Stephen Miller’s War on America: How One Man Turned Extremism Into Federal Policy

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This is the guy responsible for what we are seeing on our streets. We get told that this type of person n longer exists, that he is a thing of the past. But he and a few million others exist today, right now. As the great Hank Aaron said:

“The biggest difference is that back then they had hoods,” Aaron said. “Now they have neckties and starched shirts.”

Stephen Miller’s War on America: How One Man Turned Extremism Into Federal Policy​

Stephen Miller was not “radicalized” by circumstance; he sought it out.

Born in 1985 in Santa Monica, California, Miller was raised in a liberal environment but quickly rebelled. As a teenager, he ranted against multiculturalism, bilingual education, and diversity initiatives at his majority-minority high school. In one now-infamous quote to his classmates:

"If you love Mexico so much, why don’t you go back there?"
At Duke University, Miller found ideological soulmates among far-right figures — including white nationalist Richard Spencer, who would later brag:

"Stephen and I were thick as thieves. He has always been on the edge of the far right."
Far from distancing himself from racial resentment, Miller embraced it. It became his currency.

The Congressional Staffer Who Weaponized White Grievance

Working under racist firebrand Senator Jeff Sessions, Miller honed his skills. His mission was clear. Demonize immigrants. Halt diversity. Stoke white anxiety. While most staffers toiled in anonymity, Miller made a name for himself drafting incendiary speeches, authoring anti-immigration legislation, and pushing a narrative that America’s white majority was "under siege." Former Senate colleagues described him as “joyful” when crafting cruel immigration bills and “obsessed with demographics.”

Inside the Trump White House: Cruelty Was the Point

When Miller joined Trump’s 2016 campaign, he found the perfect vehicle for his worldview. Inside the West Wing, he became the most powerful and dangerous aide no one voted for. He didn’t just whisper ideas — he wrote the scripts and designed the policies.

Signature Miller Projects:

  • The Muslim Ban
    Wrote the legal framework banning travelers from majority-Muslim countries.
"It’s not just about terrorism — it’s about cultural compatibility."
  • Family Separation
    Engineered the “Zero Tolerance” policy ripping thousands of children from their parents at the border.
"Deterrence only works if it’s painful."
  • Ending Legal Immigration
    Slashed refugee caps to historic lows, pushed policies to deny green cards to poor immigrants, and sought to eliminate asylum protections.
His open hostility to immigrants was so extreme that Trump himself reportedly had to occasionally "soften" Miller’s proposals to avoid political backlash.

 
Time to crack down on the criminals. Blacks, Mexicans, Latinos, Moslems. Zero tolerance. Hell, we need to at least arrest them until they can write a sentence and make a resume.
 
This is the guy responsible for what we are seeing on our streets. We get told that this type of person n longer exists, that he is a thing of the past. But he and a few million others exist today, right now. As the great Hank Aaron said:

“The biggest difference is that back then they had hoods,” Aaron said. “Now they have neckties and starched shirts.”

Stephen Miller’s War on America: How One Man Turned Extremism Into Federal Policy​

Stephen Miller was not “radicalized” by circumstance; he sought it out.

Born in 1985 in Santa Monica, California, Miller was raised in a liberal environment but quickly rebelled. As a teenager, he ranted against multiculturalism, bilingual education, and diversity initiatives at his majority-minority high school. In one now-infamous quote to his classmates:

"If you love Mexico so much, why don’t you go back there?"
At Duke University, Miller found ideological soulmates among far-right figures — including white nationalist Richard Spencer, who would later brag:

"Stephen and I were thick as thieves. He has always been on the edge of the far right."
Far from distancing himself from racial resentment, Miller embraced it. It became his currency.

The Congressional Staffer Who Weaponized White Grievance

Working under racist firebrand Senator Jeff Sessions, Miller honed his skills. His mission was clear. Demonize immigrants. Halt diversity. Stoke white anxiety. While most staffers toiled in anonymity, Miller made a name for himself drafting incendiary speeches, authoring anti-immigration legislation, and pushing a narrative that America’s white majority was "under siege." Former Senate colleagues described him as “joyful” when crafting cruel immigration bills and “obsessed with demographics.”

Inside the Trump White House: Cruelty Was the Point

When Miller joined Trump’s 2016 campaign, he found the perfect vehicle for his worldview. Inside the West Wing, he became the most powerful and dangerous aide no one voted for. He didn’t just whisper ideas — he wrote the scripts and designed the policies.

Signature Miller Projects:

  • The Muslim Ban
    Wrote the legal framework banning travelers from majority-Muslim countries.
"It’s not just about terrorism — it’s about cultural compatibility."
  • Family Separation
    Engineered the “Zero Tolerance” policy ripping thousands of children from their parents at the border.
"Deterrence only works if it’s painful."
  • Ending Legal Immigration
    Slashed refugee caps to historic lows, pushed policies to deny green cards to poor immigrants, and sought to eliminate asylum protections.
His open hostility to immigrants was so extreme that Trump himself reportedly had to occasionally "soften" Miller’s proposals to avoid political backlash.


Violent Nazis like you are the reason Miller has to live on an Army base.
 
That's a heap of whining and crying, is there a point in that OP hot mess somewhere??
LOL! The number 1 whiner in this country is the right-wing white male. That's you.
 
Signature Miller Projects:
  • The Muslim Ban

The travel ban had nothing to do with religion or ethnicity. It was about nationality.

It was about restricting entry from countries where a large fraction of the population wishes the United States harm.

The ban included North Korea and Venezuela, both of which have negligible Muslims.

The leaders of this country are not elected to help refugees in the rest of the world; they are supposed to be looking out for us citizens.
 
The travel ban had nothing to do with religion or ethnicity. It was about nationality.

It was about restricting entry from countries where a large fraction of the population wishes the United States harm.

The ban included North Korea and Venezuela, both of which have negligible Muslims.

The leaders of this country are not elected to help refugees in the rest of the world; they are supposed to be looking out for us citizens.
BS. Steven Miller is a white supremacist. He wants to try ethnic cleansing of this country.
 
This is the guy responsible for what we are seeing on our streets. We get told that this type of person n longer exists, that he is a thing of the past. But he and a few million others exist today, right now. As the great Hank Aaron said:

“The biggest difference is that back then they had hoods,” Aaron said. “Now they have neckties and starched shirts.”

Stephen Miller’s War on America: How One Man Turned Extremism Into Federal Policy​

Stephen Miller was not “radicalized” by circumstance; he sought it out.

Born in 1985 in Santa Monica, California, Miller was raised in a liberal environment but quickly rebelled. As a teenager, he ranted against multiculturalism, bilingual education, and diversity initiatives at his majority-minority high school. In one now-infamous quote to his classmates:

"If you love Mexico so much, why don’t you go back there?"
At Duke University, Miller found ideological soulmates among far-right figures — including white nationalist Richard Spencer, who would later brag:

"Stephen and I were thick as thieves. He has always been on the edge of the far right."
Far from distancing himself from racial resentment, Miller embraced it. It became his currency.

The Congressional Staffer Who Weaponized White Grievance

Working under racist firebrand Senator Jeff Sessions, Miller honed his skills. His mission was clear. Demonize immigrants. Halt diversity. Stoke white anxiety. While most staffers toiled in anonymity, Miller made a name for himself drafting incendiary speeches, authoring anti-immigration legislation, and pushing a narrative that America’s white majority was "under siege." Former Senate colleagues described him as “joyful” when crafting cruel immigration bills and “obsessed with demographics.”

Inside the Trump White House: Cruelty Was the Point

When Miller joined Trump’s 2016 campaign, he found the perfect vehicle for his worldview. Inside the West Wing, he became the most powerful and dangerous aide no one voted for. He didn’t just whisper ideas — he wrote the scripts and designed the policies.

Signature Miller Projects:

  • The Muslim Ban
    Wrote the legal framework banning travelers from majority-Muslim countries.
"It’s not just about terrorism — it’s about cultural compatibility."
  • Family Separation
    Engineered the “Zero Tolerance” policy ripping thousands of children from their parents at the border.
"Deterrence only works if it’s painful."
  • Ending Legal Immigration
    Slashed refugee caps to historic lows, pushed policies to deny green cards to poor immigrants, and sought to eliminate asylum protections.
His open hostility to immigrants was so extreme that Trump himself reportedly had to occasionally "soften" Miller’s proposals to avoid political backlash.

Are you complaining or on his payroll as a publicist, cause that’s all shit that’s great.
 
This is the guy responsible for what we are seeing on our streets. We get told that this type of person n longer exists, that he is a thing of the past. But he and a few million others exist today, right now. As the great Hank Aaron said:

“The biggest difference is that back then they had hoods,” Aaron said. “Now they have neckties and starched shirts.”

Stephen Miller’s War on America: How One Man Turned Extremism Into Federal Policy​

Stephen Miller was not “radicalized” by circumstance; he sought it out.

Born in 1985 in Santa Monica, California, Miller was raised in a liberal environment but quickly rebelled. As a teenager, he ranted against multiculturalism, bilingual education, and diversity initiatives at his majority-minority high school. In one now-infamous quote to his classmates:

"If you love Mexico so much, why don’t you go back there?"
At Duke University, Miller found ideological soulmates among far-right figures — including white nationalist Richard Spencer, who would later brag:

"Stephen and I were thick as thieves. He has always been on the edge of the far right."
Far from distancing himself from racial resentment, Miller embraced it. It became his currency.

The Congressional Staffer Who Weaponized White Grievance

Working under racist firebrand Senator Jeff Sessions, Miller honed his skills. His mission was clear. Demonize immigrants. Halt diversity. Stoke white anxiety. While most staffers toiled in anonymity, Miller made a name for himself drafting incendiary speeches, authoring anti-immigration legislation, and pushing a narrative that America’s white majority was "under siege." Former Senate colleagues described him as “joyful” when crafting cruel immigration bills and “obsessed with demographics.”

Inside the Trump White House: Cruelty Was the Point

When Miller joined Trump’s 2016 campaign, he found the perfect vehicle for his worldview. Inside the West Wing, he became the most powerful and dangerous aide no one voted for. He didn’t just whisper ideas — he wrote the scripts and designed the policies.

Signature Miller Projects:

  • The Muslim Ban
    Wrote the legal framework banning travelers from majority-Muslim countries.
"It’s not just about terrorism — it’s about cultural compatibility."
  • Family Separation
    Engineered the “Zero Tolerance” policy ripping thousands of children from their parents at the border.
"Deterrence only works if it’s painful."
  • Ending Legal Immigration
    Slashed refugee caps to historic lows, pushed policies to deny green cards to poor immigrants, and sought to eliminate asylum protections.
His open hostility to immigrants was so extreme that Trump himself reportedly had to occasionally "soften" Miller’s proposals to avoid political backlash.

Nowhere near as radical as you are, Looney Tunes.
 
Are you complaining or on his payroll as a publicist, cause that’s all shit that’s great.
Of course, this garbage is great to you. That's because you're a white supremacist.
 
This is the guy responsible for what we are seeing on our streets. We get told that this type of person n longer exists, that he is a thing of the past. But he and a few million others exist today, right now. As the great Hank Aaron said:

“The biggest difference is that back then they had hoods,” Aaron said. “Now they have neckties and starched shirts.”

Stephen Miller’s War on America: How One Man Turned Extremism Into Federal Policy​

Stephen Miller was not “radicalized” by circumstance; he sought it out.

Born in 1985 in Santa Monica, California, Miller was raised in a liberal environment but quickly rebelled. As a teenager, he ranted against multiculturalism, bilingual education, and diversity initiatives at his majority-minority high school. In one now-infamous quote to his classmates:

"If you love Mexico so much, why don’t you go back there?"
At Duke University, Miller found ideological soulmates among far-right figures — including white nationalist Richard Spencer, who would later brag:

"Stephen and I were thick as thieves. He has always been on the edge of the far right."
Far from distancing himself from racial resentment, Miller embraced it. It became his currency.

The Congressional Staffer Who Weaponized White Grievance

Working under racist firebrand Senator Jeff Sessions, Miller honed his skills. His mission was clear. Demonize immigrants. Halt diversity. Stoke white anxiety. While most staffers toiled in anonymity, Miller made a name for himself drafting incendiary speeches, authoring anti-immigration legislation, and pushing a narrative that America’s white majority was "under siege." Former Senate colleagues described him as “joyful” when crafting cruel immigration bills and “obsessed with demographics.”

Inside the Trump White House: Cruelty Was the Point

When Miller joined Trump’s 2016 campaign, he found the perfect vehicle for his worldview. Inside the West Wing, he became the most powerful and dangerous aide no one voted for. He didn’t just whisper ideas — he wrote the scripts and designed the policies.

Signature Miller Projects:

  • The Muslim Ban
    Wrote the legal framework banning travelers from majority-Muslim countries.
"It’s not just about terrorism — it’s about cultural compatibility."
  • Family Separation
    Engineered the “Zero Tolerance” policy ripping thousands of children from their parents at the border.
"Deterrence only works if it’s painful."
  • Ending Legal Immigration
    Slashed refugee caps to historic lows, pushed policies to deny green cards to poor immigrants, and sought to eliminate asylum protections.
His open hostility to immigrants was so extreme that Trump himself reportedly had to occasionally "soften" Miller’s proposals to avoid political backlash.



Yeah, secure borders are extreme. :laughing0301:
 
15th post
This is the guy responsible for what we are seeing on our streets. We get told that this type of person n longer exists, that he is a thing of the past. But he and a few million others exist today, right now. As the great Hank Aaron said:

“The biggest difference is that back then they had hoods,” Aaron said. “Now they have neckties and starched shirts.”

Stephen Miller’s War on America: How One Man Turned Extremism Into Federal Policy​

Stephen Miller was not “radicalized” by circumstance; he sought it out.

Born in 1985 in Santa Monica, California, Miller was raised in a liberal environment but quickly rebelled. As a teenager, he ranted against multiculturalism, bilingual education, and diversity initiatives at his majority-minority high school. In one now-infamous quote to his classmates:

"If you love Mexico so much, why don’t you go back there?"
At Duke University, Miller found ideological soulmates among far-right figures — including white nationalist Richard Spencer, who would later brag:

"Stephen and I were thick as thieves. He has always been on the edge of the far right."
Far from distancing himself from racial resentment, Miller embraced it. It became his currency.

The Congressional Staffer Who Weaponized White Grievance

Working under racist firebrand Senator Jeff Sessions, Miller honed his skills. His mission was clear. Demonize immigrants. Halt diversity. Stoke white anxiety. While most staffers toiled in anonymity, Miller made a name for himself drafting incendiary speeches, authoring anti-immigration legislation, and pushing a narrative that America’s white majority was "under siege." Former Senate colleagues described him as “joyful” when crafting cruel immigration bills and “obsessed with demographics.”

Inside the Trump White House: Cruelty Was the Point

When Miller joined Trump’s 2016 campaign, he found the perfect vehicle for his worldview. Inside the West Wing, he became the most powerful and dangerous aide no one voted for. He didn’t just whisper ideas — he wrote the scripts and designed the policies.

Signature Miller Projects:

  • The Muslim Ban
    Wrote the legal framework banning travelers from majority-Muslim countries.
"It’s not just about terrorism — it’s about cultural compatibility."
  • Family Separation
    Engineered the “Zero Tolerance” policy ripping thousands of children from their parents at the border.
"Deterrence only works if it’s painful."
  • Ending Legal Immigration
    Slashed refugee caps to historic lows, pushed policies to deny green cards to poor immigrants, and sought to eliminate asylum protections.
His open hostility to immigrants was so extreme that Trump himself reportedly had to occasionally "soften" Miller’s proposals to avoid political backlash.

WTF is all this shit? Miller is a Jew, not a Hitler or Grand Wizard. Honestly, WTF is wrong with you?!?
 
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