Far-left Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) has complained about President-elect Donald J. Trump’s Defence Secretary pick Pete Hegseth, claiming he may be an “insider threat” because he has a Roman Catholic-inspired tattoo.
In a letter to Hegseth written on January 6, Senator Warren notes that Hegseth, then a National Guardsman, was removed from President Joe Biden’s inauguration because of concerns he was an “insider threat” due to a tattoo on his arm that reads Deus Vult, Latin for “God wills it.”
Warren claims the phrase is linked to “right-wing extremism” and states that “we cannot have a Defence Secretary whose fellow servicemembers feel concerned enough about to report as a potential insider threat.”
The phrase “Deus Vult” is associated with the Crusades and was allegedly shouted by knights in response to a speech by Pope Urban II. In it, the Pope called for Christians in the West to aid the Eastern Roman Empire, which was constantly under attack by armies of invading Muslims.
While not a Roman Catholic, Hegseth also sports a large Jerusalem Cross tattoo on his chest, a symbol of the city of Jerusalem and the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Hegseth has previously addressed criticisms of his tattoos, accusing the media of “anti-Christian bigotry” on X last November.
Vice President-elect J.D. Vance, a practicing Roman Catholic, also defended Hegseth and slammed the Associated Press (AP), saying, “They’re attacking Pete Hegseth for having a Christian motto tattooed on his arm. This is disgusting anti-Christian bigotry from the AP, and the entire organization should be ashamed of itself.”
Under the Biden-Harris regime, some Christians have been targeted, with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) spying on Traditional Catholics across the country. The FBI also used “far-right extremism” as justification for the spying.