DISINFO: In the US, white Americans are demonised and erase themselves
SUMMARY
In the US, white Americans are demonised and erase themselves. In America today, white Gentiles (not Jews) are in a far more vulnerable position than Jews were in Nazi Germany. The US Democratic government has put a target on the backs of white Americans. Liberal Gentile intellectuals and cultural Marxist Jews have worked to deconstruct America and deprive white Americans of their roots.
RESPONSE
This article contains recurring pro-Kremlin narratives about the alleged victimisation of white Americans, about the current US government's alleged hostility towards the white American population and about the alleged hostility of the new democratic government against the fundamental values of the United States.
These disinformation narratives have been frequently spread by pro-Kremlin outlets since the US racial justice protests erupted in May-June of 2020 and fit into a broader disinformation narrative about the imminent disintegration of the United States.
Attempts to exaggerate, fuel and exploit racial tensions in the US date back to the USSR and are continued by contemporary pro-Kremlin media outlets. The reactionary Russian political theorist Alexander Dugin has written explicitly on the benefits of operationalising American racial conflicts for Russian benefit in his 1997 book The Foundations of Geopolitics, stating that “It is especially important to introduce geopolitical disorder into internal American activity, encouraging all kinds of separatism and ethnic, social and racial conflicts, actively supporting all dissident movements—extremist, racist, and sectarian groups, thus destabilizing internal political processes in the U.S.”
Read similar cases claiming that In the US, white American citizens are demonised and are viewed as racists and fascists, Democratic Party is disintegrating the United States by attacking the white population, or that White Americans may be deprived of their legal and constitutional rights, even their lives.