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Latter Day Cucks

Posted: Thu Mar 30, 2023 2:52 am
by Douglas Mercer
Douglas Mercer

August 3 201

On the face of it Mormons should be a bulwark of the White race. They are clannish, tightly knit, tightly networked, they look zealously after their own kind, and they breed profusely. But recently a spate of high profile White defectors among them paints another less flattering picture. What they really are are fair weathered friends and fickle weather vanes. When it was in their interest not to be seen as a minority they threw in all their chips with the White majority. But when they sensed that White majority faltering, all of a sudden they too were a persecuted minority and got morality for the marginalized.

"For Mormons the politics of respectability is huge. Mormons engage in respectability campaigning that is not unlike a lot of black church-going communities in the early 20th century. They’re trying to present themselves to mainstream, white, partisan gatekeepers as pious, patriotic, family-oriented, hardworking, contributing to the society, and willing to fight for the American flag in war."

That was then. Now you're much more likely to hear them trumpeting all those times they were run out of town on a rail (they didn't do nothing of course) and saying that history gives them empathy for the downtrodden and the wretched of the earth. Don't trust it: it's a cynical move.

For most of it's history in America Mormons were looked on as the weirdos with the magic undergarments; they were the ones that always stirred up trouble wherever the went and alienated the townspeople. But starting in the 1960s with much of the country veering hard left into manifold revolutions the Mormons did the opposite. They wrapped themselves in Old Glory, took pains to be seen as White, identified in an exaggerated way with the White majority. You see they thought they knew a strong horse when they saw it and they wanted to ride it to glory. And in great part they were successful. But a funny thing happened on their way to Whiteness. Round about the beginning of this century they thought they spied an even stronger horse, as cracks in the White majority's power became more and more evident. That stronger horse of course was the cult of victimhood, and the various marginal groups banding together to gang up on the White man. Suddenly it was: what we're White? Well, yes, but no, look at our history of being persecuted, why it was Shoah after Shoah back in the day and of course we didn't do nothing. That is, all of a sudden it was One Struggle with the minorities of which they were suddenly chief among.

So much for them.

***


Within Mormonism’s history is this concept of whiteness as Godliness and purity.

The shame of it is that Mormonism has a long and noble history of real racism. Living out on their outposts like throwbacks they burrowed in and were for the longest time largely immune to the currents in the wider world which was preaching one love treason.

"Until a few decades ago, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints taught that they “shall be a white and a delightsome people,” a phrase taken from the Book of Mormon. Until the 1970s, the LDS Church also restricted black members’ participation in important rituals and prohibited black men from becoming priests."

A White and Delightsome people, how beautiful is that. It's like a breath of fresh air released from the past. Too bad they gave up the ghost on themselves and capitulated in their end.

"The Book of Mormon, it fits its time period really well. It’s very American. It tells a story of racial schism and how it came to be, dividing the world into a hierarchy of races, and that’s a standard American story—especially the idea that people born to a so-called darker-skinned race could not be redeemed."

Who can deny that? That there's no hope or help for them.

The Mormon belief in black skin being a “curse” is found in uniquely Mormon books they call “Scripture.” These books, known as the Book of Mormon and Pearl of Great Price published by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are racist as the list of verses below show:

“She was exceedingly fair and white.”

"That people became a dark, and loathsome, and a filthy people, full of idleness and all manner of abominations.”

“And the skins of the Lamanites were dark, according to the mark which was set upon their fathers, which was a curse upon them because of their transgression and their rebellion.”

"From the mid-1800s until 1978, the LDS Church prevented men of African descent from being ordained to the church's priesthood, barred black men and women from participating in the ordinances of its temples, and opposed interracial marriage Since black men of African descent could not receive the priesthood, they were excluded from holding leadership roles and performing these rituals. Joseph Smith and Brigham Young reasoned that black skin was the result of the Curs of Cain. Many leaders, including Ezra Taft Benson were vocally opposed to the civil rights movement."

Delbert L. Stapley, a high-ranking member of the LDS believed in his heart that the "Lord had placed the curse upon the Negro, which denied him the Priesthood."

Blacks could not be priests. When one judge and bishop found "Negro" ancestry in his genealogy, he was demoted and forced to sit in the back of the church. Even those he had baptized had to be re-baptized.

Sorry, it the ritual was performed by Negro so it doesn't count.

"Discrimination against Blacks, a milder albeit unjustifiable form of persecution, began with Smith’s successor, Brigham Young, who declared that no man with even a drop of black African “blood” could be ordained to the church’s otherwise universal male lay priesthood. Young’s action was buoyed by the Book of Mormon, wherein a persistent theme is the coupling of dark skin with wickedness, and of white skin with righteousness. With the priesthood ban hovering in the background, by the middle of the 20th century Utah was as unwelcoming to Blacks as was the Deep South. Even the church’s otherwise progressive president, David O. McKay, defended the right of businessmen to deny lodging and other services on the basis of race, preached against interracial marriage, and denounced efforts to end school segregation."

That was then.

***

Look at one of those Mormon choirs and what you will see, or what you would have seen before they peppered them with black mascots, was a glorious sea of scrubbed and healthy White and shining faces. But something dark lay beneath.

Like the majority of White Americans the Mormons took the preeminence of their race as a matter of course, at least until the 1970s. The Mormons kept on in this belief for longer than most, not rescinding their anti black rules until 1978. It was at that time time that some big wig in the LDS got the idea that God himself had given them a "new revelation", and that God wanted his little children the darkies to enjoy all the fruits that the Mormon Church had to offer. The idea that God would make such a horrible decision is exactly zero; it was not revelation, it was an early sighting of which way the wind was was blowing. And then 45 years later in 2013 at the very beginning of the avalanche of wokeness the Mormon Church appeared in public with its collective hat in hand and said that the original rule to keep the blacks out really was not a revelation from God but was just plain old fashioned racism. It is thus that great peoples perish.

The LDS had a new revelation and in 1978 the almost 150 year ban on African Americans in the priesthood was lifted.

"The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints added new language to the faith’s handbook Friday imploring members to root out prejudice and racism, adding significance and permanence to recent comments by top leaders on one of the most sensitive topics in the church’s history."

Yes, that's correct, everyone's favorite salt of the earth White desert sojourners, the ones the kept it White for a good long while, the Whitest of the Whitest Church of all, has fully folded like a card table in the face of the onslaught of the modern world. Which is really a shame to see. For more and more we will look back on those unending sea of White faces, singing to their silly God to be sure, but still that sea of White faces with those supernal voices, and we will see nothing but power and strength and health. But there was something dark beneath.

"A leader of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued another plea Saturday for members to be welcoming to people of all faiths and ethnicities on the heels of recent attacks on Asians and following a recent reckoning over racial justice around the world."

There it is, expressing solidarity with and reaching out to another so-called oppressed group, the Asians. An attack on them is an attack on us too they say now. Remember when we used to be run out of town on a rail wherever we went? So goes the logic as they abandon the pretense of siding with the White majority. Of course they say it's for moral reasons but it's simply where they see the power of the future residing.

"Their version of racial reconciliation is what I call multicultural Mormonism. There was an ad campaign called “I’m a Mormon” from 2011 to 2012. This was explicitly presenting a multicultural face of Mormonism to the world: multicultural, multinational, multilingual. The Church acknowledged that it did have a problem as a white Church."

In hindsight this advertisement is indistinguishable from an ad from Benneton touting its United Colors or that Coca Cola ad where those multiracial hippies wanted to teach us to sing in perfect harmony.

But I don't want to sing in harmony with them.

"The ads feature a diverse group of men and women talking about their values and their passions: motorcycles, surfing, skateboarding and families. Other ads include Alex, a black musician in an interracial marriage."

"The ads are blasting apart those stereotypes that people have of who Mormons are. It's a big tent," says Kim Farah, spokeswoman for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. "We have members that are very diverse and I think people are very surprised to see that."

"I think it's fabulous. I think it represents in many ways the best impulses of the Mormon people," Dehlin says. "It represents tolerance. It represents multiculturalism. It represents an empowerment of women, inclusivity."

Latter day cucks. When it comes to it have a tent big enough for your people and guard that tent with your very lives.

Intruders not welcome.

***

So often the seeds of destruction are always present even when you're at high crest. The problem with the Mormons is that they are like Jews and they got that tikkun olam itch, the inexplicable need to repair the world rather than let it hang. That combined with their missionary zeal, the fact that they send their young to godforsaken places around the world, where they pick up the sympathy bug, all of that neve bodes well for their race solidarity.

"I’m going to sound like a missionary here, but Mormonism is very much a message of unifying the world."

"Unity is very important for Mormons. Religious unity used to be mapped onto racial unity. Today, it’s celebrating racial difference and racial history as a key part of the Church."

"There are more Mormons outside the U.S. than inside. It’s likely that there are more non-white Mormons than there are white Mormons in the global Church. So the Church has its own future. It’s no longer an American project. It’s a global and international project. In the face of a U.S. political regime that puts white people and America first, a Church that has a global identity has to reject that."

Like so much of the religion of the West today they see the future of their Church among the non-White races of the world. As more and more White people who become materialist consumers they need to make a virtue of necessity and become an international religion. When this practical impulse is supported by the moral dogma of a newly believed in equality the results are deadly.

Deadly to the race.

“The Lord expects us to teach that inclusion is a positive means towards unity, and that exclusion leads to division,” said Gary Stevenson, a member of a top governing panel called the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. “We have been heartbroken to hear of recent attacks on people who are Black, Asian, Latino, or of any other group. Prejudice, racial tension, or violence should never have any place in our neighborhoods, communities, or within the church.”

This of course is the low road to perdition. Those "missionaries" should stay at home, protected their kin and their own kind, look after themselves and their interests. Sending the youth to faraway places, teaching them strange languages, can in the end only foster a belief in equality and along with it a sense of guilt for the "privilege" they will come to think is theirs.

"Fellow church leaders urged members to root out racism and make the faith an oasis of unity at the last Mormon church conference in October. Two months later, the church added to the faith’s handbook new language demanding members root out prejudice and racism, adding significance and permanence on one of the most sensitive topics in the church’s history."

The danger is when a group of people have been absolute stalwarts in defense of the race buckles; when they buckle they begin to shudder at their so-called brush with hate; and as the racial pendulum swings they become fanatics for what they once opposed, making exaggerated gestures, statements, and actions to prove to themselves and to the world at large that the bad old days (ie, the good old days) are long past by now.

"The faith’s past ban on Black men in the lay priesthood, which stood until 1978, remains a delicate issue for members and non-members alike. The church disavowed the ban in a 2013 essay, saying it was enacted during an era of great racial divide that influenced the church’s early teachings, but it never issued a formal apology — a sore spot for some members."

Apparently the removal of the ban is not good enough for the hyper cucks, they want them to say they're sorry. And probably some due reparations in the bargain.

"In the handbook from the faith widely known as the Mormon church, the new section on prejudice echoes advice in a string of speeches by top leaders this year, reminding 16 million members around the globe that a person’s standing with God depends on devotion to the commandments, not the color of their skin."

The placing of ideology over race is always the beginning of the end.

“The church calls on all people to abandon attitudes and actions of prejudice toward any group or individuals,” it said. “Members of the church should lead out in promoting respect for all of God’s children.”

It notes that prejudice can be based on “race, ethnicity, nationality, tribe, gender, age, disability, socioeconomic status, religious belief or nonbelief, and sexual orientation.”

"Under church president Russel M. Nelson, the church began initiatives in 2019 to cooperate with the NAACP, leading to Nelson speaking at the NAACP national convention in 2019 and issuing joint statements with the national leaders of the NAACP in 2020."

"In the church's October 2020 general conference multiple leaders spoke against racism. In June of 2021 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced plans to spend over $9 million in cooperation with both the NAACP and the United Negro College Fund over the next three years."

There's the reparations but it will never be enough.

"Now that recent protests have forced a racial reckoning throughout American society, many Mormons are taking a renewed look at racism in their own faith."

The Black LDS Legacy Conference came from the broken hearts of Black women after the acquittal of George Zimmerman in 2013.We were having interactions with other Black members, wondering, ‘Why is no one saying anything from the pulpit? How can we go to church on Sunday and it feels like we're the only ones who care about what's happening to Black people here in the U.S. in the wake of police brutality?’ And so we created the conference on Wakanda weekend, when Black Panther opened, to be able to say, ‘We have a place here. We've always had a place here. We'll continue to carve out space for our place.’"

"Church president Gordon B. Hinckley, in an unprecedented move, used the forum of the church’s world conference in 2006 to denounce it in strong language. “No man who makes disparaging remarks concerning those of another race can consider himself a true disciple of Christ.”

We’ve had Brother Ahmad Corbitt come. He also is African American. He sort of talked about his initial draw to the church and to the Book of Mormon as, to use his terms, the most racially unifying book of scripture out there. We had an Indigenous scholar, Farina King, come in and talk about a passage in the Book of Mormon that's often interpreted to be referring to Christopher Columbus, and she was just sort of raising the question: Are we wanting to glorify Columbus at the expense of our Indigenous members of the church?”

Glorify yourselves White man---glorify yourselves.

***

Now it's an indisputable fact that Donald Trump is no great cup of tea yet support for him in 2016 remains a rough barometer for for White identity. Mormons ended up giving him slim majorities but had to be coaxed into that: but at first they rent their garments and gnashed their teeth, deeming themselves paragons to the pariahs. That is, their new found racial sensibilities were offended by that rapist Mexican crack and the Muslim ban sent them around the bend.

Why, didn't their Church have a long and storied tradition of being religiously persecuted?

And out of this anathema they heaped on any hint of White pride a roll of Mormon anti-racist rogues has emerged. The grandaddy of them all, the ur-cuck, was a man who even when Mormons still retained their staunch whiteness had already succumbed to the lure of jungle fever.

"George Romney joins NAACP Detroit president Edward Turner and other Civil Rights activists on a march through Detroit's Grosse Point suburb."

When Mormon George Romney returned from Vietnam and averred that he had been brainwashed by the generals a wag quipped that in his case a light rinse would have done the trick. And it's true like his lightweight son Mitt the elder Romney as not intellectual heavyweight, that is no one ever asked him to bring the potato salad to the MENSA picnic.

But he had a "heart of gold"---don't you know.

"In 1963, George Romney was able to forge a bond with Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King that seems virtually inconceivable across today's political divide. The year was a pivotal one for both men. In between launching his spring campaign in Birmingham and delivering his "I Have a Dream" speech in Washington at the end of August, King led a march in Detroit in June."

"Romney had just become Governor of Michigan and declared the occasion "Freedom Day in Michigan." He sent an emissary to join the crowd of about 120,000 (had the march not been on a Sunday, he likely would have been there himself). The following year, in his State of the State address, the governor said that "Michigan's most urgent human rights problem is racial discrimination."

And there you have it: just when White people in America needed solid and uncompromising leader to defend them, and to take their side, this moral grandstander defected to the enemy, setting a pattern which has been more and more replicated the current crop of Mormon who walk in his anti-racist shoes

"Romney was one of a number of moderate and liberal Republicans who strongly supported the Civil Rights Bill of 1964 and, at the Republican Party convention, worked on behalf of efforts to include an anti-discrimination plank in the party platform. When the party's presidential nominee, Barry Goldwater, opposed the bill, Romney refused to support Goldwater's candidacy for the presidency."

Barry Goldwater was a quarter Jew and wanted war all the time, and was a small government conservative, so in essence he was no friend of the White race; indeed his family famously integrated its Department Store in Phoenix in the 1950s even when no one was asking them to do it. Still, not to support him was to support the man who ushered in the Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Immigration Act, surely a one two punch to the White solar plexus that will remain unequaled in all space and all time.

And of course Mitt is a chip off the old block; he took Trump's endorsement when he needed it but post Mexican Rapist the entire project became much too rich for his thin blood. And he became an ostentatious and showy Never Trumper, ballyhooing his One World and One Love bona fides whenever he got the chance.

"During a virtual town hall hosted Wednesday by the NAACP, Sen. Mitt Romney and NAACP President and CEO Derrick Johnson spoke on racism in America and how it’s being played out through protests, voting and the pandemic. Moderated by White House correspondent April Ryan, Romney said the entire country has turned its focus to the fact there is still systemic and structural racism in America, saying it is “unacceptable” that racism has not been eliminated. He said that having procedures and policies that make people unequal is “wrong.”

"The president has said things that have been divisive,” Romney said. He later explained that when Trump was running for president, he appealed to those Republican voters who have “racist tendencies.” Since becoming president, Trump has continued with that appeal, Romney said.

This is of course a man who was one of the big brains in the top floor offices who thought nothing of decimating White America in the name of that revolutionary doctrine known as capitalism, an ideology that knows no race, that has no nation. As an honorary of that international tripe of bandits known as Jews he trumpeted creative destruction, un-rooted hundreds of thousands of White people, turned former White working class communities into ghost towns and shells of their former selves, asset stripped whole industries.

But when it comes to race he knows what's moral and what's not.

"Mitt Romney delivered some searing criticism of Donald Trump's presidential campaign on Friday, hitting the presumptive Republican nominee for his own attacks on Latinos, Muslims

"I simply can’t put my name down as someone who voted for principles that suggest racism or xenophobia, misogyny, bigotry."

"Citing Trump’s recent racist remarks about U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curie, who is handling two lawsuits accusing the for-profit Trump University of fraud, the previous Republican presidential nominee said that even if Trump tones down his rhetoric, he’s already revealed his true colors."

So Romney has shown his true colors: black, brown, anything but White.

“He indicated what he believes in his heart about Mexicans and about race by the comments he made about Judge Curiel, and he may try to distance himself from that, but we know what he believes,” Romney said.

“I don’t want to see trickle-down racism. I don’t want to see a president of the United States saying things which change the character of the generations of Americans that are following. Presidents have an impact on the nature of our nation,” Romney said. “And trickle-down racism, trickle-down bigotry, trickle-down misogyny, all these things are extraordinarily dangerous to the heart and character of America.”

Former Mormon Congressman and frequent Fox New bloviator Jason Chaffetz ultimately got on the Trump train when it became inevitable but for a while in the early stages he balked; Chaffetz said that he couldn't look his wife and daughter in the eye and vote for Trump.

Imagine a Roman Senator telling his fellow law makers that it was the women in his family who ruled him. Such a thing would of course not be believed.

Mormon Jeff Flake's cucking is of course legendary, he is in fact a byword for it, and example after example could be adduced to show it. But perhaps the best is that he once proudly claimed that he subverted American law due to his tender heart and the concern for his family's money.

"Sometimes the Border Patrol would send small planes to search our alfalfa fields for migrants. When I would hear the distinctive whine of the Cessna (search aircraft), I’d hop on a horse, put on a hat that would obscure my head, and try to divert the Border Patrol away from our workers — a decoy in the game of cat and mouse."

Mormon John Huntsman Sr. made a fortune, not in curing diseases or in bringing some new important and significant technical advance to his countryman but in the invention of the clamshell container for the Big Mac.

He parlayed that big deal into a lurid career as a lifetime cuck. The cancer institute he created poured out this bilge at the height of the madness in 2020:

The tragic murder of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, catalyzed a national reckoning regarding racism that has plagued our country for centuries. The recent dialogue has only begun to reveal a deeper understanding of the pain inflicted and still experienced on a regular basis by our Black family members, friends, neighbors, and colleagues. We will dedicate ourselves to tackling racism. Meaningful action is long overdue.

Black Lives Matter.

Our change process at Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) includes these new commitments and actions:

We will commit $1 million to establish an HCI Endowed Chair to expand faculty and demonstrate HCI’s commitment to equity, diversity, and inclusion.

We will establish an HCI Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Commission to make recommendations to the HCI on issues related to equality and justice. Areas of immediate consideration will include mechanisms for addressing workplace racism and discrimination; implicit bias and microaggression training for all at HCI; anti-discrimination tools. We will expand HCI’s Office of Diversity and Inclusion This will include the establishment of effective pathways to address workplace racism We will make our commitment to equity, diversity, and inclusion a key pillar of our HCI 2025 Strategic Plan, which will be finalized this year.

His son Jon Huntsman Jr. felt the need to call out Ron Paul who had a newsletter which said some sensible things about negros:

In a video, titled "Unelectable," the Huntsman campaign focuses on the newsletters published under Paul's name in the 1980s and 1990s, which included controversial comments about African-Americans. A day after new polling that shows Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul with a clear lead over Jon Huntsman in the critical primary state of New Hampshire, the Huntsman campaign has released an aggressive new web ad attacking Paul for publishing racist essay.

"Mormon Senator Mike Lee told the Trump team that it is important that they go on record to call racism deplorable."

"Lee emphasized that Republicans must identify David Duke's racism as deplorable. Lee also encouraged the Trump campaign to be explicit in its denunciation of the alt-right movement."

But perhaps no one better symbolizes the current state of cucked Mormonism that Republican Haitian Mia Love. She was a mayor of Utah town before entering Congress. And you know when she got a national profile the White traitors back home saw it as godsend of a way to showcase the New Mormonism. In fact the Haitian Love was in that multicultural "I Am A Mormon" advertisement.

Of course there's the old joke as to what do you call the only black man at a Republican Conference? The answer: Mr. Chairman

Of course.

And sure enough right on cue the Romney campaign in 2012 trotted out the Haitian interloper to show how down they were with the New America:

"Mia Love, the 36-year-old black Mormon woman running for a U.S. House seat in Utah, officially launched onto the national stage Tuesday night with a speech at the Republican National Convention."

As you delve in to her history it of course becomes more and more sordid. Of her marriage a report noted: "The Loves could be one of Washington’s most intriguing stories — the mixed-marriage Utah Mormons from tiny Saratoga Springs."

You can see the race mixers in pictures along with their three coffee colored ugly brats, indicating for sure that when it comes to their family the holocaust is complete.

A more revolting sight cannot be imagined.

Republican Rep. Mia Love deplored President Donald Trump for reportedly criticizing immigrants coming to the United States from what he called “sh*thole countries.”

“I can’t defend the indefensible. You have to understand that there are countries that struggle out there. But their people, their people are good people and they’re part of us. We’re Americans,”

As a Haitian you'd think she'd know better than anyone else about those sh*thole counties. She hails from the poster country for it.

Love, whose parents immigrated from Haiti, told “State of the Union” that she thinks the President’s comments were racist.

Of course the were. She's a Mormon in good standing, so what else could the be?

***


At the end of the day it is of course the going with the times and the cynicism that has caused the Mormon multicultural makeover. But on a deeper level there is an even bigger problem: they got the Jewish disease.

As sojourners to the promised land in the desert they have always strongly associated themselves with Jews. And look at the pattern of their history: they moved to a new town, they became economically successful overnight, the alienated their hosts, they got run out of town, only to repeat this scenario over and over. Sound suspiciously like Jews to me.

According to the Book of Mormon, an Israelite family came to New York in the 6th century B.C.

The place names tell the story as well:

There is a Jordan river in Utah.

The is a city named Moab in Utah.

And of course there is Zion National Park in Utah.

None of this is any Cohen-cidence.

The thing is when a religious group inscribes Judaism into its cultural heritage it may function for a while as a recessive trait but soon enough over time it will be expressed. If you exalt the Jews sooner or later you'll fall in line with them.

***

In November 2015 Donald Trump announced that he was calling for a complete and total shutdown of Muslim immigration until we can find out what the hell is going on. The odd thing is by then we already knew what the hell was going on, it was Muslims with bombs in their underwear and of course in the larger sense the Great Replacement.

This sensible policy proposal was too much for former Utah Senator and Mormon Bob Bennett.

In the final days of his life (in 2016), former Utah Republican Senator Bob Bennett turned to his son and asked him, "Are there any Muslims in this hospital?"

So here's a dying man and is he thinking about his own race's survival which is imperiled?

No sir.

And Bennet was very emotional and said, 'I want to go up to every single one of them and apologize, I want to go up to every single one of them and tell them how grateful I am that they are in this country and apologize on behalf of the Republican Party for Donald Trump.'"

Bob Bennett's son Jim said that when he later spoke to his mother, Joyce Bennett, about the conversation, she told him that expressing a sense of inclusion for ostracized populations, especially Muslims, had become "something that he was doing quite a lot of in the last months of his life."

Joyce told her son that his father had approached people wearing hijabs in an airport to "let them know that he was grateful they were in the country and the country was better for them being here."

Bennet also did same thing in the hospital as he was dying. Roam the hall for those sporting hijabs and profusely apologize on behalf of all of White America.

So Bob Bennett, Mormon and race traitor, spent the his final time on planet earth walking around airports and hospitals searching out race alien in hijabs and saying sorry.

Why, for all he is worth (not much) he might as well have been crawling on his knees with a placard around his neck saying:

Sorry I'm white. It's your country now.

It's certainly no way to meet your maker.

And a more revolting sight cannot be imagined.

But such has become the Church Of Latter Day Cucks.

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