Will Syria rockets wake up Trumptards?

Started by yankeedoodle, April 14, 2018, 12:23:21 PM

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yankeedoodle

Good stuff from Goon Squad:
Trumptards, Why did Your Dear Leader Bomb Syria? Because he's a Jew Pet
http://careandwashingofthebrain.blogspot.com/2018/04/trumptards-why-did-your-dear-leader.html





Trump is the president of the JEWnited States of America, not the USA. He's been a Jew Pet from the beginning, installed in office because the ones who really control this nation knew that he could distract the sheeple better than that washed-up whore Hillary.



Now he's committed an act of war against a nation that has not threatened or attacked the USA, but a nation that the Jew Inc wants destroyed.



So go ahead and live in your fantasy world, babbling that Trump is playing 80d chess or some such nonsense.

Be sure to kiss as much Jew ass as possible, maybe they'll let you live when they take complete control of the USA and start sending people off to slave labor camps or one-way trips to the local quarry.



My guess is that Jew Inc has a BIG nasty in store for its American GOYIM, another 9/11 style massacre that will frame Iran and Syria, giving Trump the Mad the excuse to wage total war against those nations for his Jew Overlords.

yankeedoodle

You have to begin to think this whole thing is a sham, when you read that All-excrement Jones is critcizing shabbos goy Donnie-boy over this event.

Conservative pundits hammer Trump for US-led strikes in Syria
https://www.rt.com/usa/424158-trump-supporters-criticize-syria-strikes/?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=aplication_chrome&utm_campaign=chrome

In the wake of US-led airstrikes against Syria following an alleged chemical weapons attack in Douma, many of US President Donald Trump's most ardent supporters have vehemently criticized the action.

Conservative writers, bloggers and newscasters that have long stood by Trump are abandoning the president in the wake of his latest intervention in Syria for breaking one of his main campaign promises: to refrain from meddling in the Middle East. Many have even retweeted several of Trump's own criticisms of past administrations' actions in the Middle East as a reminder of just how galling these latest strikes are to many in his support base.

While many of his supporters voiced their criticism of Trump's 'one-and-done' strike against a Syrian airfield in April 2017, others saw it as a token gesture to appease the international community in the wake of an alleged chemical weapons attack carried out by pro-Assad forces. US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis admitted in early February that the US had yet to find evidence to justify the 2017 cruise missile strikes.

Conservative firebrand and Fox News host Tomi Lahren, a vocal supporter of Trump since his election, decried the return to US foreign intervention that became the hallmark of both the Bush and Obama presidencies.

Lahren's Fox News counterpart and equally outspoken political commentator Laura Ingraham suggested that the US "should rethink how we deploy our forces Middle East."

"It is interesting, the president's elected over a year ago, he ran on being a non-interventionist... And that's one of the reasons Trump won this election. Because unlike the Bushes and unlike Romney and Rubio, Trump came out and said, 'You know something? It was a mistake, and we should rethink how we deploy our forces Middle East.' And I think, obviously a lot of people, a majority of people, agree with that."

Outspoken political commentator Alex Jones appeared distraught while presenting news of the strikes to his audience during a marathon broadcast on the subject. And Jones was far from alone in resorting to swearing to emphasize distaste for a foreign policy more akin to Trump's former presidential campaign rivals than the promises he himself made in 2016.

Others warned that the US had endangered Christian populations in Syria. In addition, several formerly ardent Trump supporters added that the actions could also embolden beleaguered Islamic State militants, who have been pushed to the brink of defeat across both Syria and Iraq.

Even Trump's foreign allies and supporters have excoriated the US president's decision to strike the Syrian military and further escalate tensions in the region just days after Trump stated that a withdrawal of US troops was imminent. Most notable among them was former UKIP leader Nigel Farage.

However, not everyone has abandoned Trump. His more fervent supporters have claimed that the US fulfils a role that no other nation can, while others have attacked his critics, advocating for the unilateral action even in the absence of congressional approval.