Posted on December 7, 2018

‘Nazi Lives Here’: Vandals Strike Home of Purdue University College Republican Adviser

Alana Mastrangelo, Breitbart, December 5, 2018

The faculty adviser for Purdue University’s College Republican student group woke up to find that his home had been vandalized with paint, including the words “Nazi Lives Here” scrawled on his garage door.

Professor David Bridges, who is the adviser of the College Republican (CR) group at Purdue University, discovered that his home had been vandalized with a red paint-like substance on his driveway, and the words “Nazi Lives Here” spray-painted on his garage door.

The suspect is still at large, but Bridges believes that the vandalism was carried out by local Antifa members, according to a November 27 Facebook post.

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It is unclear what prompted vandals to target the biology professor’s home, but one could surmise that it was in response to a flyer the CR’s had put out on campus ahead of the midterm elections, {snip}.

The flyer read: “Jobs Not Mobs” at the top, accompanied with an image of the “OK” hand gesture below the word “Jobs,” and the “raised fist” hand gesture below the words “Not Mobs.”

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“The majority of our group viewed the text printed on our posters as an acceptable means to convey our conservative message,” stated the CR student group to Breitbart News, “One person was in charge of the imagery portrayed on those posters, and we regret that many found one of those images offensive.”

Nazi propaganda poster.

“We were shocked at the disproportionate outrage that was caused, and the vandalism that ensued, over posters that were clearly moderate in their intent,” added the group.

Just as President Donald Trump’s signature “thumbs up” has become a popular gesture among his supporters, the “OK” hand gesture had also become popular among conservative youth during the 2016 election, as it is a gesture frequently seen made by President Trump during his speeches, among many other gestures.

Last year, a 4chan hoax attempting to fool individuals into mistaking the “OK” hand gesture for a “white power” symbol, went viral among some circles on the internet. The hoax was later promoted by Left-wing activists seeking to label conservatives as white supremacists.

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