Patrick Little Running Against Sen. Feinsten For California Senate

Started by maz, May 01, 2018, 01:51:02 PM

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maz

The fact that this guy is even polling at 21% is pretty incredible.

Top Senate challenger in California is white supremacist with anti-Semitic agenda

QuoteA top challenger to longtime U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California is a white supremacist who espouses anti-Semitic views.

Patrick Little, a Republican, is polling at 18 percent behind Feinstein, a Democrat who has served more than four terms in the Senate. Feinstein is polling at 39 percent in the race, which will pit the top-two vote-getters against each other in the general election in November.

The primary is set for June 5.

Little has been endorsed by former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke, but has complained that "alt-right" media outlets such as The Daily Stormer have not been supportive of his campaign.

Right Wing Watch outed Little's white supremacist views in an article last week.

In a campaign video posted to YouTube earlier this week, Little said he "woke up to the Jewish question and dedicated my life to exposing these Jews that control our country."

In a post last month on his blog, Little wrote: "We all want what has been taboo until now to say aloud, we want to be around other whites, safe from non-whites. But unless we start voicing that sentiment regularly at the ballot box, all of the places we have retreated to will be eventually overrun by non-whites."

Little on his Twitter account has accused Israel's Mossad intelligence agency of playing a leading role in the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and said that "No man in history saved more Jewish lives than Adolf Hitler." His Twitter account was suspended earlier this year over statements amounting to Holocaust denial.


I was following this guy on Twitter before I got banned and he had done some interesting work. I don't know much of anything about him, other than that.

On a side note, I have never seen  Right Wing Watch before but I have heard others mention it.

Looks like just another homosexual attack blog just like ThinkProgress or Raw Story.

QuoteAbout

Right Wing Watch is a project of People For the American Way (PFAW) dedicated to monitoring and exposing the activities and rhetoric of right-wing activists and organizations in order to expose their extreme agenda. Our researchers monitor dozens of broadcasts, emails and websites, and use their expertise on right-wing movements to analyze and distill that information for media, allies and the general public. By shedding light on the activities of the right-wing movement, we help expose the risks its extreme and intolerant agenda presents to our country. We do not endorse the views of groups that we report on.

People For the American Way is a progressive advocacy organization founded to fight right-wing extremism and defend constitutional values including free expression, religious liberty, equal justice under the law, and the right to meaningfully participate in our democracy. You can learn more about PFAW's work on our website at www.pfaw.org.

This site may also include postings by our affiliate People For the American Way Foundation and will be so designated.



maz



I haven't heard Ry's interview yet. His YouTube channel could get shoah'd because of the interview though.




yankeedoodle

Patrick Little will be interviewed on the USS Liberty Massacre Hour show, on the Rense Radio Network, tomorrow, Thursday, May 31, 2018, at 5:06pm, Eastern US time (21:06 UTC), at this link: 
http://www.gsradio.net/rense_live/rense_56k/top.html

QuoteOur guest is . . .Pat Little

Marine Corps vet wants to put America first and get out of foreign entanglements

A video https://www.bitchute.com/video/fpuE09F35XU9/ of a U.S. Senate candidate scraping his shoes and spitting on an Israeli flag went viral, with a lot of people asking: "Who is this guy?"

So, we caught up with this mystery candidate, who's running in The Golden State to replace 84-year-old Dianne Goldman Berman Feinstein, the oldest currently serving U.S. senator.

Feinstein, who has "served" in the Senate since winning a special election in 1992, is known for her ultra-liberal positions as well as her anti-Second Amendment stance. She authored the 1994 Federal Assault Weapons Ban, which expired in 2004, and tried to do it again in 2013, after the suspicious Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. This attempt failed to pass. Feinstein is also a multimillionaire, with a net worth of over $100 million.

Patrick Little, 34, who's polling in second place in California's senate election, was born in New Hampshire but grew up in Maine. He studied overseas for a year in Germany, majored in international business at a U.S. university, received a corporate accounting degree, and decided to get in shape to join the U.S. Marine Corps.

"My father was a Marine Corps veteran of Vietnam," Patrick said. "He was in the Tet Offensive, and sometimes when he got some drinks in him he would talk about Vietnam and it just broke my heart to hear what had happened to him."

Little was stationed at Camp Leatherneck, the 1,600-acre base in Helmand Province, Afghanistan.

"I was part of a combat logistics battalion where I spent my entire active duty career," Little said, "and deployed to Afghanistan for Operation Enduring Freedom. I was a Data Network Specialist. I did my four-year honorable contract, got out as a sergeant, and was honorably discharged."

It was soon after that that Little began to question the motives of the "war on terror."

"I was not aware of Jewish supremacists' control our country, this Jewish oligarchy, this international clique that runs our country," he explained.

"I read The Culture of Critique," he said. "I spent the first half of the book trying to disprove everything. Could not disprove a single thing. Most of the things can be verified from Jewish sources. I couldn't believe what was in the book."

Little was referring to The Culture of Critique: An Evolutionary Analysis of Jewish Involvement in Twentieth-Century Intellectual and Political Movements, by Dr. Kevin B. MacDonald.

"If you read [the book]," he continued, "you'll understand exactly what has happened to our family unit and how it's intentional. It's not just, 'Oh, it's worse with every generation,' or 'These kids keep getting worse,' as the old timers sometimes say. It's designed. It's a critical theory applied to human societies. This is a deliberate destruction of functional, traditional societies, so that it's easier for a tyrannical group of oligarchs to rule over us."

He decided to put what he had learned into action.

"I finished the book," he said, "and decided, you know what, you can't just sit around reading about Jewish supremacism and Zionism, I gotta go wake people up. In the summer I decided somebody needed to run against Feinstein."

Things happened fast for Little, and on April 24, SurveyUSA, a U.S. polling firm that conducts opinion polls for political candidates and issues, released the results of a poll conducted over the previous week, ranking him in second place—out of 32 candidates—with 18%. Feinstein received 39% and the closest Republican was a full 10 points behind Little. He was also leading the president pro tempore of the California State Senate, Kevin de León, by the same margin.

"At this point, the news blew up," explained Little, "neo-Nazi this, neo-Nazi that."

On May 2, the "fake news" magazine, Newsweek, the failed print publication that transitioned to an all-digital format in 2012, published a hit piece entitled, "Republican Senate Candidate Praises Hitler and Sparks Condemnation from California GOP," calling Little an "extremist." The "article" was timed to have maximum impact before the California Republican Party (CAGOP) convention at the Sheraton San Diego Hotel & Marina on May 5.

"I show up to the convention," Little said, "because I'm the top-polling Republican candidate by more than twice the support of anyone else."

His trouble started when he purchased two passes at the VIP registration booth, reserved for leading candidates.

"They processed my credit card until someone figured out I'm the guy that they'd been smearing in the media," he said, "and they said to me right after they processed my credit card, 'Oh, were sorry that the payment processing is down; we can't process your credit card.'"

This in spite of the fact that Little got an email on his cell phone in real time that the payment had been processed.

"They pretty much stole $130 from me," he said.

The CAGOP's next step was to distance themselves from Little.

The failed, disgraced Los Angeles Times—purchased this year by a Chinese industrialist—which has seen its circulation plummet from around 1.2 million in 1990 to less than half that today (still, the fourth-largest circulation among U.S. newspapers), reported that "An anti-Semitic GOP Senate candidate was kicked out of the California Republican Party's convention in San Diego on Saturday morning, with one witness saying he was dragging and kicking an Israeli flag while being escorted out."

Patrick explained what happened while he was still inside the hotel.

"I shot a little video where I said, 'They're kicking me out here. They're calling security to remove me, because I won't leave voluntarily, because I would like to speak for an hour or two in front of the audience, the GOP here, I'm the leading candidate.' I came here with a whole speech to deliver, and I said, 'I'm being removed because I won't support a foreign country.'"

He complied with their request to leave, but not before letting them know his views.

"On the way approaching the door," he said, "I reached into a little bag I had with me and pulled out an Israeli flag that I had all unfurled, and I threw it under my foot and I said, 'I'm dragging this thing out the door with me.' So, I dragged it under my foot the whole way out to the edge of the property line, and then security made me move even further away, all the way out to the sidewalk. And at that point, the police had been called on me."

The two San Diego cops, both military vets, simply asked Little not to burn the Zionist flag, although he had no lighter nor any intention to do so.

Little made a video soon after, the video that went around the world.

"My blood was up; I probably sounded a little angry," he said. "I did not expect to get kicked out, especially having been the leading candidate by more than twice the margin of the other challengers. I got emails from all over the world showing their support and solidarity against Jewish supremacism and Zionism."

Californians go to the polls on June 5 to vote in the primaries, and the one thing Patrick needs more than anything else is money, especially if he wins the GOP primary.

"During this primary election the most I can receive from any person's combined contributions is $2,700 and zero cents," Patrick explained.

After the primary, no limits apply, thanks to Citizens United v. FEC.

"This train isn't stopping," he said, "even if they somehow keep me out of the top two in this primary. So, if you can help spread the word or you can spare some funds, littlerevolution.us/donate has all the information you need. Anything helps."   

maz

 <:^0

Anti-Semitic Senate Candidate Patrick Little Now Polling At 0%

QuotePatrick Little, the white supremacist candidate running as a Republican in the upcoming California Senate race, polled at 0% in a recent survey — a far cry from the 18% he received last month.

Little, who has called for a government "free from Jews," ended last month's poll from SurveyUSA in a surprising second place, behind incumbent Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein. But a new poll released by the same company on May 24 showed support for him at minimal levels.

Polling experts believed that last month's result was an anomaly, the result of SurveyUSA only listing him and one other Republican candidate rather than the party's full list of 11 hopefuls. But the ensuing infamy did him no favors: He was condemned by the California Republican Party and banned from their convention.

The top two vote-getters in the June 5 primary will advance to the general election regardless of party. Feinstein, who is Jewish, is expected to easily advance to the final vote in November — she received support from 36% of respondents. Behind here were Democrat Kevin de Leon at 11% and Republican James Bradley at 9%. Some 21% of voters announced that they were still undecided.

Read more: https://forward.com/fast-forward/402061/anti-semitic-senate-candidate-patrick-little-now-polling-at-0/