
By a Concerned American Patriot
Take a stroll through any liberal neighborhood, and you’ll spot the signs proudly displayed on front lawns and apartment windows:
“Hate Has No Home Here.”
It’s painted in rainbow colors, often flanked by fists, flags, and hashtags like #BLM or #TransRights. The message? A virtuous declaration of moral superiority. The Left, after all, sees itself as the loving, tolerant side.
But let’s not be fooled. Behind the pastel signs and sweet slogans lies a darker truth: hate absolutely does have a home there—just not for everyone. It has no home for the groups the Left likes. But if you’re a Trump supporter? White man? Christian? Conservative? Jew who supports Israel? Suddenly, you’re not just an opponent. You’re the enemy. And hatred becomes not only permissible—it becomes fashionable.
You’ll be called a fascist just for voting Republican. Called a bigot for believing in two genders. Called “privileged” for being white, “dangerous” for quoting the Bible, and “ignorant” for believing in limited government.
This isn’t tolerance. This is tribalism, repackaged as progress.
And the worst part? They don’t even see the hypocrisy.
They’ll shout “love wins” while mocking your faith.
They’ll chant “no human is illegal” while wishing ICE agents would rot in hell.
They’ll preach about inclusion while banning conservative speakers from campuses and shadowbanning pro-America voices online.
They claim to oppose hate. But in practice, they’ve simply changed who it’s okay to hate.
So let’s call it what it is: virtue signaling. Hollow. Conditional. Performative.
Because “Hate Has No Home Here”—unless you’re wearing a MAGA hat, believe in the Constitution, or think America is worth protecting. Then the pitchforks come out.
To the modern Left, hate isn’t wrong. It’s just a tool. And like any tool, it’s fine—so long as they’re the ones swinging it.