Sentences with phrase «white supremacist there»

Dating site OkCupid kicks out white supremacist There is no room for.

Not exact matches

In an email to employees, Apple CEO Tim Cook said, «I disagree with the president and others who believe that there is a moral equivalence between white supremacists and Nazis, and those who oppose them by standing up for human rights.
«The white supremacists out there are celebrating his victory and many are feeling their oats.»
«I disagree with the president and others who believe that there is a moral equivalence between white supremacists and Nazis, and those who oppose them by standing up for human rights,» Cook wrote.
«I disagree with the president and others who believe that there is a moral equivalence between white supremacists and Nazis, and those who oppose them by standing up for human rights.
If I had a white supremacist neighbor with cancer, I hope that I'd be there to give him rides to the doctor, bring him meals and serve him in whatever ways I could.
There are violent, white supremacist groups like the Aryan Nations, The Aryan Republican Army, The Phineas Priesthood, and The Covenant The Sword and The Arm of the Lord.
Already in the very first book, the First Book of Nephi, there is white supremacist racism, and justification for Manifest Destiny.
However, I realize you said you were reading the Book of Mormon, and there is white supremacist stuff in the very first book.
Earlier this year there were protests over the future of a Confederate statue in Charlottesville as well as violent rallies by white supremacists and neo-Nazis, prompting the discussion in Alexandria to progress.
There are so many white supremacist masking themselves as Christians and Republicans.
From that, if viewed as a venn diagram, are there any notable white nationalists that aren't white supremacists?
The mayor of Phoenix scolded Trump for planning a rally there, suggesting the president is aiming to «inflame emotions» following a deadly white supremacist rally in Virginia by pardoning a controversial Phoenix sheriff.
Cohn said then that the administration «can and must do better in consistently and unequivocally condemning» hate groups after Trump blamed both white supremacists and counter-protesters for Charlottesville and said there were «some very fine people» among those protesting alongside white supremacists.
«Somebody has to be the figure to stand up and say this is right, this is wrong,» Howard Dean, the one - time presidential candidate and former Vermont governor, said this week in a discussion of President Donald Trump's reaction to the violence in Charlottesville, Va., following a white supremacist rally there.
He claimed there were «fine people» marching alongside white supremacists and he condemned the «very violent» people protesting against the neo-Nazis.
President Donald Trump signed a resolution condemning white supremacists and hate groups, hours after reviving his assertion that there were «bad dudes» among those opposing a white nationalist protest in Charlottesville, Virginia, last month.
Besides those at the rally, with a Confederate flag flying and apparent white supremacist material circulating, there were counter-protesters from Black Lives Matter.
And just recently we saw [Howard] in April appear at a rally where there were White Supremacists in attendance, Confederate flags flying and, in the wake of that, he has not once denounced the racist and hateful rhetoric that was present at that rally.»
«The NAACP calls on Senator DeFrancisco to apologize and disavow the idea that there is more than one side to this despicable act of domestic terrorism perpetrated by the alt - right and white supremacists,» she said.
Linda Brown - Robinson, president of the NAACP chapter, said DeFrancisco should «disavow the idea that there is more than one side to this despicable act of domestic terrorism perpetrated by the alt - right and white supremacists
This, of course, would have been a nice opportunity to hire a black model, as there aren't many jobs available for non-white models (as Jezebel pointed out, 82 percent of the models at New York Fashion Week this season were white) and some might argue (I would argue) that the lack of racial diversity in the fashion industry promotes a standard of beauty which verges on (slash is) white supremacist.
This latest effort is a green band affair, but don't fret: There's still plenty of tension to be found in this tale of a punk rock band locked away in a room awaiting a very bad end after witnessing a group of skinhead white supremacists up to something they very definitely should not have been.
There's no denying the sad, scary timeliness of Akin's subject matter; although the film is set in Germany, it could easily be relocated to America or any other Western country currently experiencing a spike in violence committed by white supremacists.
One dispiriting theory as to why Three Billboards has done so well with audiences, critics, and award voters is that it entertains the comforting thought that there could be hidden decency in the deplorable — be they racist cops, marching white supremacists, or just the asshole relative you argue with on Facebook.
There's long been a struggle when portraying white supremacists and the skinhead movement on the big screen; to exactly what level do you humanise them, do you glamourise their ideals, blame nature over nurture?
In the wake of yesterday's Dropout Nation commentary, there has been plenty of reformers stepping up to call out President Donald Trump's defense of White Supremacists committing terrorism last weekend in Charlottesville.
Whatever the reason, there is nothing admirable in failing to call Dylann Roof exactly what he is: a White Supremacist who deliberately chose one of the most iconic symbols of the African American community for an act of terrorism as devastating as any in the 1950s and 1960s.
There isn't even glimmers of dealing with the white supremacists of today.
Greene recounts the 1958 bombing of the oldest synagogue in Atlanta, «The Temple,» targeted by white supremacists who were upset by the rabbi presiding there, Jacob Rothschild, and his liberal views on civil rights.
And no, it's not because there are no travel bloggers of color out there, but rather that the travel industry (and, ahem, all other industries) is dominated by white people in a white supremacist world.
Lincoln isn't out there battling racism on the streets unless you count a series of missions where you get to tackle some white supremacists, but even then Lincoln is primarily doing it to further his own goals.
Historically, there were relatively mainstream religious bodies that adhered to white supremacist views (e.g. Southern Baptists prior to 1995 and the Church of Latter Day Saints prior to 1978).
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