NORTON META TAG

06 June 2026

Trump tears apart his number two and refuses to crown him as MAGA's future 30MAI26

 

AFTER all the ass licking of NOT MY pres drumpf's/trump's ass NOT MY vp vance has done he is finding out he isn't going to receive drumpf's/trump's "blessing" or inherit the fascist magat cabal. DON'T cry jd, your mascara and eyeliner will run!!!!! From AlterNet.....

Trump tears apart his number two and refuses to crown him as MAGA's future


Ken Paxton Insists God Is Male. The Bible Says Not Quite 2JUN26

 



HOW sad so many are so insecure they have to assign a gender to our Christian God when one is not assigned in the Bible. When I have been asked if God is male I go with imago dei and tell the questioner to look in a mirror, if  they see a man then God is a man, if they see a woman then God is a woman. We are all created in the image of God and I believe this is something we should keep in mind in our encounters and relationships with each other. I believe the world would be a much better place if we did. Oh, and ken paxton, since you like to bring up God, what does the Bible say about adultery? This from Sojourners.....

Ken Paxton Insists God Is Male. The Bible Says Not Quite


Jun 2, 2026

Ken Paxton and James Talarico are making headlines in unexpected ways in Texas as part of the two political opponents’ campaigns. The political direction of the state is on the line, but a millennia-old theological debate has taken center stage: What is God’s gender?

It’s bold of Paxton to double down on the theologically contentious premise that God is male, a response to Talarico’s declaration on the Texas House floor that “God is nonbinary.” But Talarico is right—God is not exclusively defined as male in scripture.

Let’s start at the beginning, with Genesis 1:27: “So God created humans in his image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.” As we see here, it’s true that the Bible often uses male pronouns to refer to God, but the point of this verse is that God’s image is reflected in different genders. The verse uses what’s called a “merism,” a figure of speech combining two contrasting parts to express totality or completeness. In this case, Genesis describes how humans are all created in God’s image, meaning all genders represent the imago dei.

That’s not the only place in the Hebrew Bible where God shows up as something beyond a distinctly male entity. As God led the Israelites away from Egypt after Pharaoh finally agreed to let them go, “the Lord went in front of them in a pillar of cloud by day, to lead them along the way, and in a pillar of fire by night, to give them light, so that they might travel by day and by night.” (Exodus 13:21) It’s important to note both the pillar of cloud and pillar of fire are gender-neutral forms that God chose for leading God’s people to safety and the use of the word “Lord” in the same verse. It indicates that, at least as far as the Israelites of this time were concerned, their image of God was not an old, bearded man in the sky, but a guiding spirit with no distinct gender.

As Rabbi Arthur Green notes in “Judaism’s Ten Best Ideas” the term “Y-H-W-H”—a representation of God’s name that many Jewish people consider to be taboo to speak—was later substituted in scripture with the term adonay, meaning “my lord,” about two thousand years ago. This act of pious submission was good in its intent of showing love and reverence to God, but it led people to begin conflating God with images of elderly noblemen. Green describes this conflation as religion sliding into idolatry. The Jewish Publication Society recently published “The JPS Tanakh: Gender-Sensitive Edition”, a translation of the Hebrew Bible that begins to address some of these discrepancies.

Rev. Chloe Specht notes that the writers of scripture we are able to identify today were largely men with immense privilege, writing with a hyper-patriarchal cultural lens. “Since the Bible is a tool of God’s self-revelation, it’s important to consider all the ways that God is described in scripture and avoid focusing solely on the masculine pronouns ascribed to God,” Specht wrote. God also refers to Godself with feminine metaphors throughout scripture, including the image of God as a mother bear defending her cubs (Hosea 13:8) and as a mother comforting her child (Isaiah 66:13).

The gender of the Holy Spirit is also ambiguous, with many feminine and genderless representations in scripture. The terms used for “spirit” in the Hebrew Bible are grammatically feminine, though scholars are still debating the contextual gender of God in those instances. In any case, it’s clear that the writers of the Hebrew Bible did not feel the need to stress the masculine gender of God in all forms, opting for a more complex gender representation of the divine. And in Greek, the term used for the Holy Spirit is the gender-neutral, pneuma hagion.

While Jesus was a man, it makes sense that when God chose to enter human life, God picked the gender that would allow Jesus to be taken seriously as a leader in the patriarchal society of the Roman era. But as we’ve seen, the other two members of the trinity have no body and are portrayed with a complex and diverse array of gender.

Given all this, it seems far more likely that God, as a spirit, is at once genderfluid and agender, instead of entirely male from the beginning of time to the present day.

Paxton might insist that God in all forms is male, but those who are steeped in scriptural context and original biblical languages know that to call God entirely male is unbiblical and just fundamentally incorrect. It’s also an unimaginative way to ascribe human traits to a God who we can never know in God’s entirety during our human lifetimes.

Paxton’s claims serve only to reinforce modern conservative conceptualizations of gender while preserving the identity politics of those who align with him. In doing so, he erases the experiences of those who are facing oppression because of their gender instead of seeing and siding with the oppressed, as Jesus calls Christians to do. 

Paxton can insist that God is a man all he likes, but he can’t change the teaching of the Bible or the experience of the people he claims to want to represent if elected to the U.S. Senate. To lead well in representing the full range of people who would be his constituents, Paxton would need to take a more Godly approach: embracing all of their genders.

Heather Brady is the audience engagement manager at Sojourners.

Minnesota Republicans Hold Moment of Silence for Ex-Officer Convicted of Murder 1JUN26

 


THIS is disgusting but not surprising considering this is the party that stands by a convicted felon, a sexual predator and a child rapist as their but NOT MY pres drumpf/trump. There will be some of this neo-nazi fascist "christian" nationalist authoritarian lot who will claim they do not support this action by the Minnesota gop/guardians of prejudice-republican party, but if they remain members of and or candidates of the party they are confirming their complicity and support of hate, prejudice, bigotry, racism, police violence, fascism and fear mongering. From the New York Times.....

Minnesota Republicans Hold Moment of Silence for Ex-Officer Convicted of Murder


Delegates to the Minnesota Republican Party’s convention voted to hold a moment of silence for Derek Chauvin, who was convicted of murdering George Floyd.


Delegates to the Minnesota Republican Party’s convention held a moment of silence over the weekend for Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapolis police officer, six years after he murdered George Floyd and touched off a national reckoning over policing and race.

The decision brought searing criticism from Democrats, who accused the Republicans of disrespecting the courts and Mr. Floyd’s memory. In recent years, some conservatives have sought to reshape the narrative around Mr. Floyd’s killing and have pushed President Trump to pardon Mr. Chauvin for his federal conviction.

Christopher Rocco, a delegate from St. Paul who goes by the name Rocco, proposed the moment of silence on Saturday morning, describing Mr. Chauvin to his fellow delegates as someone “who should get a state retrial, who should get a federal pardon.” Audio of the exchange was recorded by The Minnesota Reformer, a local news outlet.

When a voice vote was held on a motion for a moment of silence or prayer, many people in the room could be heard yelling aye. The nays were far quieter.

“It wasn’t even close,” said State Representative Danny Nadeau, who presided over that portion of the convention, where about 2,300 delegates gathered in Duluth to make endorsements in state elections.

Mr. Rocco said he had decided to seek recognition of Mr. Chauvin after coming to the conclusion that the former officer had not received a fair trial in state court.

Mr. Rocco said that he did not have any personal connection to Mr. Chauvin, and that no candidate or member of the Republican Party’s leadership had asked him to make the motion.

“I made that decision to do that, to stand up for someone who doesn’t have the ability to stand up for himself anymore — someone who, in my opinion, faced injustice,” Mr. Rocco said in a phone interview.

Mr. Nadeau said he chose to make the moment of silence last only a few seconds, “the minimum amount necessary.” Before starting the session that morning, he said he had told Mr. Rocco that he would prefer he not pursue a moment of silence.

“It’s not a good look, in my opinion,” said Mr. Nadeau, whose district is in suburban Minneapolis.

Democrats noted that the decision to recognize Mr. Chauvin came within days of the anniversary of Mr. Floyd’s death.

“They cannot run from this,” said the Minnesota attorney general, Keith Ellison, a Democrat who prosecuted Mr. Chauvin in state court in 2021. “They either are OK with what happened or they’re going to denounce it. I haven’t seen one person denounce it. I haven’t seen one person say, ‘That was a bad, ugly thing.’”

Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci, lawyers who represented the Floyd family, called the moment of silence “disgusting.”

“They cannot run from this,” said the Minnesota attorney general, Keith Ellison, a Democrat who prosecuted Mr. Chauvin in state court in 2021. “They either are OK with what happened or they’re going to denounce it. I haven’t seen one person denounce it. I haven’t seen one person say, ‘That was a bad, ugly thing.’”

Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci, lawyers who represented the Floyd family, called the moment of silence “disgusting.”

Mr. Floyd, who was Black, was killed in 2020 when Minneapolis police officers, including Mr. Chauvin, responded to a call that Mr. Floyd had used a counterfeit bill. Mr. Floyd defied the officers’ efforts to put him into a squad car, and in the ensuing struggle Mr. Chauvin knelt on Mr. Floyd’s neck for nearly 10 minutes as he pleaded to be released and eventually stopped breathing. Horrified bystanders, filming on their cellphones, captured videos that were quickly seen around the world.

Mr. Chauvin, who is white, was convicted of murder in state court and pleaded guilty to a civil rights crime in federal court. He is serving a prison sentence of more than 20 years.

Asked about the moment of silence by a reporter for WCCO Radio, Alex Plechash, the chairman of the Minnesota Republican Party, said that “there are a lot of people, I think, that believe that Derek Chauvin was improperly convicted and not treated well.”

Mr. Plechash said in an emailed statement that it had been “a spontaneous motion brought forward from the convention floor” and “was not a statement from party leadership.”

“To be clear, party leadership did not support this motion,” he said.

Justin Malone, the chairman of the Republican Party of Otter Tail County, said that he was busy getting his delegates seated at the time of the vote and had chosen not to weigh in. He said some delegates seemed caught off guard by the mention of Mr. Chauvin.

“It was overwhelmingly accepted,” Mr. Malone said of the moment of silence. “There was not too many people who said no.”

Republicans have struggled to win statewide races in Minnesota over the last two decades, though they have sometimes come close. The party has also at times held majorities in the State Legislature.

Democrats are defending the governorship and a U.S. Senate seat this year, but neither race has an incumbent running.

Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, abandoned his bid for a third term early this year after facing criticism for widespread fraud of state social service programs that played out under his watch. The Trump administration used that fraud as part of its justification for an immigration enforcement blitz in Minnesota that led to three shootings, thousands of arrests and tense face-offs between federal agents and protesters.

At their convention over the weekend, Republicans endorsed Kendall Qualls, a businessman, for governor, and Adam Schwarze, a military veteran, for Senate. Those endorsements are not binding, and voters can choose those candidates or others in the August primary.

At their convention, Democratic delegates endorsed Senator Amy Klobuchar for governor and Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan for Senate.


Before making the motion on the floor of the Republican convention, Mr. Rocco said he had been unsure whether other delegates would agree with him. Even if they did not, he determined, it was worth it to draw attention to the cause.

“I was actually really surprised that the motion passed,” Mr. Rocco said.

The moment of silence for Mr. Chauvin received relatively little coverage from local news outlets in the immediate aftermath of the convention. But as Democrats began drawing attention to it, few Republicans seemed eager to comment.

Reached by phone, Mr. Schwarze declined to comment, saying he was not in the room at the time of the vote. Mr. Qualls’s campaign did not respond to emailed requests for comment, nor did the campaigns of Speaker Lisa Demuth, another Republican seeking the governorship, and Michele Tafoya, a former sportscaster running for Senate.

Mr. Rocco said he understood why many candidates were not expressing public support for his motion.

“The Republicans still have to win the trifecta this year,” he said, referring to control of the governorship and both legislative chambers. “Hopefully, they’ll be able to do it. But at the end of the line, they’re going to have to cater to the independents. I mean, that’s how all elections are won.”

Democrats were already seeking to make it a campaign issue.

“Rather than a moment of silence to honor the service members killed this year in combat across the globe,” said Jason Heaser, a Democrat seeking Mr. Nadeau’s State House seat, “they chose a political stunt to honor a man unanimously convicted by a jury of his peers for murder.”

Ernesto Londoño contributed reporting.

Mitch Smith is a Chicago-based national correspondent for The Times, covering the Midwest and Great Plains.

Julie Bosman is the Chicago bureau chief for The Times, writing and reporting stories from around the Midwest.

More on the 2026 Midterm Elections


05 June 2026

Far-Right Leaders, Including Ex-CBP Chief Greg Bovino, Convene in Portugal for “Remigration Summit” & Why did the press ignore a gathering of the world's leading fascists? 4JUN&31MAI26

 



AMERICA has been fighting the scourge of fascism and "christian" nationalism since neo nazi fascist barry goldwater was the gop / guardians of prejudice-republican party presidential candidate in 1964. So called moderate republicans kept the right wing extremist under control, loosening their hold gradually until NOT MY pres drumpf/trump lead a coup of party, declaring an agenda based on voluntary ignorance, hate, racism, bigotry, greed, fearmongering, misogyny, and apostasy of Christianity. Sadly it seems too many Europeans have forgotten the death and destruction extreme right wing politics brought to the world in the 20th century, hence this summit in Portugal. From DemocracyNow! and The Redoubt 

Far-Right Leaders, Including Ex-CBP Chief Greg Bovino, Convene in Portugal for “Remigration Summit”


StoryJune 04, 2026
Guests
  • Charles R. Davis
    journalist.
  • Hundreds of far-right activists gathered in Portugal on Saturday for the annual “Remigration Summit” advocating for the mass deportation of immigrants. Former U.S. Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino and white nationalist leader Jared Taylor were VIP guests alongside elected officials from Germany and Spain’s far-right parties. In an interview ahead of the event, Bovino cited Nazi Germany’s lead general, Erwin Rommel, as an inspirational figure.

“Remigration is basically the policy response to the 'great replacement' conspiracy theory,” says Charles R. Davis, a journalist based in Vienna, Austria. Davis explains “great replacement” as a theory that there is a “global elite plot, typically by Jews,” to replace white people in Europe and North America with immigrants. “It’s an argument for mass deportations,” not just of recently arrived immigrants, but of “those who were allowed in over the last hundred years who were not really, as they see it, European or American,” says Davis. “This is basically rooted in Nazi ideology.”

Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: In Portugal, hundreds of far-right activists gathered Saturday for the annual “Remigration Summit” advocating for the mass deportation of immigrants. Former U.S. Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino and white nationalist leader Jared Taylor were VIP guests alongside elected officials from Germany’s far-right, anti-immigrant AfD party and Spain’s Vox. Other attendees included Stefano Forte, president of the New York Young Republican Club.

In an interview ahead of the event, Greg Bovino cited Nazi Germany’s lead general, Erwin Rommel, as an inspirational figure. At the summit, Bovino said, quote, “If there is inspiration gained from the U.S. Border Patrol model and method, then fantastic.”

AMY GOODMAN: Gregory Bovino led the Trump administration’s militarized immigration crackdowns in Chicago, Los Angeles and Minneapolis. Earlier this year, he appeared in Minneapolis wearing a long olive wool overcoat that some online observers likened to, quote, “a Nazi cosplay coat.” California Governor Gavin Newsom’s social media press account called it “Nazi-coded.”

Bovino was eventually removed from his position in January after immigration agents under his command killed 37-year-old VA nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. Pretti was shot dead two weeks after an ICE agent fatally shot Renee Good in Minneapolis.

During an interview outside the so-called Remigration Summit in Portugal, Bovino criticized the Trump administration.

GREGORY BOVINO: The base is not very happy now over what’s happening immigration-wise. They voted for mass deportations. Mass deportations are not occurring. There are no mass deportations occurring in the United States right now. So, those MAGA voters, those 80 million that came out to vote for him in the polls, are not happy campers right now.

AMY GOODMAN: We go now to Vienna, Austria, to speak with the reporter Charles Davis, who writes for The Guardian and also runs The Redoubt, where his new piece is headlined “Why did the press ignore a gathering of the world’s leading fascists?”

Charles, thanks so much for being with us. Why don’t you talk about what remigration is and the significance of Bovino being there?

CHARLES R. DAVIS: Yeah, so, remigration is basically the policy response to the “great replacement” conspiracy theory. And the great replacement conspiracy theory, as I think, unfortunately, a lot of your viewers will already know about, is the idea that there’s like a global elite plot, typically by Jews, to replace white Europeans and white North Americans with immigrants via mass migration. So, “remigration” was a term that was popularized a few years ago by an Austrian activist named Martin Sellner. He’s also the guy who helped popularize the great replacement conspiracy theory.

And it basically is — it’s an argument for mass deportations not just of illegal criminals, as is the typical rhetoric you would hear from the Trump administration and far-right parties here in Europe, but it’s the idea that we need to actually, like, reverse the 20th century, that the issue is not just the immigrants who came in the last few years seeking asylum or refugee status, but those who were allowed in over the last hundred years who were not really, as they see it, European or American.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: And, Charles, could you explain why — you mentioned earlier — why is this remigration idea attributed to Jews, this global plot?

CHARLES R. DAVIS: Well, actually, yeah, my original piece that I wrote last week, I spoke to a professor at the University of Vienna named Daniel Sharp, who explained that this is basically rooted in Nazi ideology. Like, the idea — specifically, let’s talk about Germany and Austria. The idea that certain people were not German and Austrian, despite the fact that they had lived in this area for hundreds of years, despite the fact that they had citizenship, that was very much the Nazi idea. And in fact, remigration back then, before it became the Holocaust, was the idea that we would expel Jews to places like Madagascar.

So, when it’s — when it’s popularized now, like, I mean, this is why it caused such a controversy a few years ago when Martin Sellner was meeting with members of Alternative für Deutschland. In 2023, the German outlet Correctiv reported that there was a secret meeting in Potsdam between Sellner and leaders of the AfD. And that caused national protests, because Germans know their history, right? They know what happens when you start saying certain Germans are more Germans than others.

And I think what is so alarming about this summit is that these people, including the AfD lawmakers that attended this, AfD lawmaker Lena Kotré and the AfD press that showed up to give her a platform, they’re now doing it out in the open. And I think that is maybe one of the lessons they’ve learned from Donald Trump. They’ve been both emboldened and empowered by him, and they’ve also learned that the way you get away with this kind of stuff and get away with this kind of crazy, conspiratorial and, you know, policy of ethnic cleansing, which I think you can call remigration — the way you get away with it is not by having secret meetings that the press can then expose. You just do it out in public, and you say, “There’s no — there’s nothing scandalous here. We’re doing this out in public. We’re organizing on Facebook.” In fact, that’s where I first learned about this summit, paid Facebook ads by the group Reconquista, which is a far-right Portuguese group, which is named after the idea of mass expulsions of Muslims historically from the Iberian Peninsula. And so, now it’s all out in the open.

And if we can be grateful to Greg Bovino for anything, it’s to drawing some attention to this, and also spelling out what they mean by remigration. It is not just deporting so-called illegals. Greg Bovino, when he was criticizing the Trump administration, you know, I’m less interested in his sour grapes, and more in the fact that he spelled out that he thinks there are 100 million “illegal aliens” in the United States. Now, most credible experts would tell you there are 12 million tops. But if you were paying attention during the 2024 campaign, you might have seen Donald Trump and JD Vance making that number go a little bit higher every time they spoke. It hit 20 million, it hit 30 million, and now it hit 100 million. And I think that speaks to the fact that they’re not just trying to get people out based on pure legal status. You have to view it in the context of trying to eliminate birthright citizenship and rolling back the 20th century. It’s getting rid of people that came over the last hundred years who they define as not American or not European enough, in the European context.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: And so, if you could say a little bit more about the way in which Trump and his administration generally have been advancing and elevating this idea, and in particular the fact that the State Department has pledged to create an office for remigration? What is the status of that? Has it been established? And what is its purpose?

CHARLES R. DAVIS: Well, you know, the Trump administration, there’s always a little bit of dance that the far right does. There are those that are like the public figures that say, “You know, remigration, don’t get too scared about it. We actually just mean deporting criminals.” That is what the AfD did after their secret meeting with Martin Sellner was exposed a few years ago. If you go to their website, they say, “We just mean getting rid of, like, the people that have committed violent crimes, etc.” And same with the Trump administration.

I do not know if they actually succeeded in establishing this, but the whole department of remigration that they were going to establish from under the State Department was ostensibly about voluntary self-deportation. Of course, when you get them to speak honestly at summits like just happened over the weekend, you see that it’s not just about getting out a certain amount of “illegal aliens,” as they call them, or getting people to self-deport. I mean, they would get people to self-deport by creating such a hostile environment and, I think, through state force to get them expelled.

And in terms of remigration in Europe, the United States State Department has actually endorsed this great replacement conspiracy theory. In the U.S. National Security Strategy document that was released last December, the Trump administration warned that majority non-Europeans were taking over Europe and that Europeans faced a stark prospect of civilizational erasure, and that, should present trends continue, the continent will be unrecognizable in 20 years or less. Now, living here in Vienna, I can tell you that that is not really taking place. You know, there are definitely more immigrants here than there were 20 years ago, but the idea that they’re facing civilizational erasure for white Austrians, that is — it’s conspiratorial.

And I think what upsets me so much about the coverage of this and just the far-right extremism, in general, is that if you — you sound kind of crazy when you talk about it. When you say that the face of Donald Trump’s deportation policy and a young Republican leader, Stefano Forte, are going to Europe to meet with self-described fans of Adolf Hitler, people that you can fairly describe as neo-Nazi activists, to talk about a plan for ethnic cleansing, it sounds crazy, because, you know, we should acknowledge that there has been some reporting on this — it’s not just people like myself — but you have not seen any coverage from CBS News, you’ve not seen any coverage from The Washington Post, and you’ve not seen any coverage from The New York Times. And I think that is a huge problem, because The New York Times, especially, is an institution that could make this something more than just a one-day story, that could press the Trump administration to answer: When did they realize that Greg Bovino was a Nazi sympathizer? — and to press Republicans in New York and elsewhere: Do you agree with Stefano Forte in his efforts to forge a kind of neofascist transatlantic alliance?

AMY GOODMAN: So, I wanted to ask you more about Bovino and why people should care, since he has been ousted. You have him tweeting from Newark — many people wondered if he had gone to Delaney — but on his way to Portugal, “Sen. Mullin” — he was talking about the new DHS secretary — “and the rest of them have been trying to handle these riots and… well, let’s just say it’s not going great. For those of you in the comments section, give a vote. Should I just handle this myself? Those agents’ lives are at stake due to this inaction.” And then you have — let me go to Greg Bovino speaking to Newsmax about the hunger strike at the Delaney Hall ICE jail in Newark.

GREGORY BOVINO: As far as the facilities, those facilities are actually — I think they’re too good, fantastic facilities. Those detainees get everything they need. But what they really need is deporting. And we need to expand this facility so we can get even more detainees in there. Carl, hey, I’ve heard about a hunger strike, which, you know, I think that’s fake news anyway. But if they did, well, I’m OK with that, because if they lose weight, we can get even more people on planes for deportation.

AMY GOODMAN: So, that was Bovino talking to Newsmax. And, of course, you had Tom Homan, the so-called border czar, denying there’s a hunger strike, but then saying he would force-feed prisoners there. And then you have Bovino saying, “You have the world watching and supporting your efforts to hold the line,” he’s saying to ICE agents at Delaney. “Every one of us wants to be shoulder to shoulder with you. In speaking with the Mean Green Team, they send you support and are wishing you the best.” He also talked about ”ICE Agents at Delaney, hang in there.” This is extremely interesting, given he is both supporting them and criticizing the Trump administration. Your final comment on this, the role he plays?

CHARLES R. DAVIS: Well, yeah, I think he does speak for the MAGA base. And I think it’s interesting that when he criticizes the Trump administration, he is criticizing the czars around him. It’s always the bad advisers. He’s not criticizing Stephen Miller or Donald Trump. And I think he’s right not to, because I think Stephen Miller and Donald Trump share the remigration agenda that he has.

And I think it’s interesting, since we’re talking about him showing up to Newark, or at least faking that he would. You know, for several days, organizers of this summit had been teasing that they would have a special guest star. And in the weeks leading up to it, I kind of wondered who that was. I thought, “Is it going to be a former Fox News anchor? Is it going to be Nick Fuentes?” And then Greg Bovino posted on X a photo of himself with — giving what can only be described as a Nazi salute. And I think at that exact moment I realized it is him. It is him. And I checked the Telegram channel for the summit, and they had just announced him.

And I think that is what is alarming, because I think he does speak, in an unfiltered way, what Stephen Miller and Donald Trump would like to say, but they are prevented to by their — the Susie Wiles, who know, again, this kind of fascist dance, that you cannot come out and say this. You can hint at it by embracing the term “remigration,” but when the broader public asks you what that means, you tell them it’s not the scary thing that it totally does mean, and which you are signaling to your far-right supporters that you yourself support.

The original content of this program is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Please attribute legal copies of this work to democracynow.org. Some of the work(s) that this program incorporates, however, may be separately licensed. For further information or additional permissions, contact us.

Martin Sellner (l), Greg Bovino (c) and Afonso Gonçalves (r) at "Remigration Summit 2026." Photo published May 30, 2026.

Just before he confirmed his attendance at a neo-fascist summit in Portugal, Gregory Bovino, the former U.S. Border Patrol commander who was once the face of President Donald Trump's mass deportations, posted a photo on X showing himself giving a salute familiar to anyone who has heard of Nazi Germany.


It would be easier to dismiss this Hitlerian greeting as an awkward gesture — as some did when X's owner, Elon Musk, gave it at Trump's 2025 inauguration — were it not selected and shared by a man on his way to a racial-purity conference. The "Remigration Summit 2026," so called, was held May 30 at the Salmanha Residence hotel just south of Porto, Portugal, and its organizers were not subtle.

"Weimar conditions require Weimar solutions," argues Afonso Gonçalves, chief organizer of the event. He's the founder of the far-right group Reconquista, so named for the mass expulsion of Muslims from the Iberian Peninsula. That's who Bovino was photographed standing next to after he landed in Europe.

Martin Sellner, an extremist from Austria, is best known for pushing the "great replacement" conspiracy theory — that Jewish elites are seeking to exterminate the white race via mass migration — that has motivated mass shooters from Pennsylvania to New Zealand. He was the other man standing next to Bovino.

Other speakers included a Belgian fascist convicted of Holocaust denial and the founder of a Swiss neo-Nazi group called "Junge Tat" who is quite open about his fondness for "National Socialism."

I first learned of this gathering on Facebook, where it was promoted by Reconquista with paid advertising (Meta refused to comment or to take down the ads). The only secret was its precise location.

And yet? No media outlet in the English-speaking world covered the fact that a former Trump administration official was at a gathering of the world's leading fascists to promote "remigration," a far-right euphemism for the ethnic cleansing of non-white people from the United States and Europe.

Major media outlets also ignored the presence of Stefano Forte, president of the New York Young Republican Club. A spokesperson for the group — informed of the extremist views (and criminal convictions) of those attending — told The Redoubt that it would "never apologize for standing alongside our European brothers and sisters."

One of the only outlets that covered this event — and certainly the first — was The Redoubt. The Spanish newspaper El Pais reported on the presence of Rocio de Meer Méndez, a politician with the far-right Vox party; Europe's Politico covered it too. But otherwise? As of Sunday afternoon, coverage appeared largely limited to the far-right outlets that were invited, such as the AfD-affiliated Deutschland Kurier (Alternative für Deutschland lawmaker Lena Kotré was another featured speaker).

The mainstream right is crawling into the sewer of neo-Nazi ideology but you probably wouldn't know it unless you were a right-wing extremist yourself. Even news outlets that dedicate significant resources to covering the scourge of antisemitism generally ignore it, at least in the United States, when it comes from Republican operatives and retired Trump administration officials.

There is no need to argue about whether there is a double standard; the lack of media coverage speaks for itself. The only question is why it exists.

Right-wing capture of the corporate media in the United States is one response; there's just no incentive to highlight one side of the aisle's extremists.

Bari Weiss, an opinion columnist with no record of actual reporting, was handed full control over CBS News based on her willingness to turn it into a mouthpiece for its new owners' politics. ABC paid Donald Trump millions of dollars for the crime of accurately describing his civil liability for sexual assault. Jeff Bezos has turned The Washington Post into a conservative blog, and not a particularly interesting one.

These outlets will cover extremism and antisemitism if the dots can be connected to an elected Democrat, no question, but not when it's the other way around. After all, it is in the interests of their ownership, and the reactionary cause, for right-wing politics to be seen as a necessarily brutish response to the dangers of a loony left.

But I think it's more than that. I think it's that we, broadly speaking, demand nothing from the right, even if we don't share the politics. When illiberal figures behave badly, as they are wont to do — when they give voice to their basest and oft-libidinal desires and hatreds — it is viewed as akin to a mangy dog chewing on a slipper. They are not defying expectations; they can't really be helped.

Whether from sympathy or condescension, far-right politics are interpreted as naturally occurring in a way that left-wing politics are not. Small-minded, reactionary tribalism is the default setting of the world, or so it is thought. It's only news, and only interesting, when someone who purports to be better shows that they're not.

Eventually, though, what's left of the free press will have to reckon with the fact that the far-right fringe is now the modern world's governing elite — and openly declaring an intent to repeat the 1930s. That's a story.



Screen capture of Google News taken May 31, 2026.