opponent j. d. vance has previously spoken against immigration to the u.s. by invoking the language of white replacement theory. that theory is predicated on the idea of white extinction, the idea that white americans will be replaced by a non-white population, one that will extinguish white culture and tradition. the conspiracy theory is also antisemitic, many of its components falsely claiming that the jewish political ball is behind the order to achieve power. the theory uses the language of immigrant invasion and voter replacement to try to scare people into believing this ridiculous conspiracy, and now we are hearing echoes of this language repeatedly in this midterm campaign cycle. candidates like j. d. vance, his surrogate marjorie taylor greene and arizona senate candidate, blake masters, has all use that language about the
the idea that white americans will be replaced by a nonwhite population that will ex tinge tradition. and many claim a jewish-led cabal is behind the plot for power. the theory use voter replacement to try and scare people into believing this ridiculous conspiracy. and now we re hearing echoes of this language repeatedly in this midterm cycle. candidates like j.d. vance. his surgt, congresswoman marjorie taylor greene and arizona senator blake masters has all used that language of the invasion and coming of armageddon for nonwhites to campaign for national office. we have an invasion in this country because very powerful people get richer and more powerful because of it. joe biden s 5 million illegal aliens are on the verge of replacing you, replacing your jobs and replacing your kids in school. and coming from all over the world, they re also replacing
how has the effort been so senator what needs to be done. it s been very overwhelming couple of weeks dating back to mid-may. we began ring alarm as what we saw is the very foreseeable spread of monkeypox in our community. we coordinated with public health but we didn t have access to vaccine and now this this moment where we ve had to declare a public health emergency, it s harkening back to the early days of the aids epidemic when san francisco was abandoned by the federal government in our public health crisis among men who have sex with men. yeah, i mean, you you predicted this, and so, you know, there are a lot of people right now who are upset over the fact that they want a vaccine and can t get up. a 68-year-old man on the waiting list said, quote, i m feeling apprehensive. he said many residents like him are hearing echoes of the aids crisis. they are questioning whether the current mindset is it s just
every eight years, the idea of a comprehensive, immigration reform package, seeming so far away from the state, here, in 2022. what do you see in the language that is being used, by politicians, who are, and now, looking at the midterms, right now? what i am hearing is, really, this newer strain. it is these two issues, that are emerging. illegal immigration, and this belief in lies, that the 2020 election is stolen from president trump. you are hearing more echoes with, this grand replacement theory, this conspiracy theory, that black and brown immigrants are coming into the country to replace white people. you are hearing echoes not even echoes, you are hearing this rhetoric of invasion. you hear these very old beliefs that, to confer this old language, that conflates illegal immigration in crime, but you also get this new restrain, which is that unauthorized immigrants are crossing the border, to vote, specifically, to vote democrat.
theory, this conspiracy theory, that black and brown immigrants are coming into the country to replace white people. you are hearing echoes not even echoes, you are hearing this rhetoric of invasion. you hear these very old beliefs that, to confer this old language, that conflates illegal immigration in crime, but you also get this new restrain, which is that unauthorized immigrants are crossing the border, to vote, specifically, to vote democrat. so, as you said, it s in this basis that voter fraud is extremely rare. but, also, the data that we do have, what immigrants do vote, when we saw in the last election, is in cities where there were larger immigrant populations, it was actually a turn to the right. is wrong and more ways than one. the data is not there, and both conflation s you bring up. we were mentoring it earlier in today s our. so, on top of that, as this