• Donald Trump tweets (and then quickly deletes) about Clinton being corrupt with a Star of David
    64 replies, posted
I'm pretty sure I've even used the 'anti-Jew' shape on a few of my PowerPoint presentations. It's a shape. Due to the rectangular portion along the middle, it's probably more convenient for text than a five or seven pointed star. There's no secret message, that's all there is to it. [IMG]https://i.gyazo.com/d85d64e34f29bd1fa428d7b59bd59c15.gif[/IMG]
[QUOTE=OmniConsUme;50642031]I really don't think the story should be about a star of david, [B]rather the fact that trump may have retweeted white supremacist material.[/B][/QUOTE] come on man trump's a knob but that's taking it a step too far. Why does the source matter if the content is benign?
[QUOTE=Emperor Scorpious II;50640259]You do understand the concept of 'negative publicity" right?[/QUOTE] They say all publicity is good publicity Also wtf, negative publicity of what? Using clip art? [editline]4th July 2016[/editline] Also "Hillary Clinton under investigation by FBI, private meeting between husband Bill and Loretta Lynch" Meanwhile... "Trump posts star clip art on Twitter"
Strangely enough, I think the hexagram is the default setting for the star marquee tool in some versions of Photoshop. That being said, the image was originally created and posted by anti-semites on /pol/. So the issue at hand isn't whether the image was created with the intention of being anti-semitic (it was) but whether Trump was [I]aware[/I] of the image's origin. Given his proclivity for passing tacit approval of white nationalism, it's not a big stretch.
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