Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., keeps peddling pro-Russia, anti-Ukraine talking points. Unfortunately for the far-right conspiracy theorist, she has zero credibility on the matter.
During an interview with a conservative podcast on Tuesday, Greene, who once blamed California wildfires on space lasers controlled by Jews, suggested Ukraine is overrun by Nazis. The Kremlin has made similar allegations to justify its ongoing invasion of Ukraine, claiming it must “denazify” the country.
“It’s shocking to me that Congress is so willing to funnel $14 billion in military equipment over and over again into Ukraine,” Greene said. “And you have to ask, is this money and is this United States military equipment falling into the hands of Nazis in Ukraine?”
She made a similar remark Sunday on Twitter, underscoring her apparent desire to inject the Kremlin’s talking points into U.S. dialogue.
But Greene’s credibility problem on the anti-Nazi front is abundantly clear: She’s publicly aligned herself with neo-Nazis and white nationalists in America. Just last month, she spoke at a white nationalist conference in Orlando, Florida.
At the conference, Greene told attendees they were wrongly “canceled Americans.”
“You’ve been handed the responsibility to fight for our Constitution and stand for our freedoms and stop the Democrats, who are the communist party of the United States of America,” she told them.
Yet, we’re to believe she’s suddenly developed an interest in rooting out neo-Nazism? It’s an inexplicable contradiction that blows a hole in the “supporting Ukraine means supporting Nazis” propaganda that Kremlin sympathizers have been pushing.








