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Ron Paul's latest flap over a series of racist newsletters has won him the support of a group no politician wants on their side: White supremacists. And it's not the first time, either. The Republican presidential candidate is a perennial favorite among those on the white supremacist message board Stormfront, where he's getting all kinds of unabashed support for his campaign, his newsletters, and his political persona in general. Paul has already said he doesn't want white supremacists' support. But like it or not, he's got it. And stories like the newsletter thing really seem to lock that support down even tighter.

For the sake of your browsing history, we're going to put a * next to links that will take you to Stormfront or sites like it. We could have used one of those from Slate's Dave Wiegel when he tweeted today: "Shockingly, Stormfront commenters believe that Paul's newsletters are right and awesome," with a link that led to a very white-power themed discussion* of how great Paul was when he walked off a CNN interview Wednesday. Take this for example, from a commenter named OneMan:

I don't think many white Americans are falling for that "racist" canard much these days. They've worn it out and people are more awake to that red herring. Still, let them wear themselves out throwing it around. I'd love to see him win the presidency and make them all eat s--t.

Another was even more to the point: "Too bad he can't just embrace the newsletters, " wrote Iceman85. Plenty more comments supported Paul in language we'd prefer not to repeat here.