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  • #31
    Collapsed Crap led by ZOGbots

    Collapsed Crap led by ZOGbots


    https://www.counter-currents.com/201...omment-1401096
    http://stumbleinn.net/forum/showthre...049#post435049
    http://thebeerbarrel.net/threads/gre...4/#post-252998
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7780#post17780
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7780#post17780


    I’ve been in the [bowel] Movement since Waco and not being able to find a militia set me up two of them. In every single case, if you are successful in building anything which ZOG finds dangerous, they will try to infiltrate it in short order. Understanding that ZOG/Babylon won’t collapse in a single day or week no matter what you do or don’t do has kept people around me out of trouble. My particular Movement Mentor was James Floyd of Cullman Alabama.

    So I’ve seen tards cum and go. Louis Beam introduced me to Katja Lane, David Lane’s wife. They knew all about the Reverend Doctor Bob Millar of Elohim City being a ZOGbot. Katja Lane would tell all about “Phone-booth fuerher’s who got $400,000 in Order loot and didn’t help David Lane” talking about William Pierce and how TraitorFlenn Miller got $250,000 and yet testified against the Order and Pastors Richard Butler and Robert Miles.

    Now unlike most of the bowel Movement ober-shiessen-kopfen-feeben-fartin-fuktard-fuerhers I’ve never had any doubt that ZOG/Babylon the Third and Final will fall apart and break up into Ten Thousand Warlordcies over 10-20 million remaining ZOGling whigger and mamzer herd animals. My job has been to ensure the Collapse / Great Tribulation kills predominately the mongrels, jews, and Sixth-Day Beasts of the Field. Hence I’m not much interested in showing my self other than in running for political office in order to spread sedition at the local, state and federal level. Accordingly I’ve had a web page since Feb 1996 of which I never take anything down.

    Dickie Spencer is a 1/8 jew mischling with plenty of money from William Regnery — majorityrights.com calls it the “Regnery Circus”. Until last week Dickie was a part of Attorney Kyle Bristow’s Foundation for the MarketPlace of Ideas. I called it the ZOGbot Poverty [F]Law Center (ZPLC). Kyle Bristow’s “law clerk” is one Bryan Reo a.k.a. “SwordBrethren” who is also on the ZPLC as is Attorney Brett Klimkowsky, who is suing myself, my girlfriend Roxie, and my Church Corporation the Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri. First for $10.75 million in gederal court, then when that bogus federal lawsuit was dismissed, to the Lake County Ohio courts.

    Reo v Lindstedt 15CV001590

    Reo v Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri 16CV000825

    Bryan Reo took down 10-12 Church web pages because I said that it was a homosexual mongrel. Bryan Reo and Brett Klimkowsky recently tried to get summary judgment because I insinuated that Kyle Bristow and Reo were homosexual lovers and in my motion for summary judgment tried to get Bristow and Klimkowsky disbarred for abuse of legal process. The seventh trial date has been set for June 2018.

    Looking at the postage meterings (some from Detroit as opposed to Reo’s Cleveland and Klimkowsky’s Toledo) and the postage spent it seems that they were flush when Bristow got $27,500 for lawyer’s fees in last week’s Michigan State University rally a month and a half ago, then Bristow and Spencer fell apart to where Bristow is not representing Dickie any more.

    I made a video about this last week:

    Pulling The Buttplug on the ZOGbot Poverty FLaw Center”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zGLkqxC-Lw

    When Kyle Bristow pulled the plug, so did the goat-raper with the mongrel spawn Augustus Invictus, then the rest of the lawyers. Dickie Spencer was also on the Bored of DirecTards.

    I doubt that Dickie Spencer has very much ZOGbux left, not that it matters because there is always ZOG financing via the ” Hal Turner Model of ZOG Financing”. ZOG gives Hal Turner or Alex Linder or Don Black the ZOGbux for their operations and they get to keep the ZOGbux, whiggazmites, and geezergelt sent in by tards, whose adresses and IP #s are in turn sent to ZOG/ADL/$PLC.

    http://whitenationalist.org/useful/a...l-fuk-U-up.mp3

    It strikes me if a Norwegian presstard can write a book about the bowel Movement then I can write one that is better, cheaper, and more accurate, especially about all the jews, mongrels, perverts and ZOGbux in the See-Eye Dentist portion of the bowel Movement.

    Hail Victory !!!

    Pastor Martin Luther Dzerzhinsky Lindstedt
    Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri




    Pastor Lindstedt's Web Page
    Pastor Lindstedt's Archive Page & Christian Nationalist Forum

    Comment


    • #32
      Less Than a Year After Charlottesville, the Alt-Right Is Self-Destructing

      Less Than a Year After Charlottesville, the Alt-Right Is Self-Destructing

      Less than a year after its deadly rally in Charlottesville, the American alt-right is splintering in dramatic fashion as its leaders turn on each other or quit altogether.

      KELLY WEILL
      03.29.18 4:56 AM ET



      https://www.thedailybeast.com/less-t...lf-destructing
      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7873#post17873
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7873#post17873




      A Mount Rush-mamzer of jews & mamzers ! ! ! Dickie Spencer, Andre the nigger Anglin, Matt-oid Chaimbach
      .

      Some have turned federal informant. Others are facing prison time. More are named in looming lawsuits. All of them are fighting.

      Last summer, the American alt-right was presenting itself as a threatening, unified front, gaining national attention with a deadly rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. The collection of far-right and white nationalist groups proclaimed victory after President Donald Trump hesitated to directly condemn them and instead blamed “both sides” and the “alt left” for the violence. But less than a year after Charlottesville, the alt-right is splintering in dramatic fashion as its leaders turn on each other or quit altogether.

      Matthew Heimbach’s arrest in a March trailer park brawl with members of his neo-Nazi group—some of whom he was allegedly screwing—felt like a too-obvious metaphor. Heimbach was the head of the Traditionalist Worker Party, a youth-focused white supremacist group that floated to the front of media coverage and hate rallies in the run-up to Donald Trump’s election.

      But by March, Heimbach and the TWP had spent the previous months embroiled in a series of online spats with other alt-right factions. On March 14, police in his Indiana hometown arrested Heimbach after he allegedly assaulted TWP spokesperson Matthew Parrott during a fight over their wives, both of whom Heimbach was allegedly sleeping with. Heimbach’s wife is Parrott’s stepdaughter.

      The high-profile bust was an accelerant in what had been a slow-burning feud among the alt-right. Heidi Beirich, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project, said the schism started after Unite the Right, a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, last August. The rally turned deadly after a man affiliated with a white supremacist group plowed a car into a crowd of counterprotesters, killing one and injuring more.

      I think the splintering started there, but I have to say what happened in the last couple weeks has been at a much higher level,” Beirich told The Daily Beast on Wednesday.

      Threats from the far-right are by no means over. The SPLC recently released a map documenting 954 hate groups in the U.S., a rise in 20 percent since 2014. In a January report, the Anti-Defamation League found that white supremacists had killed 18 people in 2017.

      But the alt-right has had a bad month. In recent weeks, as Beirich described, prominent white supremacist Richard Spencer has dropped a lawsuit against Kent State University and canceled his speaking tour, after anti-fascist protesters opposed him at every stop. “Antifa is winning,” Spencer conceded in a video. Days earlier, Kyle Bristow, an alt-right lawyer who has represented Spencer, announced he was quitting the movement after the Detroit Free Press wrote an article critical of him.

      Heimbach was arrested days after Spencer canceled his tour.

      “The implosion of the Traditionalist Worker Party, it’s not exactly as though that was planned in some way, but it’s a spectacular implosion of a key player in this universe,” Beirich said of the alt-right’s terrible two weeks.

      Even the TWP’s diehards say its prospects are bleak.

      “There is no way for us to continue on with the TWP branding after what happened,” Tony Hovater, a TWP leader, wrote on Gab, a social media platform popular among the alt-right. In November, Hovater was the subject of an arguably sympathetic New York Times profile. Now he was on Gab discussing his plans to start a new organization after Heimbach’s arrest, which was “without a doubt a shameful” incident, he wrote. (Journalist Elizabeth King noted on Twitter that the TWP may have rebranded or splintered into something called the Nationalist Initiative.)

      “I have no comment,” Parrott, the former TWP spokesperson whose wife allegedly slept with Heimbach, told The Daily Beast on Wednesday. “I am no longer involved in the movement, and I have no stake in all the stupid shit going on in it.”

      He’s not the only one headed to the exits over infighting.

      Earlier in March—after Bristow quit the movement, but before Spencer canceled his college tour—Heimbach and the TWP acted as a security force for Spencer outside a speech to a handful of people at Michigan State University. They scrapped with counterprotesters, resulting in at least a dozen arrests—including that of Greg Conte, director of operations for an alt-right group, HuffPost reported.

      The physical brawl turned into a Twitter feud between Spencer and Patrick Casey, the executive director of white supremacist group Identity Evropa. Identity Evropa participated in the violent clashes at Charlottesville. But after the deadly rally, and two leadership changes (leader Nathan Damigo quit after Charlottesville, and his successor Eli Mosely quit to join a Spencer-affiliated group before it was revealed that Mosely lied about serving in the Iraq War) Identity Evropa promoted Casey to its head and attempted to rebrand itself as clean-cut.

      On Twitter, two days after the TWP got in a brawl while acting as Spencer’s security force, Identity Evropa claimed to be “explicitly non-violent” and “peacefully effecting cultural change.” In a press-friendly, but largely meaningless semantic ploy, the group denied being a white supremacist organization.

      Spencer interpreted the tweet as an attack. In a tweet of his own, Spencer said he was “baffled and shocked at the behavior” of Casey, and accused him of expelling Identity Evropa members who had supported Spencer during the brawl outside Michigan State University.

      The spat was the latest over the alt-right’s “optics,” a divisive subject among the movement. The Unite the Right rally was so toxic for the alt-right’s image that some members started arguing that in-person protests were bad publicity for the cause.

      Currently “the biggest divide is between people who believe in online activism versus real-world activism.” Beirich said. After Charlottesville, Daily Stormer founder “Andrew Anglin, for example, posted things criticizing in-real-life protests… When PayPal and Facebook started banning accounts, he was pointing out that ‘these aren’t good things for us, taking to the streets isn’t necessarily positive, the optics were bad.’”

      Anglin is currently on the run and claims to be in Cambodia while he attempts to avoid a lawsuit by a Jewish woman whose address and phone number he posted online after she argued with Spencer’s mother. Anglin encouraged readers on his neo-Nazi website The Daily Stormer to call the woman and visit her home, unleashing a campaign of harassment against her.

      An opposing alt-right movement accuses people like Anglin of “optics-cucking,” a reference to a porn genre in which a man watches another man have sex with his wife. (The term was in vogue with the alt-right long before Parrott stood on a box outside a trailer to watch Heimbach have sex with Parrott’s wife, according to a police report in the incident.) The anti-optics crowd accuses the pro-optics faction of trying to splinter the movement.

      Among the optics-skeptical is Chris Cantwell, a white supremacist who featured prominently in a Vice documentary on the Unite the Right rally, and who later became a meme when he cried on camera. Since Charlottesville, Cantwell has produced a podcast, which ran on The Daily Stormer until Anglin allegedly removed it without telling Cantwell earlier this month.

      “As far as I can tell, that’s what’s going on and they’re just throwing barbs back and forth over it,” Beirich said. “I think there’s also a lot of, maybe ‘professional’ is the wrong word, but professional jealousies here. Cantwell’s blog or podcast gets more popular, that pisses off other members of the alt-right who want to be center-stage.”

      On Gab, Cantwell alleged a conspiracy.

      “I found out that new content was not being syndicated to [The Daily Stormer] when somebody asked about it in my Gab mentions. So I can’t say with any certainty what the motivation was,” Cantwell wrote last week. He suggested that the removal of his show and the flood of negative news about the TWP, in which he is not involved, was part of an effort to discredit the alt-right.

      “I smell subversion,” he wrote.

      Hovater, the remaining TWP leader who called Heimbach’s arrest “shameful,” shared the post. Cantwell’s attack on The Daily Stormer soon landed him in trouble with other members of the alt-right, when one of the blog’s contributors revealed that Cantwell was an FBI informant.

      Andrew Auernheimer, a Daily Stormer contributor and hacker best known by his screen name “Weev,” posted screenshots of a conversation with Cantwell, in which Cantwell admitted to reporting members of Philadelphia ARA (anti-racist action groups) to authorities.

      “I talked to cops too. gonna talk to the feds soon most likely,” Cantwell told Weev in the undated conversation, which references Cantwell’s pending felony case for alleged illegal use of tear gas at the Charlottesville rally. “I’m going after Philly ARA. Not throwing our people under the bus. We weren’t the bad guys last August, and Charlottesville is ignoring that fact. The feds want to bust Antifa and I’m keen to help them.”

      Weev replied that “if you hadn’t talked to cops and media in the first place and had gotten scarce you wouldn’t be facing 40 years in prison.”

      After Weev posted the screenshots, Cantwell confirmed their authenticity in a blog post of his own titled “I Am A Federal Informant,” in which he attacked Weev as “a Jew in a foreign country” in reference to rumors that the neo-Nazi blogger is actually of Jewish ancestry. Cantwell also confirmed that his attorney had spoken with the FBI. The admission set off a fresh volley of criticism from alt-righters who are opposed to communicating with law enforcement.

      Cantwell has good reason to try to deflect blame onto anti-fascist protesters. In addition to his pending criminal charges, he is named in two civil lawsuits against Unite the Right rioters. (He is only a defendant in one of the cases.) Between them, the lawsuits also name Spencer, the TWP, Identity Evropa, and the League of the South, the latter of which signed an agreement Monday not to host any future armed protests in Charlottesville.

      Beirich said the two lawsuits “will probably drive some other people to abandon the movement. They just don’t want to get caught up in the legal fees.”

      In her extensive time tracking the far-right, Beirich has seen other similar movements grow and implode. She drew a parallel between the alt-right and the National Alliance, a neo-Nazi group that, until the early 2000s, “was the biggest neo-Nazi group in America. It was the main player.”

      But when the National Alliance’s leader William Pierce died in 2002, the group turned on itself.

      “Within a very short period of time, the whole group was essentially decimated. One year after Pierce was dead, that group was done and had splintered into a whole bunch of factions,” Beirich said. “That was the case where a leader died, and I imagine Heimbach’s downfall is almost a death to the Traditionalist Worker Party.”

      Under the pressure of lawsuits, jail time, scandal, and shame, she imagines some current alt-righters will simply slink away, if they haven’t already.

      “I’m sure we’re going to lose some people and we’re going to have some fighting over the crumbs that are left.”

      Kelly Weill
      kelly.weill@thedailybeast.com


      Meercat with tits!!!

      Comment


      • #33
        A Story of Solidarity

        A Story of Solidarity


        http://www.occidentaldissent.com/201...of-solidarity/
        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7879#post17879
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7879#post17879


        Dickie Spencer gets punched by Antifa
        .

        Last month, I said that April was going to be a time of self reflection on this website. That’s because something ended in March. It was my affiliation with the Alt-Right.

        I’ve spent the last few weeks thinking about why I got involved with the Alt-Right in the first place. Elsewhere, I have seen the argument made that we did it because the media wanted us to “do something” after the 2016 election. This is why we decided to participate in street activism and college tours. But that’s not what happened. This narrative skips over a series of important events in 2017.

        The Rise

        The Inauguration

        In hindsight, it wasn’t the Trump campaign in 2015 and 2016 – there were few public events during this time – that set off the events of 2017. Instead, the catalyzing moment was when Richard Spencer was punched in the face by the Antifa who rioted at Trump’s inauguration.

        In the aftermath of the Trump inauguration, the “Punch a Nazi” meme went viral. There were many voices on the Left that publicly embraced the cause of political violence. The issue of Antifa violence entered the mainstream. In such a way, Richard Spencer getting punched at the inauguration and the explosion of Antifa violence led to a reassessment in our circles. We began to perceive a common threat. We felt a sense of solidarity with Spencer because Antifa had become such a menace to our rights.

        As Carl Schmitt argued, politics is based on the friend/enemy distinction. The enemy is someone who wants to cause you physical harm. The distinction refers to the “utmost degree of intensity … of an association or dissociation” between groups that square off against each other. Seen in this light, Richard Spencer was a friend who had the same enemies who wish to do us harm.

        MILO

        The “punch a Nazi” meme bled over from Richard Spencer getting attacked at Trump’s inauguration to the next battle with Antifa rioting and shutting down MILO at Berkeley. Very few of us ever had any sympathy for MILO, but it was another sign that Antifa were ratcheting up political violence. They were emboldened to “no platform” free speech and freedom of assembly in public places.

        Berkeley

        The March 4 Trump event at Berkeley where Based Stickman cracked his pole over the head of an Antifa set off a backlash against Antifa. He was lauded for it at the time. This event catalyzed the “free speech movement” where lots of people on the Right, not just White Nationalists, but also MAGApede civic nationalists began to battle with Antifa in public spaces over their free speech and freedom of assembly. The victories over Antifa in Huntington Beach and Berkeley were widely celebrated on the internet. This is what set off all sorts of people showing up at public events with sticks and shields.

        Auburn

        Richard Spencer spoke at Auburn University last April. He won an important battle for free speech and freedom of assembly in the federal courts. Antifa showed up to challenge the Alt-Right in Auburn, but were unmasked and were mostly kept at bay by the Auburn police. Matt Heimbach and the Traditionalist Worker Party were asked to come to Auburn to help provide security and did so out of a sense of solidarity with Richard Spencer. I personally attended the Auburn event.

        Pikeville

        The Traditionalist Worker Party held a rally in Pikeville, KY the following weekend.

        It was a Nationalist Front rally. Since Matt Heimbach had come to Auburn and clashed with Antifa in my backyard in East Alabama, I drove to Pikeville to support his free speech and right to freedom of assembly in Kentucky. This is what the movement was about at the time. It wasn’t so much the Alt-Right movement as it was a free speech movement about the common threat posed by Antifa to our rights.

        The reason that I attended the Pikeville rally was out of a sense of solidarity. The League of the South also attended the Pikeville rally. It was at that moment that the League joined the Nationalist Front. We did so out of the recognition that all these groups were facing a common enemy which was determined to violently attack us in the streets. It wasn’t because we shared the same ideology or optics.

        The Pikeville rally got a lot of negative feedback. I discounted those voices at the time. I was focused on the fact that Antifa was the real enemy. I was looking outwards at the real threat, not inward at the people bitching about optics online. There was a clarifying moment in Pikeville when Antifa was across the street screaming about their desire to kill us. It showed those of us who were there who was the real enemy.

        New Orleans

        In the aftermath of Pikeville, a group of Black Confederates defending the Jefferson Davis monument were attacked in New Orleans. As in Auburn and Pikeville, we felt a sense of solidarity with them too. Here you had the same group of thugs engaging in political violence to deny others their rights.

        This is why the League of the South went to New Orleans the following weekend. In Auburn, the threat had been violent Antifa. In Pikeville, the threat had been violent Antifa. In New Orleans, the threat had been violent Antifa. We were determined to stand up to those people. It was around this time that people were standing up to Antifa all over the country in Austin, TX and Nashville, TN on May Day.

        As we entered the summer, Antifa was so demoralized that they had begun to talk about changing tactics. They were encountering resistance even in their strongholds like Berekely.

        Charlottesville I

        We didn’t participate in the first Charlottesville event. It took place the weekend after New Orleans which was the weekend after Pikeville which was the weekend after Auburn.

        The first Charlottesville event was well received even though Matt Heimbach and the Traditionalist Worker Party had participated in it. This was the first time that tiki torches were used. The reason the operation went so well is because it combined good optics with a positive sense of solidarity.

        Houston, Orlando, Gainesville, Harrison

        The activism continued as spring turned into summer. There were rallies in Houston, Orlando, Gainesville and Harrison. It continued to build on the positive mood and sense of solidarity. Once again, the glue that held the movement together was opposing Antifa and asserting our rights to free speech and freedom of assembly. Antifa changed tactics and didn’t bother to show up at any of these events.

        Washington, DC

        Last June, Richard Spencer held a rally at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC which squared off against the dueling Alt-Lite “Rally Against Political Violence.” The rally was about free speech. Antifa spent the day squaring off against the DC police over their Disrupt J20 comrades. Around 200 people attended the event including the Traditionalist Worker Party. The Alt-Lite was outnumbered and humiliated. It was a great day. The Alt-Right had the wind in its sails and its enemies were on the ropes.

        The Fall


        Unite the Right

        Unite the Right would have been inconceivable in the absence of this celebratory mood. It blew up into such a large rally because there was so much positive energy flowing through the Alt-Right last summer as a result of defeating Antifa and asserting our rights to free speech and freedom of assembly. Everyone was looking forward to it at the time. We expected it to be a sort of end of summer bash.

        We didn’t go to Charlottesville to battle with Antifa in the streets. We thought that battle had already been won. If anything is true, we went into Charlottesville unprepared because we didn’t expect there would be violence. We were under the impression that the police were capable of doing their jobs. We expected the police to restrain anyone trying to disrupt the event like they had done at the Loyal White Knights event the month before in July. We would have a positive rally and go home.

        Of course, it didn’t turn out that way. It didn’t happen because the Charlottesville Police and Virginia State Police were under orders to not do their jobs. They were willing to violate a federal court order to ensure that Antifa was allowed to cause enough disruption to shut the event down. This is why the event descended into chaos. The police were simply not allowed to maintain public order.

        Aftermath

        In the aftermath of Charlottesville, the finger pointing began.

        Since I was in Charlottesville and experienced the whole event, I began to point fingers at the Charlottesville Police and Virginia State Police. I naively assumed it was obvious that is who was responsible for what happened in Charlottesville and the Alt-Right would rally behind the guys who were screwed over by the police and who were locked up there.

        I set out to correct the record on DeAndre Harris, Heather Heyer, the police breakdown and other important matters. I was heartened when post-Charlottesville polls came out which showed that the event had no impact whatsoever. President Trump said that some of the Charlottesville marchers were “good people” and that there had been “violence on both sides.” He briefly waded into the monuments issue. Charlottesville was a failed media news cycle which had no impact on President Trump’s public approval rating, public attitudes toward Confederate monuments or even White Nationalism, Neo-Nazism and the Alt-Right which had about 10% public support.

        There was a poll which came out after Unite the Right which showed that 9% of the public supported Neo-Nazism. The real cost of Charlottesville was the two frivolous lawsuits and about half a dozen guys who were locked up in Charlottesville. This was hardly a devastating blow. The internet deplatforming had been going on before Charlottesville and had hit a climax with YouTube censorship.

        Unfortunately, I made the mistake of assuming that everyone shared my view of Charlottesville, which was that the police had bungled the rally. I didn’t grasp how anyone could have come to the view that Charlottesville was a failure … because of optics. It was a failure because some guys were fat or didn’t have the right flag or were wearing helmets or didn’t have a fashy haircut, etc.

        Gainesville

        In October, I attended Richard Spencer’s speech at the University of Florida. My wife had missed out on his appearance in Auburn and really wanted to go. Once again, I went out of a sense of solidarity. I wanted to support people who were asserting our right to free speech and freedom of assembly. I didn’t want Antifa to succeed in driving us out of public spaces in the backlash to Charlottesville. Contrary to lies that have been posted elsewhere, the Traditionalist Worker Party didn’t participate in Gainesville.

        Shelbyville

        The White Lives Matter rally evolved out of our interpretation of Charlottesville.

        We believed that Charlottesville went off the rails because it was a police failure. In order to counter this narrative, we thought it was imperative to go somewhere else and hold a peaceful follow up event. In such a way, we could bounce back and disrupt the narrative that we are hell bent on violence. We felt it was important to soldier on and continue to assert our rights to free speech and freedom of assembly in public places which we had been doing since Berkeley in the spring.

        Initially, we called it Unite the Right 2.0, but when it became obvious that Identity Evropa and Daily Stormer weren’t going to participate we went with White Lives Matter. Shelbyville and Murfreesboro were chosen as the location for the rally due to our experience with law enforcement in those cities and the Emanuel Samson church shooting. It was a Nationalist Front rally that included TRS. We invited all the groups who were in Charlottesville to come and turn the page on Unite the Right.

        The Shelbyville rally went more or less as planned. We wanted to hold a peaceful event and draw attention to the Emanuel Samson church shooting. The goal was also to show that we were unbowed and hadn’t retreated from the public sphere after Charlottesville. Antifa were not victorious over us. This was a false narrative which was gaining traction in the media at the time.

        Aftermath

        No one had cared that Daily Stormer and Identity Evropa had chosen not to participate in the White Lives Matter rally. The surprising thing was their public response to it.

        Shelbyville revealed the shift in the Alt-Right that had taken place since Unite the Right. Whereas previously the point of these events since Berkeley had been standing up against Antifa which was the common enemy and refusing to be intimidated into surrendering our rights to free speech and freedom of assembly, the new focus of these events had become to show off optics in Instagram photos and videos.

        Since optics became the most important thing to “win over the normies,” the corollary of this line of thinking is that it was necessary to attack and destroy other groups over optics. Thus began the relentless attack on the Traditionalist Worker Party for rejecting the optics of “American Nationalism” around this time. Even Richard Spencer was attacked over optics and Eli Mosley left Identity Evropa to create Operation Homeland for he could continue his Alt-Right activism.

        Washington, DC

        The Traditionalist Worker Party participated in an Operation Homeland rally over the acquittal of the murderer of Kate Steinle in December. It was notable for showcasing how the optics issue had consumed the Alt-Right and had begun to undermine its solidarity.

        Knoxville and Tallahassee

        As we entered 2018, the Traditionalist Worker Party and League of the South remained active. TWP held a rally in Knoxville to protest the Women’s March. Matt Heimbach spoke at the University of Tennessee. The League of the South held a rally in Tallahassee and another one in Knoxville on St. Patrick’s Day. These four events were peaceful and uneventful. Antifa showed up but there was no violence.

        Michigan State

        Richard Spencer was scheduled to speak at the FMI conference and Michigan State on March 5. Once again, I promoted the event out of solidarity with a link to it on this website.

        Just about everything that could go wrong with the Michigan State event went wrong. It started when Kyle Bristow quit the Alt-Right. The Michigan State police let a horde of hundreds of protesters disrupt the event. Once again, TWP showed up out of solidarity to support Spencer while others stayed at home and sniped on the internet. This led to a 1,500 comment thread about optics on the TRS Forum bashing TWP, the removal of their podcast and the announcement that TRS was cutting ties with TWP.

        Spencer announced he was suspending his college tour. To his credit, Spencer never gave up or bowed to the pressure. Instead, it was the people behind him who succumbed to the pressure from Antifa. They no longer had the will power to continue to press forward.

        The Heimbach Implosion

        In the thousands of comments that were posted criticizing Matt Parrott, Matt Heimbach and the Traditionalist Worker Party over optics, no one expressed any inkling of the sex scandal.

        The sex scandal destroyed the Traditionalist Worker Party. Heimbach and Parrott left the movement. Tony Hovater and the rest of the group rebranded as Nationalist Initiative. I’ve been told they were planning to make all sorts of changes. Nevertheless, the attacks quickly resumed and escalated.

        Over the course of the past year, the Alt-Right has done a 180 degree turn. It has shifted from activism to pacifism. It has shifted from asserting our rights to free speech and freedom of assembly and winning court battles in the real world to ridiculing these things as less important than shitposting on the internet. It has shifted from the positive energy of last summer to the negative energy of the present moment. It has shifted from gaining cohesion and greater solidarity to splintering over optics. More than anything else, the biggest change has been the attitude that other nationalists are the problem, not Antifa. In other words, it has shifted from winning to losing and from rising to declining.

        Post Mortem

        At least on my end, I started 2017 feeling a sense of solidarity with the Alt-Right. It felt like we had a common enemy, common values and a common purpose. Now, I don’t feel that sense of solidarity anymore. I feel like I barely knew many of these people and what motivated them.

        It occurs to me that the biggest difference was a moral one. Whereas I saw men who exhibited moral qualities that I valued like courage, integrity, loyalty and perseverance, other people saw “bad optics.” Whereas I was incensed by the disrespect shown to these men who had made sacrifices and put themselves in physical danger on behalf of their cause, other people saw nothing but a bunch of fat contemptible LARPers who were ruining their public image.

        As I listened more closely to their conversations about their “brand,” I picked up on how frequently they would drop phrases like “white trash,” casually muse about sterilizing poor, working class people and revel in posting Asian pornography. It struck me as being far removed from ethnic nationalism which as I understand it is based on sympathy and affinity with one’s own people. A nation isn’t a public image or a brand though. It includes all kinds of people including those who are “bad optics” as well as the cowards who don’t have the courage or integrity to stand up for themselves against a bully.

        Ultimately, I couldn’t square the constant sneering at people about optics, the disrespect of our elders and the loathing of women with nationalism. I was even less fond of the promotion of “American Nationalism” and the attacks on other nationalists to curry favor with “normies.” The embrace of pacifism in the midst of a fight while simultaneously attacking others is just throwing in the towel. It has emboldened Antifa and justified their use of violent tactics to accomplish their political goals.

        This brings to a close the free speech movement that began when Richard Spencer was punched in the face. There was a clear rise from February until August. There was a clear fall from August to March. What can we learn from this episode? Where do we go from here?

        We’re going to dive into this tomorrow.





        The quality of people I am reaching is much higher than I ever did with a forum.
        I'm now at the top of the racialist intellectual community in the United States.
        I was a nobody when I ran The Phora.

        Comment


        • #34
          'Imploding': Lawsuits. Fundraising troubles. Trailer-park brawls. Has the alt-right peaked?

          The ZOG False-Flag Bowel Movement Imploding . . .

          'Imploding': Lawsuits. Fundraising troubles. Trailer-park brawls. Has the alt-right peaked?

          Terrence McCoy, Washington Post
          21 April 2018



          http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/n...420-story.html
          http://stumbleinn.net/forum/showthre...158#post435158
          http://thebeerbarrel.net/threads/alt...gust-12.39362/
          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...7986#post17986
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7986#post17986




          High Point of the Alt-Kike. William Fears, center, holding the flag, of Houston, is pictured with other
          white supremacists at a Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., in August. The loose collection of
          white supremacist groups known as the alt-right movement has suffered significant setbacks since then.

          .

          Eight months after a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia ended in the death of a counterprotester, the loose collection of disaffected young white men known as the alt-right is in disarray.

          The problems have been mounting: lawsuits and arrests, fundraising difficulties, tepid recruitment, widespread infighting, fierce counterprotests and banishment on social media platforms. Taken together, they've exhausted even some of the staunchest members.

          One of the movement's biggest groups, the Traditionalist Worker Party, dissolved in March. Andrew Anglin, founder of the Daily Stormer, the largest alt-right website, has gone into hiding, chased by a harassment lawsuit. And Richard Spencer, the alt-right's most public figure, cancelled a college speaking tour and was abandoned by his attorney last month.

          "Things have become a lot harder, and we paid a price for what happened in Charlottesville. . . . The question is whether there is going to be a third act," said Spencer, who coined the name of the movement, which rose to prominence during the 2016 presidential campaign, advocates a whites-only ethno-state, and has posted racist, anti-Semitic and misogynistic memes across the internet.

          Overall, the number of neo-Nazi groups increased in the United States in 2017, from 99 to 121, according to a Southern Poverty Law Center report released this year. That number is likely to decrease this year, said Heidi Beirich, who co-wrote the report. SPLC did not group alt-right organizations together, but some of the neo-Nazi groups were an outgrowth of the movement.

          "Imploding," is how Beirich now describes the alt-right. "The self-inflicted damage, the defections, the infighting is so rampant, it's to the point of almost being pathetic."

          Even so, there is little doubt that white supremacy remains a potent force that is likely to emerge again as a political one - if not as the alt-right, then as something else. Racial animus remains an entrenched aspect of American life.

          .

          .

          The alt-right "is on a downward spiral, but it doesn't mean they're going to disappear, and that they're not going to regroup," said Marilyn Mayo, who studies hate groups for the Anti-Defamation League's Center on Extremism. She said one large group called Identity Evropa - which targets college-aged men, is less extreme in rhetoric and has turned away from the alt-right label - has grown recently.

          "March was a phenomenal month for Identity Evropa, perhaps our best month," group spokesman Darren Baker said.

          Chris Schiano, a reporter for Unicorn Riot, a decentralized nonprofit media organization that has leaked internal correspondence among alt-right members, called the alt-right "basically done." It could resurface if it falls out of public view and organizes under newer, younger leaders, he cautions, but they haven't "gotten much traction yet."

          "The overall level of racism in U.S. society hasn't improved, it's just that the organizing space for these types of networks" has largely been depleted, said Schiano, whose group rose out of Occupy Wall Street and documents social protests. "So the latent potential won't go away unless society becomes less racist."

          Three percent of Americans surveyed this winter as part of a Washington Post-Kaiser Family Foundation poll said they support the alt-right or white nationalist movement.

          The zenith of the alt-right - Charlottesville's Unite the Right rally - also appears to have been the moment of its decline, according to hate-group experts and members of the alt-right, most of whom were predicting a surge in membership at the time.

          The death of Heather Heyer, 32 - killed in Charlottesville when a young alt-right member allegedly plowed his car into her - and President Donald Trump's reluctance to disown white nationalism focused a degree of scrutiny on the movement that it hadn't known until then. People started being fired from their jobs. Families disowned their children. Fundraising websites dropped people associated with the alt-right, making it difficult to raise money. Reporters covered every misstep.

          Chris Cantwell, a white nationalist radio host featured in a Vice video on the march viewed by millions, wept on camera in a video he posted to the internet, proclaiming himself "terrified" after Charlottesville police issued a warrant for his arrest on charges of using tear gas in the protest. The Daily Stormer was dropped by its web-hosting company.

          Some members have given up on the movement entirely. "I got to go back to my normal life," Connor Perrin, who drove all night from Austin to Charlottesville to protest what he saw as the oppression of white men in the United States, said in an interview late last year. "I'm focusing on working and being normal. . . . My mom is like, 'Stop being alt-right. You're going to get yourself in trouble.' " He later added: "We lost."

          Others said they were told they weren't extreme enough for the movement. "I was unofficially kicked out because I had sex with a half-Japanese girl, and they didn't like that," said Jack, 18, of Aurora, Illinois, who spoke on the condition that his last name not be published. "With white nationalists, you're never white enough."

          There has long been infighting in the white supremacist movement. The National Alliance, which for decades was the country's best organized and perhaps most powerful white supremacist group, succumbed to infighting and a rapid decline following the death of its leader, William Pierce, in 2002. The history of the Ku Klux Klan, too, is one of infighting and internal turmoil.

          What separates the alt-right movement from older groups like these, however, is that its members are internet natives. They riff off contemporary culture and politics and understand the power of leavening hate with attempts at humor, which makes their messaging and memes more palatable to disillusioned suburban white kids who spend a lot of time online. Their ideas have infected the mainstream.

          "We're not going back to a time when no one had heard the word 'alt-right,' " Spencer said. "We're not going back to a time when no one had heard of an ethno-state. It's in the discourse."

          But in the same way the internet was a boon for the alt-right, enabling rapid mobilization, fundraising and a sense of community, it also has thrown up roadblocks to the movement's progress. After alt-right members started getting booted from Facebook and Twitter, they relocated to alternative social media platforms, such as Gab, where they weren't likely to encounter, let alone radicalize, people they call "normies," who use more mainstream outlets.

          Participation and enthusiasm appear to have slowed since. Several street rallies have been sparsely populated by white supremacists - but overwhelmingly attended by counterprotesters - and by the time Spencer ended his college speaking tour, few supporters were coming to his speeches.

          And for Stormfront, a large white-supremacist online forum whose threads were read by some alt-right members, few were donating money. "It's that time of month again, when the big, scary bills hit," wrote site creator Don Black, whose wife, according to site members, has stopped financially supporting the forum, and whose son, Derek, has rejected white supremacy. "Our contributions have once again totaled less than $2000, which is not enough to cover our basic server and radio bills, and this month we no longer have enough personal money to make up the difference."

          The Traditionalist Worker Party, which at its height operated in at least eight states and had about 1,200 paying members, according to its leaders, also collapsed last month. It was perhaps the most institutionally organized of all the groups comprising the alt-right. It had a clear hierarchy - paying members reporting to regional commanders, who in turn reported to the top leaders living in a trailer park in Paoli, Indiana, where everything came apart last month.

          The dynamic between co-founders Matt Parrott and Matthew Heimbach has always been unconventional. Heimbach is married to Parrott's stepdaughter from a former marriage, and the two men lived in neighboring trailers, where they promoted traditional gender roles in addition to white-supremacist beliefs.

          But according to a police report obtained by the Southern Poverty Law Center, Heimbach and Parrott's wife began sleeping together. In early March, the two told Parrott and Heimbach's wife that the three-month affair was over, but Parrott didn't believe it, so he concocted a plan to catch them. Heimbach and Parrott's wife fell for it, while Parrott was outside, standing atop a box, looking in from the window. Then the box broke, and, cover presumably blown, Parrott went to confront Heimbach, who allegedly choked him. Parrott lost consciousness, then fled to Walmart, where he called police, who reported that Heimbach later violently grabbed his wife's face.

          Heimbach was charged with felony domestic battery, the Traditionalist Worker Party disintegrated, and Parrott, speaking on the phone earlier this month, sounded different from the triumphant white supremacist who in the days following the Charlottesville rally had promised that he and the alt-right were here to stay.

          "I'm unplugged from politics," Parrott said. "I'm done. I'm out. I don't want to be in The Washington Post anymore. I don't care to have this humiliating and terrifying ordeal be more public than it already is. . . . There is no more Trad Worker."

          Heimbach, citing the advice of his attorneys, declined to comment.

          The group's website was removed. Some members said they were out. Others said they wanted to start something new. Another group, called Nationalist Initiative, soon coalesced online, heralding a new brand.

          "TWP failed," it said in a tweet this month to its 68 followers. "What comes from the ashes?"

          .


          ____________________________
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          Comment


          • #35
            Neo-Nazi Rally Draws About Two Dozen People and Upends a Small Georgia City

            Neo-Nazi Rally Draws About Two Dozen People and Upends a Small Georgia City

            Two-Dozen of Jeff Poop-Schoep's NSM fuktards tie up 100 local piglice 200 Antifa tards, blow up the city budget

            By JACEY FORTIN APRIL 21, 2018



            https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/21/u...y-georgia.html
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7993#post17993
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...7993#post17993



            A neo-Nazi rally outside of Atlanta on Saturday drew only a few participants and did not last very long.

            But the event still upended Newnan, Ga., a city of about 38,000, for an afternoon as downtown shops closed and counterprotesters gathered. Hasco Craver, the assistant city manager, said more than 700 law enforcement officers were present from 42 agencies.

            Members of the National Socialist Movement, a white nationalist organization that has been labeled a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, gained a permit last month for a rally from 3 to 5 p.m. at a park. Organizers estimated the rally could draw 50 to 100 people, city officials said.

            Their plans called to mind a rally of white nationalists in Charlottesville, Va., in August that spun out of control, with demonstrators and counterprotesters clashing in the streets. One Ohio man, described by police as a Nazi sympathizer, drove his car through a crowd of pedestrians, killing one woman and injuring at least 19 others.



            Antifa Vermin gather to menstruate over Nazis -- a motley crew of whiggers & niggers
            .

            But when rally participants converged on Greenville Street Park in Newnan shortly after 4 p.m., it appeared there were only about two dozen white nationalists on a platform there.

            In a speech, Jeff Schoep, who leads the National Socialist Movement and was also at the rally in Charlottesville, criticized illegal immigration, skinny jeans and the removal of Confederate monuments, adding that he was “standing on behalf of white nationalism, white patriotism and our history as American people.”

            In front of the rally participants was a smattering of reporters in a grassy area that was mostly empty. Beyond that were barricades and dozens of black-clad, helmet-wearing law enforcement officers lining the street that bordered the park.

            And beyond all of that, at least 100 people stood in opposition to the gathering, including some activists of the anti-fascist group known as antifa.

            .


            Piglice gather early to keep order during the circus
            .

            The counterprotesters had been demonstrating downtown for hours before the white nationalist rally. They marched through the streets and waved signs that said “Smash white supremacy” and “Love thy neighbor,” while a helicopter pulled a banner that said “Newnan believes in love for all.”

            Burt Colucci, a member of the National Socialist Movement, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution there was no particular reason Newnan was chosen for the rally.

            “We pick these rallies randomly,” he said. “It is always preferable that it is in a white town, so that Kommandork Poop-Scoop don't get his nasti ass corn-holed by niggers.”

            There were a few confrontations between counterprotesters and the police. City officials said about 10 arrests were made but it was unclear who was charged or for what. By 6 p.m., downtown Newnan seemed calm.


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            Comment


            • #36
              Yet Another Whigger Nutsionalist Clown Show

              Yet Another Whigger Nutsionalist Clown Show


              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8066#post18066
              http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8066#post18066
              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8066#post18066



              Kommandork Poop-Scoop sure yaps some silly yap.

              Talking like WNs always whup up on Antifa and BLM, like none of us have eyes or memories. Those still pictures from Charlottesville tell a different tale. Like the one where the nigger sets this skinny little inbred's Confederate flag on fire, and all the dumb little shit does in response is try to poke at him with the sharpened end of the stick that the flag had been attachded to. (Smart little inbred to think of that, wasn't he?) Even if he had beaten that nigger half to death with that stick, and sent it to the hospital for six months, it wouldn't have made up for allowing the big, smelly ape to burn a Confederate flag while the whole world watched. The *ONLY* sufficient punishment for a crime like that is DEATH. Allowing a nigger to get away with that is like allowing him to rape your wife, your mother, your grandmother, your sister and your daughter while the TelAvivision cameras roll. Every nigger that sees it on TV will think Southern Nationalists are WEAK LITTLE PUSSIES, and, the next time he sees one, he'll try to beat him up or shoot him. And all because a bunch of worthless Whigger Nutsionalist ass-clowns couldn't resist showing their ass for the cameras.

              A few days after Charlottesville, I went to this truck stop off of I-40, to try out their buffet. This being August, I was wearing my red Dixie Republic t-shirt, with a Rebel flag and the words "STILL STANDING" in big, white letters on the back. I'm 6'4" and weigh around 400lbs. When niggers see me wearing something like that, usually, they make a face like Buckwheat, in one of those old LITTLE RASCALS episodes, and never say a word. Occasionally, one might give me the stinkeye for a few seconds, before looking away, but that's as far as it usually goes. But, that night, this nigger saw me standing at the buffet, with my back to him, and he fucking LAUGHED at me. Nor did he stop laughing when I turned around and looked at him. I glared at him for a few seconds and turned away. I had come to eat, not pick a fight with a silverback, who wasn't worth going to jail over, in any case. But I was damn glad I had made a point of parking right in front of the place, so I wouldn't have a long walk back to my car in the dark. For all I knew, the nigger was packing. In his simian eyes, I was chickenshit by association. Hell of a fucking thing.

              And his assumptions about the Left's motivations for wanting to take down the Confederate monuments are way off base, too. It is *NOT* because they "hate America". Give me a fucking break. Grant it, Antifa probably hates America, being a bunch of admitted Commies and all, but Black Lives Matter doesn't. They just hate WHITE PEOPLE, that's all. I never noticed any of the little monkoids burning a picture of Obongo, when he was in the White House. And then you've got all the Atticus Finch-types on both the Left and the Right, frankly, who want the monuments to come down because they think they make the South look "backward" and "reactionary", which isn't the image they would like to see. Even the Chamber Of Commerce Repulsivecunts make this argument, and they certainly don't hate America. Poop-Scoop sounds like George Wallace or some illiterate redneck from 1968. Nor does this mysterious, conspiratorial "they" of his intend to take down monuments to World War 2 or Korea or Vietnam veterans next. And this is for a very simple reason: NIGGERS FOUGHT IN THOSE WARS. Therefore, they're politically correct, and always will be. No, Poop-Scoop, the Confederate monuments are not politically incorrect because they're "American", ---whatever the fuck that's even supposed to mean,---they're politically incorrect because they're WHITE and they stand for WHITE SUPREMACY. Simple as that.

              But, I suppose, in his twisted little whigger brain, his explanation makes perfect sense, just like the delusional dipshit actually seems to believe that all those piggies were there to protect the howling mob of nigger and whigger Commies and mere curiosity-seekers from THEM, instead of the other way around. What a shit-for-brains.


              IF YOU STILL LOVE AMERIKA, YOU'RE A NIGGER-LOVER!!! ---CGO. 1/20/'09.



              "Lay down your silver and your gold
              I am a man who won't be sold
              And even when my heart grows cold
              I'll curse your evil stranglehold."---Horslips, from "Trouble With A Capital 'T'", 1977.

              Comment


              • #37
                The Alt Right's Trajectory: An Interview With Greg Johnson Of Counter-Currents

                The Alt Right's Trajectory: An Interview With Greg Johnson Of Counter-Currents

                with (((Luke Ford)))



                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRfcjAvU1Ko
                http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8094#post18094
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8094#post18094



                Since Dr. Greg Johnson doesn't like to show his face and since the jew mischling (((Luke Ford))) is nothing much to look at, here is a mp3 file in 32kps to listen to:
                http://voice-of-retards.xyz/WN/Count...r-Currents.mp3




                Counter-Currents Publishing
                Books Against Time

                Comment


                • #38
                  Aug. 12 suit defense says no evidence of conspiracy

                  Charlottesville civil cases: Aug. 12 suit defense says no evidence of conspiracy


                  http://www.dailyprogress.com/news/lo...222b8725e.html
                  http://christian-nat/forum/showthrea...8153#post18153
                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8153#post18153




                  Police tape is seen outside the Charlottesville Federal Courthouse before a motions hearing for a lawsuit against participants of the Aug. 12 Unite the Right rally on Thursday
                  ZOG is really really scared of jewboy & mamzer & whigger ZOGbot faggot pussies.
                  .
                  .

                  A federal judge will take some time to rule on whether to dismiss a lawsuit targeting the organizers and major participants of the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville last summer that left three people dead and dozens injured.

                  The lawsuit, filed in October by local residents, alleges that the defendants conspired to bring terror and violence to Charlottesville under the pretense of holding a political rally. It alleges that the defendants — whom plaintiffs name as the “masterminds” of the torch-lit march on Aug. 11 at the University of Virginia and the rally on Aug. 12 — planned and promoted the violent acts that occurred that weekend.

                  On Thursday, attorneys for most of the defendants appeared in front of Charlottesville federal Judge Norman K. Moon to argue that the lawsuit should be dismissed because it fails to show an actual conspiracy.

                  Among those seeking a dismissal are Jason Kessler; Christopher Cantwell; Vanguard America; Robert “Azzmador” Ray; Nathan Damigo; Elliot Kline; Identity Evropa; Matthew Heimbach; Matthew Parrott; the Traditionalist Worker Party; Jeff Schoep; the National Socialist Movement; and the National Front. They are represented by James Kolenich, an attorney from Cleveland, Ohio, and Elmer Woodard, from Danville.

                  Also seeking dismissal is the League of the South, Michael Hill and Michael Tubbs, who are represented by local attorney Bryan Jones.

                  Richard Spencer seeks dismissal from the case and originally was representing himself in the matter. However, as of Wednesday night, John DiNucci, an attorney from McLean, is representing Spencer.

                  James Alex Fields Jr. — who is accused of driving a Dodge Challenger into a group of counter-protesters on Aug. 12 and killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer — is also named as a defendant in the complaint but did not file a motion to dismiss.

                  Six other defendants — Andrew Anglin; Moonbase Holdings LLC; Augustus Sol Invictus; the Fraternal Order of the Alt-Knights; the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan; and the East Coast Knights of the Ku Klux Klan — did not respond to the suit and will therefore be in the case, according to Karen Dunn, one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys.

                  Attorneys for the defendants all argued that while the complaint alleges there was a conspiracy, it fails to show specific factual elements of a conspiracy. Kolenich argued that just because violence occurred at the rally does not mean it was planned by the defendants.

                  He said the complaint alleges that some of the defendants and other participants on the side of the “alt-right” got into fights and that there were racial comments made, but that those are protected by the First Amendment. Kolenich argued that the group was marching around, carrying signs and yelling provocatively — all activities commonly found at political rallies.

                  “There was colorful language, but where is the evidence of a conspiracy?” he asked.

                  Following Kolenich’s arguments, Jones said the plaintiffs allege much of the planning for the rally occurred online. But he said none of his clients was specifically alleged to have used such forums, such as Discord, a private chat channel that was used by many Unite the Right participants, according to the plaintiffs’ attorneys.

                  Spencer’s attorney, DiNucci, told the court he had not had a lot of time to prepare, but said there was no specific evidence about the communications his client may have had before the events in August. He said his client posted online about the upcoming rally, but never made any direct calls for violence. He said the allegations were not specific enough to support the claim of a conspiracy.

                  DiNucci also said Spencer had not been identified as one of the people in the Discord communications, which were made public by the nonprofit media collective Unicorn Riot.

                  Representing himself, Michael “Enoch” Peinovich agreed with the previous arguments and said the First Amendment protections were designed for someone like himself who holds controversial beliefs and makes provocative statements. He said there were no allegations made that he participated on Discord and no allegations that he participated in any specific violent incidents.

                  Peinovich said that, although he makes “off-color jokes” and offensive remarks on his podcast, there are no allegations that he was part of a conspiracy.

                  In response, another of the plaintiffs’ attorneys, Roberta Kaplan, cited civil rights legislation that was passed in the aftermath of the Civil War that prohibits civil conspiracy. The Civil Rights Act of 1871, also known as the Ku Klux Klan Act, was passed in response to widespread violence and acts of terror directed at African-Americans and their supporters, Kaplan said.

                  “If two or more persons in any State or Territory conspire … for the purpose of depriving, either directly or indirectly, any person or class of persons of the equal protection of the laws, or of equal privileges and immunities under the laws … the party so injured or deprived may have an action for the recovery of damages occasioned by such injury or deprivation, against any one or more of the conspirators,” according to the act.

                  Kaplan argued that the conspiracy consists of people who are motivated by a specific class-based and discriminatory animus.

                  At the core of the complaint, Kaplan said, is the allegation that there was racially motivated violence at both the torch-lit march on Aug. 11 and the rally on Aug. 12 as part of a carefully planned conspiracy. She said all of the defendants are interconnected in multiple ways and that illustrates the conspiracy.

                  For example, she said Richard Spencer, the head of the white nationalist National Policy Institute, met Evan McLaren, a member of Identity Evropa, in Washington, D.C., just before the rally in Charlottesville.

                  In another example, Kaplan said Elliot Kline was the leader of Identity Evropa and helped moderate the Charlottesville discussion forum on Discord. Kline also attended a meeting on Aug. 11 with Robert Ray and Christopher Cantwell to plan the torch-lit march on UVa Grounds.

                  In their communications before the rally, the defendants planned their outfits, decided what weapons and items to bring and how they were going to arrive at Emancipation Park, Kaplan said. She said there were even communications about using cars to run over counter-protesters.

                  “A modern day conspiracy can largely happen online,” Kaplan said. “And that’s what happened here.”

                  In terms of some of the injuries to the plaintiffs, Kaplan said Tyler Magill had a stroke as a result of violence he suffered that weekend; Marcus Martin was one of the people hit by the car after the rally dispersed; and Seth Wispelwey, a local minister, was intimidated and maced.

                  From a constitutional standpoint, Dunn argued that the First Amendment does not protect illegal conspiracies, violence or intimidation. Despite the defendants’ right to make offensive racial statements and chants, Dunn said ensuing violence is not protected.

                  Dunn said defendants used shields, flags, pepper spray, fists and other things to assault counter-protesters — actions that she said were planned and anticipated.

                  During the rally, Dunn said Ray was heard shouting, “The heat here is nothing compared to what you’re going to get in the ovens.”

                  Such threats, she said, qualify as intimidation and therefore are not protected by the First Amendment and are subject to the lawsuit.

                  Kolenich reiterated his argument that his clients are protected by the First Amendment and that the words would have to morph into conduct before they can be considered for a lawsuit. While there were spur-of-the-moment instances of violence, Kolenich said there was no evidence that they planned a conspiracy to commit violence.

                  “My clients were, at worst, reckless with their language,” said Kolenich.

                  DiNucci also argued that there were no facts pleaded that his client, Spencer, knew any of the plaintiffs or interacted with any of them. He also said there was nothing in the complaint that showed Spencer had access to Discord or that he was leading a conspiracy.

                  After almost three hours of arguments, Judge Moon did not make a decision Thursday, but will instead issue a written order at a later date.

                  Following the hearing, Kolenich said he thought it went well and appreciated the judge’s time. He said that the allegation that his clients might have conspired to run anyone over with a vehicle was ridiculous.

                  “That’s on James Fields,” Kolenich said.

                  Dunn and Kaplan said the judge was extremely generous with his time and asked thoughtful questions.

                  “In general, we were very happy to have the opportunity to stand up in person and start to discuss our case with the court,” Dunn said in a conference call with reporters Thursday.

                  Dunn said it would be apt to compare the alleged conspiracy in this suit to a criminal drug conspiracy. She said people might have different roles within such conspiracies — such as some doing actual drug drops and others facilitating — but that everyone’s roles together create the conspiracy.

                  “Here, there are obviously people who are leaders and facilitators, and those who did the violence themselves,” said Dunn. “This is just the tip of the iceberg. We haven’t even really started discovery yet.”

                  “We’re going to go where the evidence takes us,” Kaplan added.

                  Both attorneys said there was a chance they may name more defendants in the future, as they dig through the discovery process.

                  The plaintiffs in the case are Elizabeth Sines; Seth Wispelwey; Marissa Blair; Tyler Magill; April Muniz; Hannah Pearce; Marcus Martin; Natalie Romero; Chelsea Alvarado; and John Doe. The plaintiffs’ case is being funded by the nonprofit Integrity First for America

                  Send news tips to news@dailyprogress.com, call (434) 978-7264, tweet us @DailyProgress or send us a Facebook message here.



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                  • #39
                    Fool for a client? Richard Spencer prepares to argue his own legal case

                    Fool for a client? Richard Spencer prepares to argue his own legal case

                    by Brett Barrouquere
                    23 May 2018



                    https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/...own-legal-case
                    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8156#post18156
                    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8156#post18156
                    .


                    More like jewboys for a client.
                    Dickie "the 1/8 trust-fund mischlng" Spencer & Mike 'the kike' Enoch Peinovich argue that they dindu nuffin, oy vey!!!
                    .

                    Racist alt-right frontman Richard Spencer has tried to avoid this moment.

                    Despite months of attempts at fundraising to hire an attorney, Spencer, who has been booted off of or lost access to several fundraising sites in recent months, has pulled in only $19,000 of the $25,000 he says he needs on the site freestartr.com.

                    Now, lacking a lawyer, Spencer and Michael “Enoch” Peinovich face the prospect on Thursday morning of arguing on their own behalf why a federal lawsuit stemming from the Unite the Right rally should be dismissed.

                    Spencer heads the National Policy Institute, an alt-right think tank, and Peinovich runs The Right Stuff podcast and makes public appearances at alt-right and white nationalist events.

                    Neither man is a practicing attorney and neither seems to have any legal background, raising the specter of the old saying attributed to President Abraham Lincoln: “He who represents himself has a fool for a client.”

                    The federal lawsuit names a host of alt-right figures, including Spencer, Peinovich, Daily Stormer editor Andrew Anglin and Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler.

                    U.S. District Judge Norman K. Moon will hear arguments on the dismissal motions starting at 10:30 a.m. at the federal courthouse in Charlottesville, Virginia.

                    The rally, a big public push by the alt-right, featured a torch-lit march by white supremacist chanting “Jews will not replace us” and saw a follower plow a car into a crowd, killing 32-year-old counter-protestor Heather Heyer.

                    Plaintiffs in the case are trying to show that the Unite the Right rally wasn’t a case of free speech, but rather an organized call to violence by white supremacists, white nationalist and racists generally.

                    The central argument is that the violence of Unite the Right was premeditated, making the actions that took place on August 11 and 12 evidence of a conspiracy.

                    Should the judge rule in favor of the plaintiffs, the case has the potential to bankrupt the most virulent parts of the alt-right, a loosely affiliated far-right group that embraces white nationalism.

                    Defense attorneys, led by alt-right adherent James Kolenich, argue that the Unite the Right organizers needed to be organized and prepared in order to defend themselves from attacks. A provision in American law protects “inflammatory speech,” or speech that angers, offends or upsets someone.

                    That type of speech is generally protected, even at a rally or organized gathering.

                    But, there is an exception for when speech is aimed at creating “imminent lawless action” or is likely to produce such action.

                    The U.S. Supreme Court set that bar in 1969 in an Ohio case in which a Ku Klux Klan leader was convicted under an Ohio law that made it illegal to publicly advocate for criminal activity.

                    The case has already spread to other racist figures not named as defendants, as a judge on May 17 ordered one-time Ku Klux Klan grand wizard David Duke to review and turn over by June 18 his emails, social media messages and other communications related to the deadly rally.

                    Now, after the hearing, it will be up to judge Moon to decide if Spencer and Peinovich were fools for attorneys and clients or if the behavior at Unite the Right was simply free speech gone wild.

                    .





                    Comment


                    • #40
                      "Hate Crime" Charges For Fields A Bad Omen For "Unite the Right" Civil Case

                      "Hate Crime" Charges For Fields A Bad Omen For "Unite the Right" Civil Case


                      https://trad-news.blogspot.com/2018/...-bad-omen.html
                      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8307#post18307
                      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8307#post18307
                      .


                      .
                      Right now there is a civil case against the main organisers and participants of the "Unite the Right" rally held in Charlottesville last year. The last I heard was that the judge in the case was considering his verdict -- something that apparently needs to drag on for several weeks!

                      If this civil case goes against those involved, it could see them financially ruined.

                      So, it's not exactly the best omen for them that Attorney General Jeff Sessions has just come out with comprehensive "hate crime" charges against James Alex Fields, one of the men involved in the handful of criminal cases generated by the rally.

                      Fields, of course, was the man who famously drove his car into a crowd of leftists on the day of the rally, in an incident that killed one woman and injured several others. A statement released by Sessions gives a good idea of where he is trying to go with this:





                      We Survived the Post-Charlottesville Internuts Fuktardocaust

                      https://trad-news.blogspot.com/

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Surviving As A Dissident Minority

                        Surviving As A Dissident Minority


                        http://www.occidentaldissent.com/201...dent-minority/
                        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8317#post18317
                        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8317#post18317


                        The quality of people I am reaching is much higher than I ever did with a forum.
                        I'm now at the top of the racialist intellectual community in the United States.
                        I was a nobody when I ran The Phora.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Cantwell Cucks Hard After Prison Diet of Soy

                          Cantwell Cucks Hard After Prison Diet of Soy


                          https://trad-news.blogspot.com/2018/...ison-diet.html
                          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8389#post18389



                          We Survived the Post-Charlottesville Internuts Fuktardocaust

                          https://trad-news.blogspot.com/

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            James Alex Fields, worried about self-incrimination, gets lawyer for protection in civil cases

                            James Alex Fields, worried about self-incrimination, gets lawyer for protection in civil cases

                            Salma Elkhaoudi
                            July 16, 2018


                            https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/...otection-civ-0
                            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8393#post18393


                            ​James Alex Fields, Jr., a neo-Nazi sympathizer accused of driving his car into a crowd of protesters in Charlottesville, was granted an attorney to advise him in a federal civil suit.

                            Fields is concerned that he might be open to self-incrimination in the civil suit, which could impact the charges brought against him in two other cases. Along with facing civil charges, Fields has been indicted on federal hate crime charges and state murder charges in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

                            In the federal criminal case, Fields was issued a notice of special findings, making him potentially eligible for the death penalty. He was charged with 30 counts of hate crimes, as well as the murder of 32-year-old Heather Heyer.

                            A federal judge on Thursday granted Fields an attorney to advise him in the civil suit, stating, “the Court finds that the appointment of criminal defense counsel is reasonably necessary in this circumstance.”

                            The event in question in the civil and criminal suits against Fields is the first “Unite the Right” rally, which took place August 11 and 12, 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia.

                            As crowds began to disperse after the planned rally was declared an unlawful assembly, a large crowd of counter-protesters — composed of members of Anti-Racist Action, Showing Up for Racial Justice, Black Lives Matter, Antifascist (AntiFa) protesters, and others — proceeded down Charlottesville’s 4th street.

                            A Dodge Challenger then sped into the crowd, before slamming into two cars, reversing, and fleeing the crime scene. The incident resulted in the death of Heyer, a paralegal.

                            Jason Kessler, another defendant in the same federal civil suit against Fields, is organizing “Unite the Right 2” rally in Charlottesville and Washington, D.C., this year.


                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Interview on Unite the Right I & II

                              Interview on Unite the Right I & II


                              https://www.counter-currents.com/201...ight-i-and-ii/
                              http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8466#post18466
                              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8466#post18466



                              Counter-Currents Publishing
                              Books Against Time

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                ZOG/Babylon the Third & Final Hath Rejected the 1865 Armistices of Robert E. Lee, etc, & Now So Should We

                                ZOG/Babylon the Third & Final Hath Rejected the 1865 Armistices of Robert E. Lee, etc, & Now So Should We


                                http://www.tenthousandwarlords.org/10k-blog/?p=48
                                https://www.counter-currents.com/201...omment-1412455
                                http://thebeerbarrel.net/threads/who...3/#post-260621
                                http://christian-identity.net/forum/...8475#post18475
                                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...8475#post18475


                                Well Doctor Greg, as a member in good standing in the Old Right of the Identity Christians and Klansmen I am certainly not eating up any slop from your trough or infringing upon your natural membership given that I have often compared our bowel Movement to both pig farming and to it being competing baronies and fiefdumbs and certainly not monolithic.

                                Recently got home from Lake County Ohio where that Mamzer from Mentor Bryan Reo is suing both me and my Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri for calling it a homosexual mongrel thousands of times over the Internet while it called me a convicted child molester. Mentor Ohio is the home of President James Garfield, Union general and 20th US President. They had hoped that I wouldn’t show up from 900 miles away to contest the Reo lawsuit, but when I did they immediately chose to give some probation violator a jury trial so that I would be denied my jury trial. The Lake County authorities claim that they have jurisdiction for name-calling over the Internet and to favor this mongrel’s claims that my racism is to be punished while its failed attempts — along with Kyle Bristow’s and Dickie Spencer’s — to infiltrate White Nationalism / Supremacism are to be rewarded and myself punished for saying that only real Aryan Whites get to pretend to be White Supremacists.

                                So I did stick around and did some legal research and found out that while police can make arrests with an arrest warrant and felony arrests without a warrant, if they make an misdeameanor arrest without a warrant they can be charged civilly and criminally for false arrest. Sort of makes sense given John Bad Elk v. U.S 127 US 529 (1900) which held that under the common law a misdeameanor arrest made without a warrant meant that the defendant could resist that false arrest with deadly force. This law is still good law although ZOG says different.

                                Thus a new White Natrionalist regime, especially one of the Ten Thousand Warlordcies run by local military dictatorships could use that to punish ZOGlings with capital extermatory treason.

                                But what amused me is that the magistrate judge trying to get Bryan Reo to settle (for 25 minutes) and me to settle (for over an hour) said that he simply couldn’t understand either of us, especially myself. To which I told him that he couldn’t understand me any better than NE Ohioan James Garfield could understand a a Quantrill or Bloody Bill Anderson, noted partisan guerrillas. The result had to be settled by Civil War I. On the trip back home, I reflected that our People were in similar circumstances just after the Civil War in which the South was over-run with Union soldiers, rampaging negro freedmen, Carpetbaggers, and treasonous Scalawags.

                                And what was the solution which saved White Southern Civilization and Heritage? The answer was “private organizations” organized at the county and local levels, not imposed by the newsmedia and ZOG from the top. I am referring to the Ku Klux Klan which within a year of its founding stretched from Virginia to Florida to Louisiana to Texas to Missouri and even places like Indiana. And they were sucessful working with the Southern Democrats like the IRA worked with the Sein Fein to within ten years to nominate Samuel Tilden who actually won the 1876 election versus the Republican Rutherfraud B. Hayes. The deal set in Dec. 1876 was akin to the Dumbya deal of 2000 — to declare that Florida went for Rutherfraud but that the next year would see the pull-out of Union military troops. The working together of the armed and political wings like fists meant that upon the pull-out of military troops, the freedmen were left on their own, the Carpetbaggers and Scalawags had to run for their lives, and the South settled into Jim Crow and segregation lasting for the next 90 years.

                                As an aside, I never met a negro in the Mentor area who knew who James Garfield was. They thought that I was referring to a big orange cartoon tomcat even though they drive past the James Garfield Presidential Center signs on Mentor Avenue, i.e. US Route 20.

                                Bryan Reo is also annoyed at me and my web page exposing it as a non-white White Supremacist got it fired from its job as a worker in the North Perry Nuclear Power Plant. One of the sins I shall have to bear forevermore is in possibly saving six million Ohioans from nuclear meltdown because when they finally did a security check on Bryan Reo in 2012 they read my articles on the little monkey.

                                I think the way we should phrase the events at Charlottesville is the ZOGlings violating the terms of the 1865 Armistice. By calling the events of 1865 an “Armistice” we no longer agree that we lost the First Civil War. Nope. Actually, out of the goodness of our White Man hearts we let the negroes go free & gave the damn Yankees a chance to show what they could do. Now that this has been revealed as a failure, we should assume victory and claim that they since they violated the terms of the 1865 Armistice(s) that we now have no choice but to proceed to Civil War Round Two and then as victors enjoy the spoils & feed high on the rotten carcass of ZOG.

                                This little trip for the farce of the pre-trial conference in which they still are allowing Bryan Reo to run wild like it did for the other 54 cases against the NRA, Arbitron, and Starkist Tuna has set me into the mood where I would gladly burn down all of Mentor Ohio and the Lake County Courthouse in Painesville sorta like General Sherman did against Atlanta & Savannah & most of South Carolina.

                                Hail Victory !!!

                                Pastor Martin Luther Dzerzhinsky Lindstedt
                                Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri
                                Write-on Candidate for US Senate from Missouri
                                Ten-Thousand Warlords Project




                                Pastor Lindstedt's Web Page
                                Pastor Lindstedt's Archive Page & Christian Nationalist Forum

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