Rick Wiles is a virulent antisemite, violent right-wing conspiracy theorist, and End Times broadcaster. He is now running for Congress in Florida. bit.ly/3xULJOS
In less than one minute, Benny Johnson manages to make multiple false claims about Benjamin Franklin and the Constitutional Convention. bit.ly/3xoWatK
1. Benjamin Franklin did not preside over the Constitutional Convention, George Washington did.
2. This was not from a “prayer” delivered by Franklin “at the opening” of the Convention, but rather from a speech Franklin delivered on June 28, 1787, over a month into the convention.
While GOP officials and right-wing activists relentlessly attack Democrats and LGBTQ people as pedophiles and “groomers,” Milo Yiannopoulos has been alleging that "Stop The Steal" organizer Ali Alexander has a long history of propositioning underage males.
Last night, Milo posted allegations from a groyper who claims that Ali solicited sexually explicit images from him when he was 15. That person has since identified himself as America First activist "Smiley."
You might recall "Smiley" from the clip we posted last year in which he and fellow AF activist "Woozuh" voiced their incel outrage over the latest Batman movie.
More than a dozen members of Congress joined hundreds of Christian nationalists and religious-right activists at the Museum of the Bible this morning for a "National Gathering for Prayer and Repentance."
Among the speakers was right-wing pastor Andrew Brunson, who blasted the United States as "the primary corrupter of the world" because "our government and corporations increasingly march under the rainbow flag."
Speakers also included two "ex-gay" activists who begged God to cleanse the nation of "the sins of homosexuality, lesbianism, bisexuality, and sex confusion."
Fuentes wasn’t the only one who had his Twitter account reinstated today. Antisemite Patrick Howley is back on Twitter. Here he was in January of last year:
Liz Crokin—a Pizzagate and QAnon conspiracy theorist—was also recently allowed back on Twitter. She immediately began peddling the far-right Pizzagate conspiracy theory.