White Hot Controversy for a White Nationalist GOP Candidate
The paper notes that the League is not just a group devoted to Southern nostalgia. "No, they genuinely want to make the South independent and by their own admission "seek to protect the Anglo-Celtic core population and culture of the historic South." The rest of the nation they see as mostly corrupt and insufficiently Christian. Van Smith of the Baltimore City Paper, wrote that he doubts that many of Peroutka's "potential constituents have used their advantages in the way he long has: to advance a militant theocratic agenda."
A decade ago, Peroutka already had a record of supporting the formation of local militias when he ran for U.S. president under the Constitution Party banner, with a campaign slogan -- "God-Family-Republic" -- that dressed up his extremism with rhetoric that run-of-the-mill patriotic Christians might find innocuously attractive. Similarly, the name of Peroutka's Institute on the Constitution (IOC) fails to communicate its actual mission: creating theocratic governance based on both testaments of the Bible, similar to how extremist Muslims would like to establish states based on sharia law derived from the Quran.
Peroutka's effort to separate the League from neo-Nazis is a blurry endeavor... As the Huffington Post's coverage [by Jonathan Hutson] of Peroutka's press conference pointed out, the YouTube video of Peroutka singing "Dixie" in 2012 "was shot by Michael Cushman, a former member of the National Alliance, a neo-Nazi group, who now leads the League's South Carolina chapter." Last Sunday, The Capital Gazette the leading newspaper in the Annapolis area where Peroutka lives, outlined in an editorial, what is at stake for the Republican Party:
Peroutka, a former Constitution Party presidential candidate who only recently switched to the GOP, is the founder of the Pasadena-based Institute on the Constitution, which argues that the Bible is the ultimate authority for all levels of government. Peroutka's neophyte Democratic opponent, Patrick Armstrong knows he is in the fight of his young political life and responded to Peroutka's press conference writing: After being asked to step down from a secessionist organization with strong racial hatred themes after years of involvement, it is not enough to say, "I'm not a secessionist." Peroutka can be seen on YouTube videos embracing secession and openly declaring his displeasure that Maryland was prevented from seceding in the Civil War. The truth is, the more people get to know Michael Peroutka, the more they see the vision of theocratic white nationalism that animates his candidacy.
White Hot Controversy for a White Nationalist GOP Candidate | 3 comments (3 topical, 0 hidden)
White Hot Controversy for a White Nationalist GOP Candidate | 3 comments (3 topical, 0 hidden)
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