THE RETURN OF D'SOUZA
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<strong>THE</strong> <strong>RETURN</strong> <strong>OF</strong> D’SOUZA<br />
The title of the movie appears to be an allusion to<br />
the controversial 1915 film "The Birth of a<br />
Nation," which lionized the Ku Klux Klan while<br />
villifying blacks and Reconstruction era<br />
Republicans.<br />
"Through stunning historical recreations and a<br />
searching examination of fascism and white<br />
supremacy, "Death of a Nation" cuts through<br />
progressive big lies to expose hidden history and<br />
D'Souza's latest film appears to tread similar<br />
ground to his 2016 hit film Hillary's America: The<br />
Secret History of the Democratic Party, which<br />
sought to portray Democrats and then<br />
presidential hopeful Hillary Rodham Clinton in a<br />
negative light.<br />
In an interview with The Christian Post back in<br />
August 2016, D'Souza noted that while he had<br />
some issues with then candidate Trump, he still<br />
preferred him to Clinton and therefore supported<br />
the Republican nominee.<br />
"There are things I like about him. There are<br />
things I don't like about him. I like the fact that I<br />
think he's unquestionably a patriot. He loves the<br />
country. He's also a kind of unrepentant<br />
capitalist. I like that," explained D'Souza at the<br />
time. Trump is an unknown figure. He's coming<br />
from the outside. The Republicans have the<br />
outsider; the Democrats have the insider. There<br />
are a lot of question marks around Trump."<br />
"Death of a Nation" comes at a time of increased<br />
political tension in the United States, with the<br />
recent announcement of Supreme Court Justice<br />
Anthony Kennedy retiring and the upcoming<br />
midterm elections.<br />
"If you see anybody from that Cabinet in a<br />
restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline<br />
station, you get out and you create a crowd and<br />
you push back on them and you tell them they're<br />
not welcome anymore, anywhere,"<br />
declared Rep. Waters, who later clarified that she<br />
opposed such confrontations being violent.<br />
CONCLUSION<br />
The support of Dinesh D’Souza for Donald Trump<br />
is one of many prominent Christian politicians<br />
and Christian Evangelists who publicly throw their<br />
weight behind Trump as the tyrant sent to shake<br />
up the establishment and temporarily derail the<br />
plans of the global elite.<br />
D'Souza’s case is unique however because it is<br />
highly unusual for Indian or Asian immigrants to<br />
join any political movement, let alone the<br />
conservative rank and file.<br />
In a country with 13 million Asian-Americans<br />
(almost 5 percent of the population) - nearly 2<br />
million of them Indian-Americans are there any<br />
other Asian-American conservatives more vocal<br />
than D'Souza? A Google search of "Asian-<br />
American conservatives" brings up 15 webpage<br />
citations; one online club lists three members.<br />
From Hawaii, Japan, Vietnam, China, the<br />
Philippines, India, who has a speaking part in the<br />
republican party.<br />
In recent weeks, incidents of Trump<br />
administration officials being denied service at<br />
restaurants and calls for increased confrontation<br />
of political opponents have dominated the<br />
headlines.<br />
Democrat Congresswoman Maxine Waters of<br />
California garnered controversy when in a<br />
speech late last month she called on supporters<br />
to harass members of the Trump administration<br />
whenever they appeared in public.<br />
Truly a unique man with a unique agenda and<br />
with a unique pardon from a unique US<br />
president. The unique man has returned.<br />
8<br />
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