Former President Trump's remark about undocumented immigrants 'poisoning the blood of our country' has sparked controversy, with some Republicans endorsing the racist 'white replacement theory.' This language, echoing Hitler's rhetoric, could alienate conservative Latino evangelicals, potentially turning them against Trump and the Republican Party. The comments are seen as a sign of the ascendance of Christian nationalism within the Church and the GOP. Additionally, the Chicago Bulls are facing a significant deficit in the 1st quarter of their game, with Terry Taylor and Jevon Carter checking in.
Terry Taylor and Jevon Carter checking in as Bulls already down 20 in the 1st quarter.
Could Latinos evangelicals be the conscience against Trumpism that White evangelicals can not? Trump's "poisoning the blood" remark could see Latino evangelical backlash @RussContreras https://t.co/Xtq9yEgeqm
Trump's remark that undocumented immigrants are "poisoning the blood of our country" — language echoing the rhetoric of Hitler — could turn reliably conservative Latino evangelicals against him, a top leader in the faith says. https://t.co/li7gbFaRSu
Former President Trump's claim that undocumented immigrants are "poisoning the blood of our country" — language echoing the rhetoric of Hitler — could turn reliably conservative Latino evangelicals against him, @nhclc Rev SamuelRodriguez tells @Axios https://t.co/EOkBKdNRue
The phrase "poisoning the blood of our country" has a deep racist and antisemitic history, and the comments come as some Republicans have openly endorsed the once-fringe and racist "white replacement theory." https://t.co/LY4JzRqJeL
From @TimAlberta | The forces of Christian nationalism are now ascendant both inside the Church and inside the Republican Party. https://t.co/VB1EDXjFls