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'''Candace Amber Owens Farmer''' (born April 29, 1989 in Stamford, [[Connecticut]], age {{age|1989|4|29}}) is a [[conservative]] producer, political commentator, intellectual,<ref>https://www.prageru.com/presenter/candace-owens/</ref> and founder of the [[Blexit]] movement. She is especially well known for leaving the anti-Trump [[Democrat plantation]] to join the conservative movement against [[Antifa]], [[Black Lives Matter]], and the Left. On [[PragerU]], she runs The Candace Owens Show, a series of intellectual debates between other intellectuals and herself. On [[The Daily Wire]], she runs Candace, where she hosts panel discussions with an emphasis on [[popular culture]]. <ref>https://www.dailywire.com/show/candace</ref> Subsequently, the [[lamestream media]] quickly labeled her as a "white supremacist" in many failed smear attacks due to her open opposition to [[liberal bigotry]].<ref>https://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2018/08/07/perverted-leftists-call-candace-owens-a-white-supremacist/</ref>
In April 2019, after being too [[uppity]] for white liberals to handle anymore in refuting the [[Southern Strategy]] and the [[U.S. "Party-switch" myth]],<ref>[https://thehill.com/homenews/house/438042-candace-owens-blasts-hearing-on-white-nationalism-in-house-testimony-this Candace Owens blasts hearing on white nationalism in House testimony]</ref> the left-wing [[PolitiFact]] absurdly called the statement “False” while providing skewed "evidence" for its conclusion.<ref>[https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2019/apr/10/candace-owens/candace-owens-pants-fire-statement-southern-strate/ Candace Owens stated on April 9, 2019 in a House Judiciary Committee hearing: The Southern strategy is a "myth" that "never happened."]</ref> The page claimed that [[Republicans]] in the 1960s appealed to Southern racism when [[Richard Nixon]] initially opposed school busing as a brisk means of desegregation; keeping context in relation, the latter notion was considered to be very liberal measure during the time and was likely opposed by many [[conservatives]] who strictly feared setting precedents for further expansions of federal government power (and not over the issue of race) that occurred under the [[1964 Civil Rights Act]] and the [[1965 Voting Rights Act]]. In addition, PolitiFact also ridiculously made an assertion that Nixon's adherence to [[strict constructionism]] in [[Supreme Court]] nominations was also an appeal to Southern racists, despite the fact that such has no specific relation to [[racism]]. The article went on to cite quotes by Republicans during that time, such as [[RINO]] [[Lamar Alexander]] during 1969, who vaguely asserted that there had been a strategy to appeal to conservatives in the South; it's also important to note that ''while Nixon did win the 1968 election with a number of Southern states, this did not include the [[Deep South]], which strongly leaned for segregationist [[Democrat]] [[George Wallace]]''. The article would go on arguing that "coded language" was a mechanism to appeal to racists in the South, despite outright providing insufficient evidence to directly back up the notion.