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Damning Resurfaced Video Reveals Just How Evil Stephen Miller Is

Damning Resurfaced Video Reveals Just How Evil Stephen Miller Is

Yahoo17-07-2025
A resurfaced video of a younger White House deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller shows the president's ghoulish policy adviser raving that 'torture is a celebration of life.'
In a video dated 2003, 17-year-old Miller sits backward on a school bus speaking about the United States' invasion of Iraq.
'To the issue of the Iraqi civilians, I think that as many of them should survive as possible, because the goal of any military conflict is to kill as few people as possible,' Miller said.
'But as for Saddam Hussein and his henchmen, I think the ideal solution would be to cut off their fingers.'
'I don't think it's necessary to kill them entirely, we're not a barbaric people, we respect life. Therefore torture is the way to go. Because tortured people can live. Torture is a celebration of life and human dignity,' he continued, as teenagers off screen burst into laughter.
'We need to remember that as we enter these very dark and dangerous times in the next century. And I only hope that many of my peers and people who will be leading this country will appreciate the value and respect that torture shows towards other cultures,' Miller said.
Twenty-three years later, Miller is a central figure leading the United States, and his inhumane immigration policies have marked the way for hundreds of people to be detained in tortuous conditions and deported to dangerous third countries and foreign gulags.
Speaking to Vice in 2017, former White House spokesperson Sarah Huckabee Sanders dismissed the video as being inauthentic.
'This is clearly a sketch comedy routine performed by teenagers and for teenagers as part of a video yearbook,' she said. 'This teenage skit does not reflect any policy position, past or present, held by Stephen Miller. This is another comical overreach by the media.'
But there's plenty of reasons to consider Miller's heinous statements legitimate.
Miller was raised in California, where his 'evolving political views could not have been more at odds with those of progressive, inclusive Santa Monica, a fact in which he delighted,' wrote Vanity Fair special correspondent William D. Cohan in 2017 after Miller had helped craft the Trump administration's travel ban on predominantly Muslim countries.
Miller's former classmates recalled that he would challenge Latino students to speak English and loudly opposed putting student announcements in multiple languages—an attitude that mirrors the Trump administration's recent policy to end all multi-lingual services purporting to promote the use of English.
In 2002, Miller wrote a whiny op-ed for the Santa Monica Lookout, railing against the 'political correctness' he believed had taken over his school, and declaring that 'Osama Bin Laden would feel very welcome at Santa Monica High School.'
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That debate further intensified as President Donald Trump's administration sought to deport some foreign-born pro-Palestinian campus activists. The Islamic Center of Southern California has been targeted before, including vandalism in 2023 and separate threats that authorities said in 2016 were made by a man who was found with multiple weapons in his home. Incidents like the latest one cause concern, Ricci said. 'People see that it's not going to take very much to spark something in the city,' he said. 'There's a lot of emotion. There's a lot of passion' on both the pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli sides. Salam Al-Marayati, president of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, said 'if people think they can get away with graffiti, then the next step is to firebomb a mosque or even go attack worshippers.' Opening doors and receiving support Al-Marayati and others praised how many have shown support for the affected Muslim communities. 'The best preparation is what we did in Los Angeles and that's to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with our allies and be there for one another,' he said. In Texas, a gathering at Nueces brought together neighbors and others, including Christians and Jews, to paint over the vandalism, clean up the property and garden, Zayan said. 'It was beautiful,' she said. 'It's really important to open your doors and open your heart and invite people and to rebuild this trust and connection,' she said. 'For non-Muslims, it was a great opportunity for them to show their love and support. They really wanted to do something.' ___

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