MSNBC Host Accuses J.D. Vance Of Laying "Easter Egg of White Nationalism" In RNC Speech For Wanting To Be Buried In Family Plot In Kentucky
07/19/2024
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“To every man upon this earth / Death cometh soon or late. / And how can man die better / Than facing fearful odds, / For the ashes of his fathers, And the temples of his Gods.”

Horatius at the Bridge

And how can a man live better, than honoring his ancestors and hoping to one day spend eternity next to them in a family burial plot? This is what it means to believe in your posterity and honor your past.

 MSNBC Host Calls JD Vance Wanting to Be Buried in Family Plot an ‘Easter Egg of White Nationalism,’ Mediate.com, July 18, 2024

MSNBC’s Alex Wagner accused Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance of dropping an “easter egg of white nationalism” by mentioning that he hoped to be buried in his family’s plot in Kentucky during his speech at the Republican National Convention Wednesday night.

“I know that there was not the same red meat, sort of blood and soil nationalism that you might hear in, I don’t know, other parallel universe Republican conventions, but I do think there were some sort of Easter eggs of white nationalism in the speech,” declared Wagner at the outset of a lengthy monologue. “One of the things that stuck out to me was when he started talking about what America is, he said that ‘America is not just an idea, it is a group of people with a shared history and a common future.’ The thing about America is that it’s not a group of people with shared history. In fact, I think a lot of people would argue it’s quite the opposite. It’s a lot of people with different histories, different heritages.”

She continued:

And that’s the other piece of it, he goes on, he went on a long sort of paragraph at least about this plot in eastern Kentucky, where his 7 or 6 generations of his family are buried, and his hope is that his wife and he are eventually laid to rest there and their kids follow them. And I sort of understand the idea of sharing the burial plot, but it also is, it reveals someone who believes that the history that the family should inherit, and indeed the history that should be determinative in the story of the Vance family, is the history of the eastern Kentucky Vances and not the Vances from San Diego, which is where his wife is from and where her Indian parents are from. But in America, it doesn’t always have to be the white male lineage that trumps that, that defines the family history, that that branch of the tree supersedes all else. And I just think the construction of, of this notion reveals a lot about someone who fundamentally believes in the supremacy of whiteness and masculinity, and it’s couched in a sort of halcyon, you know, revisitation of his roots, but it is actually really revealing about what he thinks matters and who America is, and that America is a place for people with his shared Western background. And that is the idea of America, that is the nation of America that he wants to resurrect.

In his speech, Vance recalled telling his wife “Honey, I come with $120,000 worth of law school debt, and a cemetery plot on a mountainside in eastern Kentucky” during his proposal to her.

“And if, as I hope, my wife and I are eventually laid to rest there, and our kids follow us, there will be seven generations just in that small mountain cemetery plot in eastern Kentucky,” he continued. “Seven generations of people who have fought for this country. Who have built this country. Who have made things in this country. And who would fight and die to protect this country if they were asked to.”

The difference between Real Americans and those who seek to subvert our nation are on full display in this article, where J.D. Vance is accused of dropping “easter eggs of white nationalism” for not betraying his ancestors and believing in the permanence of family.

At the end of our lives, we will hopefully be surrounded by the people who matter the most—family. To live your life with honor, faith, and duty to your family is the first step up the moral ladder to then think about the ideas of community and nation. If you don’t honor your family, your past and present, you will have no future. You’ll be rootless. That’s what the Left wants and that’s exactly what Vance stands in opposition to by honoring his ancestors.

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