Sen. Rand Paul strongly defended his hiring of staffer Jack Hunter on Thursday, a former shock jock who spent years promoting neo-Confederacy organizations, advocating for Southern secession, and bemoaning threats to white culture.
In an interview with the Huffington Post’s Howard Fineman, Paul said he doesn’t agree with Hunter’s views on Abraham Lincoln, the Confederacy, and secession. But he added that the social media aide “is incredibly talented” and said he passes his office’s “zero tolerance policy for anybody who displays discriminatory behavior or belief in discriminating against people based on the color of their skin, their religion, their sexual orientation, anything like that.”
“People are calling him a white supremacist,” Paul said. “If I thought he was a white supremacist, he would be fired immediately. If I thought he would treat anybody on the color of their skin different that others, I’d fire him immediately.”
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Paul compared attacks on Hunter to criticism of his own past marijuana use. “Are we at a point where nobody can have had a youth or said anything untoward?” he asked.
Paul’s reference to “youth” is a relative term, to put it mildly. Hunter is 39 today. As recently as 2009, he wrote a column defending secession (as in: something to consider today) as well as his personal affection for the Confederacy. In 2007, he warned that a “non-white majority America would simply cease to be America for reasons that are as numerous as they are obvious.” In 2005, he wrote that he celebrates John Wilkes Booth’s birthday, and in 2004, he wrote a column entitled “John Wilkes Booth Was Right.” In 1999, he chaired the League of the South, a group devoted to Southern secession.
As the conservative Free Beacon reported on Tuesday, Hunter held his radio job as the “Southern Avenger” as late as 2012. In 2010, he co-authored Rand Paul’s book The Tea Party Goes To Washington.
A familiar pattern









