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RNC speaker criticized for several actions seen as dogwhistles to alt-right

August 26, 2020

Madison Cawthorn, 24, is the Republican nominee in a solid-red North Carolina congressional district. He has also garnered attention for a series of posts and actions that detractors say are dogwhistles to the so-called alt-right.

On a 2017 trip to Germany, Cawthorn made a point of visiting the Eagle’s Nest, Adolf Hitler’s vacation home. He later later posted pictures of the visit on Instagram, saying it was part of his “bucket list” and referring to the Nazi leader by the German honorific Fuhrer. (The caption also said the Eagle’s Nest was a place where “Supreme Evil shared laughs and good times with his compatriots.”)

Cawthorn deleted the posts earlier this month.

Cawthorn’s real estate company is called SPQR Holdings, a reference to the Roman motto “Senatus Populusque Romanus,” or “the Senate and People of Rome.” The phrase was a commonplace reference to Roman government in antiquity, but in modern times has been coopted by white nationalist groups.

In one of his campaign videos, Cawthorn can be seen displaying a Spartan helmet on his chest as he aims a rifle. The Spartan helmet, in addition to being the logo of Michigan State University sports teams, has also been appropriated as the logo for the Oathkeepers, one of the largest anti-government militia groups in the United States, with some 30,000 members as of 2016, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

 
The 3 charts that disprove Donald Trump’s convention speech

Aug 28, 2020

The central question going into Donald Trump’s acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention was how he’d spin his disastrous record — which now includes more than 200,000 Americans dead of coronavirus, and an unemployment rate above 10 percent. And Trump quickly made his strategy clear: Take credit for something he didn’t do, and dodge blame for something he did do.

 
Fact checking does not sway any voters.
Confirmation bias and belief perseverance are extremely powerful among those with strong beliefs.

No amounts of facts or evidence can convince them otherwise. They are that stubborn.

They are the same kinds of people who don't believe in the existence of South Sudan, the newest country in the world. They are also the same kinds of people who keep insisting on the name Swaziland instead of Eswatini, the latter of which is the country's new official name.
 
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They are the same kinds of people who don't believe in the existence of South Sudan, the newest country in the world. They are also the same kinds of people who keep insisting on the name Swaziland instead of Eswatini, the latter of which is the country's new official name.
No one but maybe cartographers and arms dealers cares about political changes in sub-Saharan Africa.
 
No one but maybe cartographers and arms dealers cares about political changes in sub-Saharan Africa.

Yeah, as far as these people are concerned, it's all just unga bunga territory. And frankly, "Eswatini" is so fresh that even more-or-less normal people can still be expected to default to "Swaziland" out of excusable inertia...
 
Yeah, as far as these people are concerned, it's all just unga bunga territory.
That reminded me of Mel Lastman's fear of being boiled in a pot. Outside of Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire's horrific account of Rwanda, and celebrities shilling for the trio of NGOs, famine relief and Christian charities, Canadian's interest and knowledge of sub-Saharan affairs hasn't progressed much since.
 
Yeah, as far as these people are concerned, it's all just unga bunga territory. And frankly, "Eswatini" is so fresh that even more-or-less normal people can still be expected to default to "Swaziland" out of excusable inertia...

I still call Myanmar Burma. I hate that name. Besides, I don't think the name change was recognized in a lot of places.
 

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