Rep. Steve King’s campaign ties Parkland’s Emma González to ‘communist’ Cuba

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Rep. Steve King’s campaign ties Parkland’s Emma González to ‘communist’ Cuba

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By Samantha Schmidt March 26 at 3:52 AM Email the author
Facebook page for the campaign of a U.S. congressman — Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa).

“This is how you look when you claim Cuban heritage yet don’t speak Spanish and ignore the fact that your ancestors fled the island when the dictatorship turned Cuba into a prison camp, after removing all weapons from its citizens; hence their right to self defense,” said the post, which also included a photo of González at the podium Saturday.

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The meme, which was posted by King’s campaign team, prompted hundreds of comments, many of them criticizing the congressman and defending González.

“Are you SERIOUSLY mocking a school shooting survivor for her ethnic identity?!” wrote Brandon Wolf, a survivor of the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando. “When it was my community, where were you? When it was Sandy Hook? Columbine? Were you on the sideline mocking those communities too? Did you question someone identifying as a mother? Did you question whether people like me were crisis actors?

“Emma stood for 6 mins and 20 seconds to honor the lives of 17 gone too soon,” Wolf added. “The least you could do is shut your privileged, ineffective trap for 6 seconds to hear someone else’s perspective.”

King’s campaign team promptly and defiantly fired back at individual comments, creating a heated exchange on the Facebook post.

“Pointing out the irony of someone wearing the flag of a communist country while simultaneously calling for gun control isn’t ‘picking’ on anyone,” the campaign team responded to Wolf’s comment. “It’s calling attention to the truth, but we understand that lefties find that offensive.”

Reached for comment early Monday by The Washington Post, a spokesman for King’s campaign said that the King for Congress Facebook page is managed by the campaign team, not the congressman himself.

“And the meme in question obviously isn’t an attack on her ‘heritage’ in any way,” the spokesman wrote in an email. “It merely points out the irony of someone pushing gun control while wearing the flag of a country that was oppressed by a communist, anti-gun regime. Pretty simple, really.”

[ A fake photo of Emma González went viral on the far right, where Parkland teens are villains ]

2:07

‘Crisis actors’: Online forums attack Parkland students with conspiracy theories
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Conspiracy theorists have questioned the credibility of the Parkland shooting survivors. This is how the theories entered the mainstream.(Elyse Samuels/The Washington Post)

González has become a prominent face of the student-led movement against gun violence since the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. And she has not been shy about explaining her various identities.

“My Name is Emma González. I’m 18 years old, Cuban and bisexual,” she wrote in an essay in Harper’s Bazaar last month. “But none of this matters anymore. What matters is that the majority of American people have become complacent in a senseless injustice that occurs all around them.”

Her father immigrated to New York from Cuba in 1968, Univision has reported. Emma was born in the United States. As Univision wrote, González does not speak Spanish, “but her voice reveals the heritage of the communicative passion of mixed Hispanics with oratory skills perfected at school.”

Other images attacking the teenager’s Cuban heritage circulated in conservative circles online.

“Emma Gonzales, wearing the flag of an authoritarian communist nation. Makes sense, they both hate an armed citizenry,” stated one meme shared on Reddit’s conservative page r/TheDonald. It was shared on social media through variations of the theme, including one by conservative commentator Andrew Wilkow.

Critics made other attempts to discredit González over the weekend, most prominently through a fake photo of the teenager tearing the U.S. Constitution in half. The doctored image and animation was lifted from a Teen Vogue story about teenage activists. In the real image, González is ripping apart a gun-range target.

Earlier this month, a Republican candidate for the Maine state House, Leslie Gibson, described González as a “skinhead lesbian,” referencing her short buzz cut.

“There is nothing about this skinhead lesbian that impresses me and there is nothing that she has to say unless you’re a frothing at the mouth moonbat,” Gibson wrote in a tweet, which was later deleted.

Gibson, who was running unopposed for Maine’s House, so outraged other politicians that two entered the race to oppose him. Gibson then quit as a candidate.

In her Harper’s Bazaar essay, González addressed the adults who have criticized the Parkland student activists, writing that “if you have ever felt what it’s like to deal with all of this, you would know we aren’t doing this for attention.

“If these funerals were for your friends, you would know this grief is real, not paid for,” she said. “We are children who are being expected to act like adults, while the adults are proving themselves to behave like children.”

The Des Moines Register, in an editorial the day before the Parkland shootings, called on Iowa Republicans to oust King in the 2018 Republican primary, calling him “one of the least effective members of Congress” who “thrives” on “outlandish” and “incendiary observations.”

King is known for making inflammatory remarks about immigrants. In April of last year, he posted a photo of a beer on Twitter, offering a toast to immigration authorities for deporting a “dreamer.”

A month earlier, he commended nationalist Dutch politician Geert Wilders with a tweet saying, “We can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies.” He had previously celebrated Wilders, stating that “cultural suicide by demographic transformation must end.”

And in 2012, he compared vetting immigrants to picking out a hunting dog.

“You want a good bird dog? You want one that’s going to be aggressive? Pick the one that’s the friskiest,” he said at a town hall, “not the one that’s over there sleeping in the corner.”
 
Rep. Steve King’s campaign ties Parkland’s Emma González to ‘communist’ Cuba

And then this mofo . . .


Ted Nugent: Parkland teens attacking the NRA have 'no soul'

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mar 31, 2018

WireAP_e07db8eeb57d4c4282d10edbbeceee5e_12x5_608.jpg
The Associated Press
FILE - In this Nov. 7, 2016 file photo, musician Ted Nugent performs before Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump comes on stage for his campaign rally before the general election, in the Grand Gallery at DeVos Place in Grand Rapids, Mich. Nugent says the Florida students calling for gun control have “no soul” and are “mushy brained children.” He made the comments Friday while defending the National Rifle Association as a guest on the Joe Pags Show, a nationally syndicated conservative radio program. Nugent, an NRA board member, said survivors of the Parkland school shooting are wrong to blame the NRA for mass shootings.(Joel Bissell/The Grand Rapids Press via AP, File)more +


Rocker Ted Nugent says the Florida students calling for gun control have "no soul" and are "mushy brained children."

The 69-year-old made the comments Friday while defending the National Rifle Association as a guest on the Joe Pags show, a nationally syndicated conservative radio program.

Nugent, a longtime member of the NRA's board of directors, said survivors of the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School are wrong to blame the NRA and its members for mass shootings.

"These poor children, I'm afraid to say, it hurts me to say, but the evidence is irrefutable: They have no soul," Nugent said. He added that the gun control measures the students support amount to "spiritual suicide" and "will cause more death and mayhem."

A representative for Nugent did not respond to a request for comment on Saturday.

Some Parkland students responded on social media and demanded an apology.

"If only he saw all the tears. If only he had to look into the eyes I've looked into. If only he saw what this did to all of us," junior Cameron Kasky said on Twitter. "And here the NRA is, receiving more fear-based donations than ever. Talk about 'no soul.' This guy better apologize. Seriously."

Senior Kyra Parrow said it's funny that the NRA rails against bullying while Nugent was "being a 5 year old acting like a bully" to her and her classmates.

Nugent made the comments the same day several advertisers dropped Fox News personality Laura Ingraham after she mocked a survivor of the Parkland shooting online.

Ingraham said Friday she will take a weeklong "Easter break" with her children while guest hosts fill in on her show, "The Ingraham Angle."

She drew backlash Wednesday when she shared an article on Twitter saying student David Hogg had been rejected by four colleges and was whining about it. She later apologized and said Hogg should be proud of his grades.
 
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