Into the deep. Just how xxxing xhite can a US Republician candidate be ? I mean before he carries too much baggage and must be ditched?
We'll see as the expose of Black Nazi Mark Robinson sees more exposure.
Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, the pride of North Carolina. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images.)
Uh, Gross
—Andrew Egger
When the rumor mill started churning yesterday that some major, potentially campaign-shaking news was coming on North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, the GOP nominee for governor this year, people’s minds began going to truly dark places. After all, Robinson was
already one of the most insanely controversial figures in today’s politics: a
Holocaust denier; a
modest enthusiast of political violence; a walking, talking
Breitbart comments section who’d been posting unhinged stuff online for years. A story that he used to be a frequent patron of video pr0n stores was barely a blip in the race. What could possibly be
worse?
Well, uh, we found out. CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski had tracked down a bunch of old online profiles of Robinson—most notably, an account he’d frequently used to comment on a pr0n site, Nude Africa, in the early 2010s. Those posts included some of the most insane ranting you’ll ever see:
- “I’m a black NAZI!”
- “I’d take Hitler over any of the **** that’s in Washington right now!”
- “Slavery is not bad. Some people need to be slaves. I wish they would bring it back. I would certainly buy a few.”
- Of Martin Luther King, Jr.: “Get that ******* commie bastard off the National Mall. . . . I’m not in the KKK. They don’t let blacks join. If I was in the KKK I would have called him Martin Lucifer Koon!”
- Of a story about a woman who said she was sexually assaulted by her taxi driver: “The moral of this story . . . . . Don’t **** a white bitch!”
There was more beyond that. What’s really incredible is that all this was the
sanitized version. CNN tiptoed politely around a heap of other Robinson comments that were simply some of the most obscene, degraded sexual stuff you could imagine.
Robinson did all this under a profile that included his own name, using an account he signed up for with his personal email address and a username he used many other places on the internet. Dozens of biographical details from the comments (he sure was chatty!) make it inescapably clear that the guy behind that keyboard and the guy currently running for governor are one and the same.
Naturally Robinson still says it wasn’t him. His interview with Kaczynski last night was a remarkable exercise in willing public humiliation.
1
“Look, I’m not going to get into the minutiae of how somebody manufactured these salacious tabloid lies,” Robinson said, suggesting it all could have come about “through AI.” “The things people can do with the internet now is incredible. . . . We have addressed it. We have said it’s not true. And we wish that we could move on and get busy with the business of the people of the state.”
For now, the North Carolina GOP is brazening it out. “Mark Robinson has categorically denied the allegations made by CNN but that won’t stop the Left from trying to demonize him via personal attacks,” the party said in a statement. “The Left needs this election to be a personality contest, not a policy contest because if voters are focused on policy, Republicans win on Election day.” (They didn’t get into the policy ramifications of preferring Hitler to Barack Obama.)
This all may prove the final nail in the coffin for Robinson, who was already trailing Democrat Josh Stein by between 5 and 15 points in every recent poll. How far the contagion will spread is another matter
. Donald Trump is a close Robinson ally: He endorsed Robinson during the primary, calling him “Martin Luther King on steroids.”2
But the political fallout is only one part of the story. The other part is the autopsy that this entire episode will provide us about the state of the Republican electorate. In pledging to plow through, in suggesting it may all be AI, in choosing to run in the first place—knowing this stuff was all out there—Robinson has offered a nasty appraisal of the voters whose support he is seeking. He thinks he can fashion his history of disturbing, angry behavior into a story in which he is the victim—and that the voters will buy it. He sees those voters as morally malleable dupes, who will cross any serious ethical line in the service of politics.
It makes sense for him to make this calculation. After all, it has never not paid off for Trump.
The question now is how those voters will react to being treated as lemmings. It’s possible they don’t change their behavior at all. It’s possible they turn on Robinson but not Trump. But, perhaps, we will see a harsher rendering here.
It’s a mind-boggling possibility: that after everything that’s happened in the last decade, after all his own intolerable scandals, the thing that ends Trump’s political career could be the grotesque behavior of some other random guy. Not getting the Capitol ransacked, not going gaga for the world’s biggest autocrats, not embracing the worst and most toxic elements in American politics—just elevating a guy who happened to be a comically racist sexual degenerate.
But there’d be a poetic justice to it all the same. Robinson is the monster Trump created. Now Trump has to survive him.
The Bulwark gazes into the abyss so you don’t have to. Come along for the ride:
Mark Robinson is barely even trying to beat the allegations. He thinks his voters won’t notice.