If you’re a conservative, the chances are that you don’t like to talk or think about white supremacy very much. After all, if you enter the marketplace of ideas with conservative views about, say, affirmative action, the welfare state, or ballot integrity, the chances are that you’re used to being smeared as a white nationalist or as playing “white-identity politics.” This is especially true if you support Donald Trump.
Moreover, you’re likely also rightly tired of having the mainstream conservative movement tied to the old-school hate groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan, or to various other fringe racist extremists. When you condemn Antifa mob violence or Black Lives Matter riots, you’re condescendingly told that “the Right” has a far worse problem with domestic terrorism. White supremacists, after all, murder more people than left-wing radicals.
White supremacists are “the Right”? They’re not my Right, you think.
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