The chat, named after a mythical all-white Nazi civilization, was started by the secretary of Miami-Dade County’s Republican Party and included the president of the Florida International University Turning Point USA chapter. Seriously, what is it with Republicans and their Nazi-loving group chats? A group chat started by Abel Carvajal, the secretary of Miami-Dade County’s Republican Party, for conservative college students at Florida International University quickly devolved into a breeding ground for moral depravity, the Miami Herald reported Wednesday. Carvajal said he created the group after Charlie Kirk was killed in September. Members of the group chat made violent and racist remarks about Black people, using variations of the n-word more than 400 times, as well as using slurs when discussing Jewish and gay people, and regularly called women “whores.” Dariel Gonzalez, a former board member of FIU’s College Republicans, was responsible for a large chunk of racist and antisemitic comments. “Ew you had colored professors?!” he wrote at one point, adding that he personally refused “to be indoctrinated by the coloreds.” Gonzalez also used slurs to discuss Jewish people. “You can f–k all the k—s you want. Just don’t marry them and procreate,” he said. Ian Valdes, the president of FIU’s chapter of Turning Point USA, responded, “I would def not marry a Jew.” In another message, Valdes called for a “moratorium on immigration” unless it was a person from a first-world country, before clarifying: “Yeah I obviously mean whites.” Valdes renamed the group chat from “Uber R—s Yapping Inc.” (using a slur to refer to people with mental disabilities) to “Gooning in Agartha.” “Gooning” refers to the ritual of continual masturbation performed by some internet-poisoned individuals, and “Agartha” is a mythical civilization at the center of the earth, where white nationalists have imagined a white master race originates. In the chat, Valdes described Agartha as “esoteric nazism essentially,” and Gonzalez described Agartha as “Nazi heaven sort of.” At one point, Gonzalez wrote a message that simply said: “Total negro death.” William Bejerano, who once tried to start a pro-life group at Miami-Dade College, then launched into a lengthy n-word-laced tirade of ways to kill Black people, including crucifying, beheading, exterminating, and curb-stomping. Students for Life in America previously published an essay in which Bejerano decried limits on free speech at his school—but has since removed it. Carvajal occasionally participated in the conversation, and even deleted others’ messages, but never shut the group chat down. He even recruited some of the group’s extremist members to serve as committee members in the Miami-Dade GOP
via newrepublic: “Nazi Heaven”: Leaked Republican Students Group Chat Filled With Slurs
siehe auch: Florida GOP condemns ‘Nazi heaven’ group chat created by Miami party official. A group chat aimed at conservative Florida college students devolved into slurs, misogyny and calls for racialized violence, according to a report from the Miami Herald. Created by Abel Carvajal, secretary of the Miami-Dade Republican Party, the WhatsApp chat was renamed after what one member described as “Nazi heaven,” according to leaked chat logs. Participants also included Florida International University’s Turning Point USA chapter president and the former College Republicans recruitment chair. The logs showed that Carvajal participated occasionally and deleted some messages, but did not shut the chat down. One member of the chat, identified as William Bejerano, “posted a block of text calling for dozens of acts of extreme violence against Black people, who he referred to using the n-word, including crucifying, beheading and dissecting people,” according to the Miami Herald. Dariel Gonzalez, the College Republicans’ recruitment chair, told group members to “avoid the coloreds like the plague.” Group chat members referred to women as “w**s” and, at one point, used an antisemitic slur to refer to women they avoid. Gonzalez said, “You can fk all the [k-word] you want. Just don’t marry them and procreate.” To which Ian Valdes, the TPUSA chapter president, said, “I would def not marry a Jew,” according to the Miami Herald. Valdes changed the chat’s name to refer to Agartha, a mythical white utopia promoted by Nazi politician Heinrich Himmler. Gonzalez described Agartha to the chat as, “Nazi heaven sort of.”