hardly recognizable in any sort of official Republican or conservative way. He was a post- right-wing provocateur but with none of the dinner party waspishness or bite of Ann Coulter or Milo Yiannopoulos. They were a stagey type of reactionary. He was a real one —a genuine racist with a good education, in his case UVA, the University of Chicago, and Duke. It was Bannon who effectively gave Spencer flight by pronouncing Breitbart to be “the platform for the alt-right’—the movement Spencer claimed to have founded, or at least owned the domain name for. “T don’t think Bannon or Trump are identitarians or alt-rightists,” Spencer explained while camped out just over CPAC’s property line at the Gaylord. They were not, like Spencer, philosophic racists (itself different from a knee-jerk racist). “But they are open to these ideas. And open to the people who are open to these ideas. We’re the spice in the mix.” Spencer was right. Trump and Bannon, with Sessions in the mix, too, had come closer than any major national politician since the Civil Rights movement to tolerating a race- tinged political view. “Trump has said things that conservatives never would have thought... . His criticism of the Iraq War, bashing the Bush family, I couldn’t believe he did that ... but he did... . Fuck them ... if at the end of the day an Anglo Wasp family produces Jeb and W then clearly that’s a clear sign of denegation... . And now they marry Mexicans ... Jeb’s wife ... he married his housekeeper or something. “In Trump’s 2011 CPAC address he specifically calls for a relaxation of immigration restrictions for Europeans ... that we should re-create an America that was far more stable and more beautiful... . No other conservative politician would say those things ... but on the other hand pretty much everyone thought it ... so it’s powerful to say it... . Clearly [there’s] a normalization process going on.” “We are the Trump vanguard. The left will say Trump is a nationalist and an impli