In the weeks since Donald Trump's disastrous "No, but I asked how to legally ban Muslims so it's not a Muslim Ban" Muslim Ban, 31-year-old senior advisor Stephen Miller is enjoying some fame. Miller is seen as something of a wingman to Steve "My Face Looks Like This Because That Was Part of Satan's Deal" Bannon, and one of the architects of the executive order. Miller and Bannon's politics are very similar, particularly when it comes to immigration, on which they are both hard-line nationalists.

For reference, Ann Coulter speaks glowingly about his "gargantuan IQ" and how much "he loves this country," which is not unlike getting a LinkedIn testimonial from Lucifer. Miller, an "intellectual giant" who has previously worked for Michelle Bachmann and newly appointed Attorney General Jeff Sessions, made appearances on a slate of Sunday news shows. He spent his time reading from cue cards or a teleprompter (remember when the right hated those?) and saying a bunch of .

On ABC's *This Week," Miller claimed that wide-spread voter fraud hurt President Trump in the election. When pressed for evidence by George Stephanopoulos, he offered none—but did shout loudly! (Note Miller's eyes moving from left to right.)

And then Miller argued that Sean Spicer, who is almost never correct, is always 100 percent correct. This is especially bonkers because Spicer is the guy who claimed Trump's inauguration was the biggest ever.

On Face the Nation, Miller spouted some light fascism about how the President's power would "not be questioned."

He also appeared on Meet the Press, where he continued to look like he was reading cue cards angrily, even while complimenting Chuck Todd:

And on Fox News, Miller continued his campaign of insulting the judiciary by angrily yelling about how the federal judges over-reached in halting the Trump Muslim ban.

But Miller's off-putting style and repugnant viewpoints are hardly new, according to Rosalind S. Helderman's profile of Miller in the Washington Post:

As a young conservative in liberal Santa Monica, Calif., Stephen Miller clashed frequently with his high school, often calling in to a national radio show to lambaste administrators for promoting multiculturalism, allowing Spanish-language morning announcements and failing to require recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance. Miller’s outrage did not appear to subside after he graduated. As a Duke University sophomore, Miller penned a column, titled “Santa Monica High’s Multicultural Fistfights,” in which he ripped his alma mater as a “center for political indoctrination.” “The social experiment that Santa Monica High School has become is yet one more example of the dismal failure of leftism and the delusions and paranoia of its architects,” Miller wrote in the 2005 article for the conservative magazine FrontPage.

Man. Miller sounds like most annoying guy in high school and the most annoying guy in college. It takes a special brand of arrogance and a special lack of self-awareness to be able to pull both of those off. Congrats Stephen, people are now as horrified of you as they are of President Bannon.

Well, almost everyone.

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