Anonymous wrote:I hope Iowans don't support this crap.
Anonymous wrote:White guy here. And I am disgusted by it. But I was already disgusted with Steve King and have already called him out. My first big encounter with him was during the government shutdown, where I happened to see him welcoming a busload of people to the WWII memorial, and he was talking about how the shutdown was the Democrats fault. I walked over and got in his face to correct him in loud detail on exactly how and why it was the Republicans fault. He turned tail and trotted over to his vehicle with his aide and took off. Chickenshit and a liar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Iowans don't support this crap.
I grew up in that area and was there when he was elected. I am so very ashamed that he represents people from Iowa. On the other hand, that kind of naivete (lack of exposure to other cultures, ways) is 100% standard in western Iowa. I grew up in the 80's but it was like I grew up in the 50's (really). It's a pretty closed society. You don't stray far from what is expected.
How is it that people who have never been exposed to diversity are so scared of it? I grew up in a pretty all white setting (semi rural California in the 70s - farmworkers were pretty segregated). But every little hint of a bigger world out there was fascinating to me, not threatening.
White woman, raised in Iowa (jr. high and high school), graduate of ISU, married to a brown Muslim, proud mother of mixed children. Doing my best to make Iowa homogenous, one brown baby at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Iowans don't support this crap.
I grew up in that area and was there when he was elected. I am so very ashamed that he represents people from Iowa. On the other hand, that kind of naivete (lack of exposure to other cultures, ways) is 100% standard in western Iowa. I grew up in the 80's but it was like I grew up in the 50's (really). It's a pretty closed society. You don't stray far from what is expected.
How is it that people who have never been exposed to diversity are so scared of it? I grew up in a pretty all white setting (semi rural California in the 70s - farmworkers were pretty segregated). But every little hint of a bigger world out there was fascinating to me, not threatening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Iowans don't support this crap.
I grew up in that area and was there when he was elected. I am so very ashamed that he represents people from Iowa. On the other hand, that kind of naivete (lack of exposure to other cultures, ways) is 100% standard in western Iowa. I grew up in the 80's but it was like I grew up in the 50's (really). It's a pretty closed society. You don't stray far from what is expected.
How is it that people who have never been exposed to diversity are so scared of it? I grew up in a pretty all white setting (semi rural California in the 70s - farmworkers were pretty segregated). But every little hint of a bigger world out there was fascinating to me, not threatening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:He doubled down on the tweet today:
.@SteveKingIA: "I'd like to see an America that's so homogenous that we look a lot the same."
https://twitter.com/NatashaBertrand/status/841260841479610368
When he was asked about being divisive, he said
'Listen to the language. 'Our' language is precise."
That is pretty telling. Makes it sound like there is a group that has coded language to use to promote a 'more western' aka a more homogeneous America.
Tell me again how this isn't racist? Anyone?
Or he means his statement was taken out of context.

Anonymous wrote:I would love some feedback from white people who don't feel enraged by this. I just don't get why white people aren't condemning this en masse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope Iowans don't support this crap.
I grew up in that area and was there when he was elected. I am so very ashamed that he represents people from Iowa. On the other hand, that kind of naivete (lack of exposure to other cultures, ways) is 100% standard in western Iowa. I grew up in the 80's but it was like I grew up in the 50's (really). It's a pretty closed society. You don't stray far from what is expected.
How is it that people who have never been exposed to diversity are so scared of it? I grew up in a pretty all white setting (semi rural California in the 70s - farmworkers were pretty segregated). But every little hint of a bigger world out there was fascinating to me, not threatening.
Anonymous wrote:I hope he is just getting senile with age and mis-tweeted.