Home US Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson harbored conspiracy theories that the United States government was behind the attack on Pearl Harbor and the death of General Patton.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson harbored conspiracy theories that the United States government was behind the attack on Pearl Harbor and the death of General Patton.

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Mark Robinson speaking at the North Carolina Republican Convention in Greensboro, North Carolina, on May 25, 2024. He is in a close race for governor against North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein.

North Carolina Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson once suggested that the U.S. government was involved in both the attack on Pearl Harbor and the death of U.S. General George Patton as part of a conspiracy to help Joseph Stalin. .

Robinson, who currently serves as the state’s lieutenant governor, is now running in what is considered one of the most competitive gubernatorial races in the country in a state that is also a battleground in November’s presidential election.

In a 2018 radio interview, the host argued that “Japan is the one that bombed us, but most of our material and effort went to Europe.”

‘Good. “It really calls into question the motives and suspicions around our entire introduction into the war, it really does,” Robsinson responded. “This raises serious questions.”

It is one of a long series of conspiracy theories that Robinson indulged in before entering politics. He has also been accused over the years of a series of anti-Semitic, homophobic and sexist comments.

Mark Robinson speaking at the North Carolina Republican Convention in Greensboro, North Carolina, on May 25, 2024. He is in a close race for governor against North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein.

DailyMail.com heard the newly discovered Audio from an episode of Politics and Prophecy with Chris Levels.

There have been a lot of reports about Robinson’s conspiracy theories, but this is believed to be the first audio of him discussing conspiracies about Pearl Harbor and Patton.

Robinson can be heard saying, “You know, I’m not prepared to say that our government intentionally set up Pearl Harbor.” I know there are a lot of conspiracy theories that say that…’

At that moment the presenter interrupted with ‘I will do it! There is too much evidence behind the theory that the United States was behind the attack.

“Definitely,” Robinson responds. “There are definitely questions out there, serious questions that have been raised.”

The Japanese attack on Hawaii on December 7, 1941 killed 2,403 Americans.

Robinson went on to argue that President Franklin Roosevelt’s decision to enter the war was part of a Communist conspiracy to aid Stalin.

“When you look at it as a whole and look at the way FDR completely ignored the fighting in Japan and focused all of his energy, all of his energy was focused on a way to get to Europe, and not just “He didn’t want to get to Europe, but to go there to help the guy I called Uncle Joe,” Robinson said.

‘Wait a minute, we went to Europe and cited Europe liberated from the Nazis, but then we turned around and gave even more property to the communists. That doesn’t make any sense,’ he continued.

In a 2018 radio interview, Mark Robinson said that there have been considerations

In a 2018 radio interview, Mark Robinson said “serious questions” had been raised and he responded “definitely” when the show’s host argued that the US government was behind the attack on Pearl Harbor.

The Japanese attack on Hawaii on December 7, 1941 killed 2,403 Americans.

The Japanese attack on Hawaii on December 7, 1941 killed 2,403 Americans.

Robinson described the circumstances surrounding the death of General George Patton in 1945 as

Robinson called the circumstances surrounding General George Patton’s death in 1945 “too suspicious for me.” He said, “I certainly don’t believe it” that one of America’s greatest commanders died in a car accident.

Later in the same interview, the host claimed that the US government killed General Patton.

“I’m not ready to say for sure, but it seems that way because Patton was a mad dog when it came to that communism thing,” Robinson responded.

Patton was paralyzed in a car accident in December 1945. He died less than two weeks later.

“I’ll never know how this guy ended up dying in a car accident,” Robinson said.

‘I certainly don’t think so. He’s too suspicious for me,” Robinson said of his death as a result of the accident.

Robinson also called FDR a “quasi-socialist or a complete socialist who was surrounded by communists” who went to Europe with the “intention of saving Joseph Stalin, saving communism, and saving Marxism.”

‘Just like when Democrats tried to smear him for calling for more education about the evils of totalitarian dictators like Hitler, Stalin and Mao, these are nothing more than twisted puns invented by Democrats and their allies in the press to falsely attack Mark Robinson “replied the campaign’s communications director, Mike Lonergan.

Lonergan pointed to Robinson’s comments in the interview where he said he was “not prepared” to support them as he considered the theories.

The comment about dictators refers to an unrelated clip posted online last summer where Robinson’s comments about dictators were edited to be misleading.

“North Carolina voters know better and will realize it when they elect Mark Robinson governor in November,” Lonergan said.

Lt. Governor Robinson spoke at a Trump rally on March 2, 2024. The former president endorsed Robinson in the gubernatorial race and called him MLK

Lt. Governor Robinson spoke at a Trump rally on March 2, 2024. The former president endorsed Robinson in the gubernatorial race and called him MLK “on steroids” at the rally.

Robinson’s past referencing conspiracy theories is well documented.

He previously stated in a post that he was “skeptical” about “everything” he had seen on television, including 9/11, and the assassination of JFK and the 2017 Las Vegas shooting.

Robinson also posted that he does not believe the moon landing was fake or that 9/11 was an “inside job,” but wrote that if he found out it was true, “I wouldn’t be surprised.”

The right-wing conservative firebrand has also been a polarizing figure who has come under fire for his past comments about women, Jews, Muslims and members of the LGBTQ community.

Before running for lieutenant governor in 2020, Robinson once wrote that the movie Black Panther was ‘created by an agnostic Jew and filmed by satanic Marxists.

Other publications have included Holocaust denialism. In one he wrote: “This nonsense of disarming MILLIONS of Jews and then sending them to concentration camps is nonsense.”

After the Pulse nightclub shooting in Florida that left 49 people dead in 2016, he wrote that homosexuality “is STILL an abominable sin” and that he would “NOT join the “gay pride celebration.”

He also suggested that Ellen DeGeneres, who is openly gay, was a “high-ranking demon.”

In posts following the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida, in 2018, Robinson called the survivors “Spoiled, angry, know-it-all KIDS” and “media prostitutes.’

Robinson is a conservative firebrand who has come under fire for past anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim, anti-LGBTQ, sexist and other controversial comments and posts online.

Robinson is a conservative firebrand who has come under fire for past anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim, anti-LGBTQ, sexist and other controversial comments and posts online.

Robinson clinched the Republican nomination for governor of North Carolina on Super Tuesday in March.

He is endorsed by Donald Trump, who described Robinson as “Martin Luther King on steroids” when he endorsed him at a rally in Greensboro before the primary.

Robinson called the civil rights leader a “communist” in a 2018 podcast. He has also criticized the Civil Rights Movement as a communist plot to “subvert capitalism.”

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