Fresh off introducing wider America to one white supremacist meme, one incidentally that was first popularized by an actual Nazi propagandist, Donald Trump Jr. doubles up with another.
The relevant link goes to, of course, the "alt-right" (racist) website breitbart.com, Trump campaign CEO Steve Bannon's own contribution to the alt-right propaganda pile. It is based on the oldest of racist premises: ethnic people are coming for Our Womens. The title itself, "Europe's Rape Epidemic: Western Women Will Be Sacrificed At The Altar Of Mass Migration" could easily have come from any number of white supremacist handouts during any era of America's own history; that it appears at Breitbart in such unsubtle fashion is a demonstration of how the separation between that "alt-right" website and one such as Stormfront has diminished considerably under Bannon's leadership.
You may also recall They Are Coming For Our Womens as one of the core premises Donald Trump Sr. used to launch his presidential campaign. Within minutes of descending the golden escalator to address his audience of tower employees and paid movie extras provided with Trump-endorsing T-shirts, we all learned that the real problem in America was that the Mexican government was "sending" us their rapists, who were now roaming the land and endangering our fine non-ethnic citizens.
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It is possible for a human being to accidentally stumble upon and pass forward information that originated in the white supremacist community. It is not credible for a human being to "accidentally," over the span of a year, find and encouragingly pass on white supremacist arguments, or their precise posters or images, or their cartoon frogs, or re-publicize information from men with nods to white supremacist or Nazi culture in their online bios month after month after month without knowing what they are doing.
They Are Coming For Our Womens is not a subtle version of white supremacist propaganda. It is, and has for decades been, one of the core staples.
Also incidentally, we have learned new information about where Donald Trump Jr. obtained the Skittles image used in his previous white supremacist-inspired tweet warning of the dangers of refugees. Not where the argument came from, but the image itself: The photograph is by David Kittos, who himself came to the United Kingdom from Cyprus as a refugee from the Turkish occupation of Cyprus in 1974. The photo was stolen by Trump Jr. without his permission: He told BBC News that he "would like the Trump campaign to delete the image, but they are probably not interested in what I have to say."