolden more of our people, as they see that people like themselves are
in positions of power.”
And David Duke, the former KKK leader, called for King to succeed Trump as president in 2024 to “finish the job.”
King’s
office did not immediately respond to a HuffPost inquiry Saturday as to
whether he considers himself a white nationalist.
America
does not do a good job of tracking incidents of hate and bias. We need
your help to create a database of such incidents across the country, so
we all know what’s going on. Tell us your story.
By: Repoter
birbal babu.
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