Sooner or later Antifa will pick the wrong house and end up ventilated.

Via Campus Reform:

A College Republicans adviser claimed that Antifa activists vandalized his house with the words “Nazi lives here.”

David Bridges, adviser to the Purdue University College Republicans student group, woke up on Nov. 18 to red dye covering his driveway and the words, “Nazi lives here” scrawled in white spray paint on the garage door. Bridges claimed that the perpetrators of the vandalism were Antifa activists, according to the Lafayette Journal & Courier.

Bridges scrubbed the garage clean with gasoline and cleared the driveway of the dye, but not before he and his wife submitted photos with a note of the incident to the West Lafayette, Ind. Police Department.

Initially, police officers were concerned that this was a politically-charged occurrence. When contemplating what other incidents may have been the catalyst for the vandalism, police were able to identify a potential impetus.

The week prior to and the week of the Nov. 6 midterm election, Bridges’ role in relation to the Purdue University College Republicans group circulated online with regard to a poster attributed to the Purdue GOP found on campus outlining reasons to vote Republican.

Across the top of the poster was the bold headline, “Jobs Not Mobs,” alluding to a Twitter hashtag that President Donald Trump frequently used during the midterm election season. The left half of the poster included the word “Jobs” in red print. It portrayed a white-skinned hand giving the “OK” hand gesture, a symbol frequently made by Trump and which left-wing activists have cast as a symbol of white supremacy. The right half of the poster displayed the “not Mobs” portion of the hashtag in blue ink and displayed a brown-skinned fist. Along the bottom of the poster was the Purdue College Republicans Twitter handle.

Some university community members expressed concerned with the posters online. Bridges claims that he never approved the idea for the posters and that he understands the concerns on campus.

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