Wholly-owned FBI subsidiary holds national rally in Kansas City -- all three dozen of them.
"Freedom of speech reigns in rally faceoff."
On the south side of 12th Street, in the shadow of Andrew Jackson’s statue, three dozen neo-Nazis marched down a sidewalk, clad mostly in black, before waiting turns to preach their views.
They had threatened to bring 1,000 members from various groups — skinheads, Aryan Nations — to Kansas City for a national conference and rally to “stand against illegal immigration and rise against the downfall of the American economy.”
So why did so few show up? Fear of photographs by the FBI and fear of employers seeing their images on news coverage, said NSM commander Jeff Schoep of Detroit.
Of course, just like in the 90s, the neo-Nazi organizations are so riddled with snitches and agents provocateurs that they should be considered FBI wholly-owned subsidiaries. Indeed, Kansas City used to be the stomping grounds of a considerable number of neo-Nazis, including the White Aryan Resistance leader and FBI-snitch Dennis Mahon. (Who once told me that "The masses are asses" which was why they needed the neo-Nazis to tell them what to do. When I told him that I had first heard that line in a communist Progressive Labor Party meeting in the 70s, he was quite speechless, which was unusual for Dennis. My favorite Dennis the Menace line came when my friend J.D. Cash got Mahon drunk and then told him that Andreas Carl Strassmeir was a federal asset. Mahon leaped from the couch and exclaimed "Oh-Sweet-Jesus, I'm f-cked!" Although, as a dedicated Nazi pagan, Mahon's relationship with Jesus was merely linguistic.)
The fact that only three dozen could be mustered for a "national" event on the anniversary of Kristallnacht must make him sad, now that he is finally in federal lockup. And such gatherings merely give the stage to other collectivists. I have to give these paragraphs laughingly high marks for hypocrisy, both on the part of the reporters and the sign holder:
On the north side on the 12th Street downtown — held back by yellow police tape, barricades and a line of officers — hundreds of rally opponents stood elbow to elbow. They came to show that regular people hate hate speech. Many carried signs.
“Go to hell white devils.”
"Go to hell white devils is an example of "regular people" hating "hate speech?"
I laughed so hard, my diuretic kicked in and I had to go to the john.
3 comments:
"Wholly-owned FBI subsidiary" brought me a chuckle. It reminded me of reports from years past that when the FBI decided that CPUSA has become so dysfunctional that it posed no threat to anyone, they decided that the money they were spending on surveillance could be better spent elsewhere. When the FBI plants pulled out of the organization it almost collapsed financially. It turned out that the majority of the real "commies" didn't believe in paying dues and the CPUSA had been living for years on the taxpayer supplied dues of the FBI plants.
That might in fact be a clue.
America. Home of the free and land of the brave, where freedom of speech and freedom of association are sacrosanct.
That being said, just be careful what you say and who you say it to.
Do not worry about what you say and who you say it to. If you cannot proclaim it to everyone in a public square, just do not say it. Ever. Never trust anyone to not repeat and share what you have to say, but instead rely on everyone to repeat and share what you have to say. At worst, they will not repeat and share it enough. Use that as your guide and you can stop worrying.
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