It you want an example of white r****m then just listen to the man you elected president.
Here are a few examples of r****m since he's been in office:
1) He attacked Muslim Gold Star parents and Muslims of all strips.
2) He claimed a judge was biased because “he’s a Mexican” and called i*****l a***ns rapists and murders--and I suppose some are good people, maybe, I guess...
3) Trump made his name by birtherism and attacking President Obama. He attacked black nations as "S**t Holes" and the Justice Department sued his company ― twice ― for not renting to black people plus his attack on b****s who took a knee in protest over how the police treat black suspects and in fact he has a pattern of discriminating against b****s:
The Justice Department sued the Trump Management Corporation again for allegedly discriminating against black applicants by telling them apartments weren’t available. Workers at Trump’s casinos in Atlantic City, New Jersey, have accused him of r****m over the years. The New Jersey Casino Control Commission fined the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino $200,000 in 1992 because managers would remove African-American card dealers at the request of a certain big-spending gambler. A state appeals court upheld the fine. The first-person account of at least one black Trump casino employee in Atlantic City suggests the r****t practices were consistent with Trump’s personal behavior toward black workers.
“When Donald and Ivana came to the casino, the bosses would order all the black people off the floor,” Kip Brown, a former employee at Trump’s Castle, told the New Yorker for a September article. “It was the eighties, I was a teen-ager, but I remember it: they put us all in the back.”
Trump disparaged his black casino employees as “lazy” in vividly bigoted terms, according to a 1991 book by John O’Donnell, a former president of Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino.
“And isn’t it funny. I’ve got black accountants at Trump Castle and Trump Plaza. Black guys counting my money! I h**e it,” O’Donnell recalled Trump saying. “The only kind of people I want counting my money are short guys that wear yarmulkes every day.”
“I think the guy is lazy,” Trump said of a black employee, according to O’Donnell. “And it’s probably not his fault because laziness is a trait in b****s. It really is, I believe that. It’s not anything they can control.”
Trump has also faced charges of reneging on commitments to hire black people. In 1996, 20 African Americans in Indiana sued Trump for failing to honor a promise to hire mostly minority workers for a riverboat casino on Lake Michigan.
He refused to condemn the w***e s*********ts who are campaigning for him. Three times in a row on Feb. 28, Trump sidestepped opportunities to renounce white nationalist and former KKK leader David Duke, who told his radio audience last week that v****g for any candidate other than Trump is “really treason to your heritage.”
When asked by CNN’s Jake Tapper if he would condemn Duke and say he didn’t want a v**e from him or any other w***e s*********ts, Trump claimed that he didn’t know anything about w***e s*********ts or about Duke himself. When Tapper pressed him twice more, Trump said he couldn’t condemn a group he hadn’t yet researched.
By Feb. 29, Trump was saying that in fact he does disavow Duke, and that the only reason he didn’t do so on CNN was because of a “lousy earpiece.” Video of the exchange, however, shows Trump responding quickly to Tapper’s questions with no apparent difficulty in hearing.
It’s preposterous to think that Trump doesn’t know about w***e s*********t groups or their sometimes violent support of him. Reports of neo-N**i groups rallying around Trump go back as far as August.
His w***e s*********t fan club includes the Daily Stormer, a leading neo-N**i news site; Richard Spencer, director of the National Policy Institute, which aims to promote the “heritage, identity, and future of European people”; Jared Taylor, editor of American Renaissance, a Virginia-based white nationalist magazine; Michael Hill, head of the League of the South, an Alabama-based w***e s*********t secessionist group; and Brad Griffin, a member of Hill’s League of the South and author of the popular w***e s*********t blog H****r Wallace.
A leader of the Virginia KKK who is backing Trump told a local TV reporter earlier this month, “The reason a lot of Klan members like Donald Trump is because a lot of what he believes, we believe in.”
And most recently, the Trump campaign announced that one of its California primary delegates was William Johnson, chair of the white nationalist American Freedom Party. The Trump campaign subsequently said his inclusion was a mistake, and Johnson withdrew his name at their request.
Obama ultimately got the better of Trump, releasing his long-form birth certificate and relentlessly mocking the real estate mogul about it at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner that year.
But Trump continues to insinuate that the president was not born in the country.
“I don’t know where he was born,” Trump said in a speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference in February 2015. (Again, for the record: He was born in Hawaii.
4) He uses one brush to describe all minorities.
Like many racial instigators, Trump often answers accusations of bigotry by loudly protesting that he actually loves the group in question. But that’s just as uncomfortable to hear, because he’s still treating all the members of the group ― all the individual human beings ― as essentially the same and interchangeable. Language is telling, here: Virtually every time Trump mentions a minority group, he uses the definite article the, as in “the Hispanics,” “the Muslims” and “the b****s.”
In that sense, Trump’s defensive explanations are of a piece with his slander of minorities. Both rely on essentializing racial and ethnic groups, blurring them into simple, monolithic entities, instead of acknowledging that there’s as much variety among Muslims and Latinos and black people as there is among white people.
Now to understand if you are r****t then all you have to do is ask yourself if you agree with the rhetoric that comes out of Trumps mouth:
1) If you fume when a black football player takes a knee to protest the treatment of b****s by the men in blue then you might be a r****t.
2) If you applauded Trump when he demanded Obama's birth certificate then you might be a r****t.
3) If you agree with Trump that black nations are "s**t holes" you might be a r****t.
4) If you think there are good people too in the W***e S*********t's then you might be a r****t.
5) If you think i*****l a***ns are rapists, murders, and some...maybe are good people you might be a r****t.
6) If you think that Nigerian immigrants should “go back to their huts” in Africa you might be a r****t.
7) If you think all Muslims are evil then you might be a r****t.
8) If you think laziness is a trait of b****s you might be a r****t.
9) If you think Neo-N**i violence is the fault of "many sides" you might be a r****t.
10) If you think Obama wasn't intelligent enough to get into Columbia and Harvard so want to see his transcripts but you have no questions about Trumps admission into Penn and Wharton School of Business and could therefore careless about his transcripts then you might be a r****t.
You can rank your level of r****m on a scale of one to ten...
It you want an example of white r****m then just l... (
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