Supremacist
in sentence
34 examples of Supremacist in a sentence
He became a casual white
supremacist
and, like so many around him, a drug-addled and absent father.
Somebody said, "You are a white supremacist."
About a seven-minute drive from my hidden lake cabin was the compound of Aryan Nations, the white
supremacist
group.
You may not see Ku Klux Klan robes, you may not see burning crosses, you may not even hear outright white
supremacist
language.
This could be the eccentric leader of a marginal political party somewhere in Europe, or an Islamist extremist imam preaching dogma and hatred, or it could be a white
supremacist
Nazi-admiring orator somewhere else.
YouTube started recommending to me and autoplaying to me white
supremacist
videos in increasing order of extremism.
Ass kickin' guys who were fed up with all that white supremacist, powers-that-be bullshit, and just went in there and kicked everybody's arse.
My journey away from violent extremism began 22 years ago, when I denounced racism and left the American white
supremacist
skinhead movement that I had helped build.
Unfortunately, the new hair dye and pacified "surfer" attitude lands him an acting opportunity with the Jericho Church, which subscribes white
supremacist
teaching of the Aryan nation.
Kowalski serves as a metaphor for Waco and Ruby Ridge, where the US government, with the cooperation of the mainstream media, threw around words like "white
supremacist"
and "right wing extremists as well as trumped-up drug charges to abridge the most fundamental of its' citizens rights, with the willing acquiescence of the general populace.
There was some backlash against Trump when he failed to condemn clearly the white
supremacist
demonstrators in Charlottesville, Virginia, whose “Unite the Right” rally in August ended with the murder of a counter-protester.
In Charlottesville, 32-year-old Heather Heyer was killed when a white
supremacist
drove his car into a crowd of people.
Unfortunately, Trump’s equivocation about the white
supremacist
violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, earlier this month destroyed the last traces of goodwill he may have had in the US Congress.
One white
supremacist
went so far as to drive a car into a crowd of counter-protestors, killing one and injuring 19 others.
And one also thinks of the white supremacist, segregationist, nativist strain represented by former Ku Klux Klan leader, David Duke, whose noisy support Trump was so hesitant to reject last week and for whose constituency Trump may be a make-or-break candidate.
Moreover, even congressional Republicans who have distanced themselves from Trump’s more extreme statements – some even before his inadequate response to the violence at a white
supremacist
rally in Charlottesville, Virginia – still support his main policy proposals, and are relying on him to sign conservative legislation that Obama vetoed.
In the United States, a fetid paranoia has taken hold, with the white
supremacist
aggression in Charlottesville, Virginia over the August 12 weekend – where a peaceful counter-protester was killed and many were injured – just the latest manifestation.
Cohn’s sin was to let it be known publicly that he almost resigned following the violence last month in Charlottesville, Va., when Trump equated white
supremacist
and neo-Nazi demonstrators, many of them armed, with those who opposed them.
With the election of Trump, who has named a white
supremacist
as his chief adviser and strategist, America could cross into Orwell territory.
Even in older democracies such as the United States, economic marginalization has led to a strengthening of chauvinist and
supremacist
identities and other social problems such as the opioid epidemic.
Prior to his appointment, Bannon was the executive chairman of Breitbart News, a far-right, hyper-nationalist – indeed white
supremacist
– online publication.
That statement still ignores the fact that a white
supremacist
used his car as a weapon, with lethal results.
Trump’s Corporate LackeysLONDON – In mid-August, alt-right, neo-Nazi, and white
supremacist
groups, including the Ku Klux Klan, gathered in Charlottesville, Virginia, for a demonstration that ended with a white
supremacist
driving a car into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing one and injuring 19.
And according to a recent ABC News-WashingtonPost poll, 9% of respondents – “equivalent to about 22 million Americans” – find it “acceptable to hold neo-Nazi or white
supremacist
views.”
Now consider the case of the white
supremacist
who murdered 51 mosque-goers in Christchurch, New Zealand, in March: we granted his obnoxious ideals efficacy.
And in both cases, we openly acknowledge that these men are the ideological offspring of the Norwegian white
supremacist
and mass murderer Anders Breivik.
Only by mobilizing together and supporting one another’s agendas can we overcome white supremacist, heteronormative, patriarchal, and exploitative forces to build a more just, equitable, and sustainable world.
Trump and some of his fellow Republicans have embraced lunatic conspiracy theories like QAnon, and signaled their tacit support of white
supremacist
groups.
The evil of that white
supremacist
outrage must unite us.
After a white supremacist, James Alex Fields Jr., drove his car into counterprotesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, killing one and injuring dozens, Trump infamously said that there were “some very fine people on both sides.”
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