The Nixon character assassination: united the nation, Americans adored him, elites destroyed him
Nixon won four landslide national elections, proved US was not divided and brought the boys home from Vietnam

President Richard Nixon suffered a fate worse than death. They didn’t assassinate him. They ruined him.
The map above highlights how badly Nixon was disfigured in the woodshed ruining. It shows the 1972 presidential election results by congressional district. Republican Richard Nixon in red. Democrat George McGovern in blue.
Nixon won 377 of 435 congressional districts in 1972; nearly twice as many as the 192 seats won by Republican congressional candidates in the same election.
President John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. will forever remain young martyrs. They killed King’s brother and mother, too, but buried the stories when they buried the bodies. More soon on those two cancel-culture tragedies.
Nixon suffered the indignity of character assassination. He rests eternally today as reminder that no American, no matter how beloved, no matter how powerful, is above the long fate of the Deep State.
The election projection slathered in Richard Nixon red is more than just a map. It’s testimony to cancel-culture terrorism, an expose on intellectual arrogance and a manual on media malfeasance.
Nixon won urban districts and rural districts. Northern districts and southern districts. Honky-tonk districts and country-club districts. Conservative districts and radical districts. Rich gated-community assholes loved Nixon. Poor trailer-park prostitutes loved Nixon.
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The popular president called them the Silent Majority. Turns out they weren’t silent by choice. They were bound, gagged and shouted down by a Marxist-media elite who had gained control of the few major sources of national information in the era. That map is a megaphone amplifying a voice the American people found only at the ballot box in 1972, and that’s been silenced in the years since.
The map offers evidence, as Bill Murray said this month on the Joe Rogan Experience, that “they framed Nixon.”




You’ve been told over and over and over again that the United States was on the eve of destruction in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The fake news narrative was written by the same fiction novelists who glorified the human shitpile bad brown acid trip business failure of Woodstock; and who called the American war heroes of Vietnam “baby killers,” even as GIs built orphanages, adopted infants and served at the sharp end of an existential struggle for survival against Godless totalitarianism.
The American people were not divided in a bitter culture war in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The American people were united behind Richard Milhous Friggin’ Nixon.
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Nixon’s voting bloc in 1972 included more than 1 in 3 registered Democrats. Hell, Nixon might have won the presidency in 1972 had he run alone against both parties.
Nixon won 61% of the popular vote to 37% for McGovern
Nixon won 49 states to 1 state for McGovern
Nixon won 520 electoral votes to 17 for McGovern

Nixon also enjoyed a landslide victory in 1968, winning 301 electoral votes in a three-man race. Popular culture has portrayed Nixon’s first term (1969-73) as an era of dismal divisive misery in the United States.
“Tin soldiers and Nixon coming … four dead in Ohio,” Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young wailed in “Ohio” in 1971, released just weeks after a Kent State campus protest turned deadly.
Nixon had nothing to do with the shootings by Ohio National Guardsmen. But the song has been celebrated for more than 50 years for channeling the “rage” of the American people.
“The American people were united in the early 1970s behind Richard Milhous F’in Nixon”
The song made a major impact on public sentiment commensurate with the decades of plaudits it has received. Nixon won Ohio by only 22 percentage points the following year, compared with 24 nationwide.
The Silent Majority sang a much sweeter song in the Nixon Era than the dirges in the dark displayed in dour headlines or spun into classic discs decades later by filthy, draft-dodging hippies reliving their whore-y days.
As the United States put men on the moon in 1969, Americans grooved to the delicious sound of “Sugar, Sugar” by the Archies. The bouncy beat of pop-culture cotton candy was the No. 1 song in America in 1969.
Voters brushed off the growing daily drumbeat of Nixon negativity in mainstream media to stand behind the president. The so-called Watergate scandal broke in June 1972, five months before the election.
Still, Nixon easily outpaced his 1968 election rout with a bigger victory in 1972, gaining support in almost every single geographic and demographic sector of the nation.
Nixon’s 821 electoral votes is the most ever over two elections by any presidential candidate except for Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Nixon joins FDR as the only two men in US history to win four national elections. Nixon won the vice presidency twice as Dwight Eisenhower’s running mate (1952, 1956) and won the presidency twice. The Nixon ticket won all four elections with overwhelming landslide victories.
Put most simply: Richard Nixon was one of the most popular politicians in U.S. history.
He proved he had the personal firepower to blow past the party-apparatus supply lines traditionally needed to feed and fuel a candidate and conquered great swaths of Democrat territory on his own.
And the elites hated him for it. So they had to destroy him.
Amid the King-Kennedy carnage, the domestic insurgents of the Deep State found a window of opportunity to take down Nixon: a petty-crime misdemeanor at the Watergate Hotel in June 1972.
The source of the scandal was a botched break-in on private property. That’s Watergate, people. But the Washington Post gaslit it with jet fuel and then fed the fire every day for two years.
The Nixon Administration had already been at war with the Post, and the New York Times, in a Supreme Court battle over the outlets’ release of the stolen classified Pentagon Papers.
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the media. No problem there. But the Nixon Administration had acted in the interest of national security, not political gain. The Pentagon Papers chronicled the management of the Vietnam War only through the end of the previous administration under Democrat President Lyndon Johnson.
Watergate was never about treason, sedition, national betrayal or national defense. There was never any allegation that Nixon colluded with our existential enemies. Nobody ever alleged that members of the Nixon family sold foreign adversaries access to halls of power in Washington DC for personal financial gain.
No. The Watergate scandal was a sensationalized handling of a misdemeanor breaking & entering between rival political parties.
The Nixon Administration handled the inquiries that followed poorly. It added fuel to the fire. But nothing more than political embarrassment was at stake. Nobody died at the Watergate Hotel. No American lives were endangered by Watergate. American national security was never threatened by Watergate.
Nixon was framed.
He offered America’s internal insurgents, the Deep State elitists, the most terrifying enemy imaginable.
Nixon was a unifying personality who crossed party lines, salved the nations wounds, appealed to Americans from every region and walk of life. He robbed the nation’s domestic enemies of their most effective weapon of division 52 years ago this week, when Nixon ended U.S involvement in the Vietnam War. And worst of all, Nixon was a Republican and a patriot.
Nixon loved America. Americans loved Nixon. And that’s why they destroyed him.
It’s easy to find your way to the truth. Just follow the map and not the headlines telling you what’s on the map.