According to one of a series of inflammatory and racist social media posts from 2014 to 2019, Mark Robinson, a embattled Republican gubernatorial candidate in North Carolina, said that those who cannot care for children are infertile. He suggested that I should undergo surgery.
Commentaries referring to black families, using terminology deemed appropriate to white supremacists, predate his time as lieutenant governor, but many of them come as he emerged as a right-wing public figure. It was made later. Most of the social media posts have never been reported.
Robinson wrote on her Facebook page in 2014, “I respect a loyal dog more than a human being who doesn’t take care of his children.” The post included the hashtag “#haveyourdeadbeatsspayedandneutered.”
Robinson has been in a state of damage control in recent weeks. Last month, CNN exposed old posts made under his profile on a pornographic website in which the conservative gubernatorial candidate referred to himself as a “black Nazi” and referred to the era of slavery. It is said that he was eager for the return of
Robinson denied making the comments, lashed out at his detractors, attacked his opponent, Attorney General Josh Stein, and filed a defamation lawsuit against CNN.
However, other comments remain public on his social media pages.
“If I need a court order to take care of my children, I will probably need surgery to make sure I don’t have any more children,” Robinson posted on Facebook in 2016.
In 2016, Robinson wrote on Facebook: The weak-minded, deranged black man always considers himself and “his people” to be the victims. ”
“I get annoyed when I hear women talk about how smart and strong they are…when they’re dating unemployed, violent criminals who abuse them,” Robinson wrote in 2017. wrote on Facebook.
In 2017, Robinson wrote, “Deadly men, the lewd women they mate with, and the undisciplined children they produce are the top three problems that cause the African American culture to fail miserably.” (in this order),” he wrote on Facebook.
“I would rather be wrongly labeled a ‘coon’ by a few African Americans than be correctly labeled a deadbeat by my children,” Robinson wrote on Facebook in 2017.
“Abortion in this country is not about saving a mother’s life. It’s about killing a child because she wasn’t responsible enough to keep her skirt down,” Robinson said in a Facebook video in 2019.
Mr. Robinson’s Facebook feed is a near-constant parade of conservative vitriol, accelerating in both pace and intensity throughout the era of President Donald Trump. With virtually no exceptions, Robinson’s posts depict black sexuality and black culture in negative terms and cite common racist tropes about out-of-wedlock births and the use of abortion as contraception.
A CNN report last month linked Robinson’s identity to a “mini-solder” profile on the Nude Africa forum and other websites, and said of Robinson’s anti-Black comments, “I’m not a member of the KKK. They don’t want Black people. I won’t let him in. If I was in the KKK, I’d call him Martin Lucifer Kuhn!”
Robinson’s campaign did not respond to requests for comment.
Earlier this month, Robinson filed a lawsuit against CNN and a Guilford County man who runs a porn video store in North Carolina and made a music video about Robinson, saying the lieutenant governor still owes money for the videotape. Ta. Robinson’s lawyers said in the defamation suit that the two articles “represent a new low in digital lynching.” “They have published disgusting lies about the Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson in what appears to be a coordinated attack aimed at derailing his gubernatorial campaign, and have already caused immeasurable damage to his family, honor and reputation. No harm done.”