Sunday, June 14, 2009

"Trouble finds Shawna Forde": You're Going to Hear a LOT About This Murderous Loon.

Meet Shawna Forde, MAD woman.

Madness accumulates.

On Friday night, I received several emails from friends -- some of whom I served with in the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps back in October 2005 on the border near Hachita NM -- about this story from the Everett, Washington Herald.

Anti-immigration activist from Everett arrested in Arizona killings

By Scott North and Jackson Holtz, Herald Writers

TUCSON, Ariz. -- An outspoken anti-immigration activist who was at the center of a series of violent crimes in Everett earlier this year has been arrested in Arizona in connection with the home-invasion killings of a man and his 9-year-old daughter.

Shawna Forde, 41, is charged with two-counts of first-degree murder, one count of first-degree burglary and one count of aggravated assault, according to a press release from the Pima County Sheriff's Department in Arizona.

The killings were believed to be premeditated. Forde and the two others allegedly went into the home intending to steal money and drugs, the press release said.

Raul Flores, 29, and his 9-year-old daughter, Brisenia, were killed when a group of armed people, including a woman, forced their way into the home on May 30, officials said.

The child's mother traded gunfire with the attackers. She survived, but remains hospitalized with gunshot wounds.

Forde was arrested without incident in Sierra Vista, a few miles from the Mexican border.

The shootings occurred in Arivaca, about 60 miles south of Tucson and 10 miles north of the Mexican border.

It is in an area where Forde and her group, Minuteman American Defense, have been operating. Forde has said her group conducts desert surveillance and undercover investigations aimed at curbing illegal immigration and drug smuggling.


Later, I was fowarded this link to the Green Valley, Arizona News with more detail.

Suspect in murders headed Minuteman group

By Daniel Newhauser and Dan Shearer, Green Valley News

Published: Friday, June 12, 2009

Two of the three people arrested in connection with the May 30 murders of an Arivaca man and his daughter headed up a splinter Minuteman group, and were looking for drugs and money to fund their efforts to keep illegal immigrants and drug runners out of the country, sheriff’s officials said.

Jason Eugene Bush, 34, was arrested Thursday in Kingman; Shawna Forde, 41, was arrested Friday south of Sierra Vista; and Albert Robert Gaxiola, 42, was arrested Friday afternoon in Tucson.

All three have been charged with two counts of first-degree murder, one count of first-degree burglary and one count of aggravated assault in connection with the murders of Raul Flores and his 9-year-old daughter, Brisenia. Flores’ wife was shot during the incident but managed to shoot one of the intruders.

“No, I did not do it,” Forde said as she was led out of the Pima County Sheriff’s Office in front of reporters Friday afternoon.

Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik said Forde was “still trying up until today to get together a large amount of money to further sophisticate the type of operation she’s interested in.”

“She’s, at best, a psychopath,” he said.


Gaxiola, Bush, Forde

Officials said Forde is associated with the Minutemen American Defense group and that Bush and Gaxiola, who is from Arivaca, are associates of Forde. The group is not associated with the national, 12,000-member Minutemen Civil Defense Corps, though Forde shared the stage with Minuteman Project co-founder Jim Gilchrist at a 2007 Elks Lodge event in Washington, according to a Southern Poverty Law Center profile on her.

But her association didn’t last long, and within Minuteman group circles Forde is controversial, according to a February article from the Daily Herald in Everett, Wash.

Hal Washburn, vetting officer for Washington state chapter of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, said Forde was encouraged to leave the group over questions about honesty and her inability to follow orders, according to the story. San Diego Minutemen lists Forde among people they won’t work with, calling her “unstable.”

Forde is listed as executive director of the Minutemen American Defense on the group’s Web site, which says its mission is, “To secure the U.S. Borders, Coastal boundaries and constitution against unlawful and unauthorized entry by all individuals, contraband and foreign military. To also increase the awareness of the devastation caused by illegal immigration to our state and country.”

Bush was listed as “operations director,” and is known as “Gunny.”

Dupnik said Bush was the shooter, under orders from Forde, and called the murders “one of the most despicable crimes that anyone in our organization has ever been associated with.”

Dupnik called it “a planned home invasion where the plan was to kill all the people inside this trailer because they might be witnesses, and rob them.” He said there are other people involved and the investigation continues.

PCSO Lt. Michael O’Connor called the killings an “assassination,” and said the shooters were looking for Flores’ other daughter, who was not at home.

Dupnik also said Raul Flores was “a large dealer” who likely had connections to large Mexican drug cartels and “has a history of being involved in narcotics.”

News of the arrests quickly spread through Arivaca on Friday evening. One woman said she knew Gaxiola and occasionally partied with him. The house where Raul and Brisenia were slain was dark, and neighbors had locked their gates as night fell.

A message from Forde on her Web site reads, “I would like to let everyone know that we are in full operation we have people coming from Florida and other parts of the country to assist in gathering exclusive footage of drug cartel drug smuggling and humane trafficking. Our point is to let the world know that we as American citizens have a choice and a responsibility to those who have stained the ground red for our freedoms.”

Bush was shot during the incident and was taken to a Kingman hospital after his arrest. He was also being held on a probation violation warrant out of Washington state for auto theft.

Scott Anderson, who belongs to the 80-member Green Valley chapter of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, said he has never heard of Forde or her group, but knows others will associate his group with theirs.

“I figured something like this was going to happen,” he said Friday evening. “We’re all going to be painted with the same broad brush.”

Anderson said anybody joining the national group must undergo a background check, an interview with a national officer and go through four to six hours of training.

“Our rules are very strict,” he said. “We’re doing everything above-board according to the law.”

Even before the arrests Anderson knew the Minutemen had an image problem with some people.

“I wish people could see our standard operating procedures,” he said. “We don’t impede the movement of anybody — we give them (illegal immigrants) water and medical aid just like the Samaritans do, but then we call the Border Patrol. We can’t convince people of that.”


I met Shawna one weekend a couple of years ago at a Patriots Border Alliance conference in St. Louis. She struck me immediately as being someone who was not too tightly wrapped -- a potential loose cannon. I commented on this at the time to several folks, and they agreed. The name of her group was Minuteman American Defense, or by acronym, M.A.D. She was called "the MAD woman."

Yet no one at the conference, I think, could have predicted the cascade of events that began in December 2008 with the shooting of her estranged husband John (he had filed for divorce in October yet still livd in the same house) by unidentified intruders. Although he lived, the details were murky and police suspicion focused on Shawna. No charges were ever brought. Then came a string of incidents where Shawna was allegedly raped and beaten by Mexicans, then later, shot.

Her claim at the time was that she and her husband had been the victim of drug cartel retribution for her border activities. I was immediately skeptical because if she had excited the interest of the cartels or MS-13, well, they are not known for doing things in little slices.

She has been shunned and denounced by almost the entire spectrum of immigration activists and border watch groups (save Jim Gilchrist and Laine Lawless, who embraced her and defended her). No one, though, thought she was capable of premeditated murder. Shows what we knew.

Some clues to her bizarre behavior can be found in an earlier Herald story here entitled Trouble finds Shawna Forde: Border activist at center of recent spate of violence.

In the coming days, you are going to hear a lot about this murderous loon. You will not hear that she was shunned and denounced. You will hear, courtesy of ADL, SPLC and their willing tools in the media the words "Minuteman," "vigilante," "nativist," amd "right-wing extremist" all in the same breath with "child murderer."

This will be pointed to, once again, as evidence the Homeland Security report was right. Thus proceeds the "Narrative of 1995."

The grim certainty that can be taken from this tragic murder of an innocent nine-year old girl is that regardless of how the trial of these three turns out, they are all, at this moment, dead folks walking. The cartels do not forget and they do not forgive.

But no matter the date of Shawna Forde's death, we will all be tarred with the broad brush of her sorry life, bad choices and evil deeds. Our enemies will use it as an excuse for our repression. That too is a grim certainty.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Attention all Threepers and Badge-Heavy "Joints."

I'll be at the Bessemer gun show this weekend. See you there. Look for the fat old white guy with white-grey hair, bushy black eyebrows and a cane. I'll be wearing a light brown shirt and the Sipsey Street sign will be posted somewhere nearby. If you can't find me with that description, "Waco Jim," your "joints" are as blind as I think they are.

Bonnie Erbe proposes rounding us all up. We're "hateful," you know.

Meet Bonnie Erbe.

First, my thanks to typeay for bringing my attention to the following op-ed by Bonnie Erbe. More on my reaction on the other side.

Mike
III


Round Up Hate-Promoters Now, Before Any More Holocaust Museum Attacks

By Bonnie Erbe
Jun 11, 2009

Three incidents and counting.

If yesterday's Holocaust Museum slaying of security guard and national hero Stephen Tyrone Johns is not a clarion call for banning hate speech, I don't know what is.

Playwright Janet Langhart Cohen appeared on CNN yesterday right after the shooting, as she wrote a play that was supposed to have been debuted at the Holocaust Museum last night. Her play is about Emmett Till, whose lynching helped launch the Civil Rights Movement, and Ann Frank, whose diary told the story of Holocaust victims in hiding in the Netherlands during World War II.

She said something must be done about ridding the Internet and the public dialogue of hate speech. I agree. Not only have we had three hate crime murders within the last two weeks (Mr. Johns, as noted above, Dr. George Tiller a week ago last Sunday, and Pvt. William Andrew Long by an American-born Muslim convert outside a recruiting station just before that.)

Now we have this quote from the so-called Rev. Jeremiah Wright, who used to be President Obama's pastor. Hate comes from among all peoples and all religions. He said this about his lack of communication with Barack Obama since he's been elected president, according to the AP:

"Them Jews ain't going to let him talk to me. I told my baby daughter that he'll talk to me in five years when he's a lame duck, or in eight years when he's out of office," Wright told the Daily Press of Newport News following a Tuesday night sermon at the 95th annual Hampton University Ministers' Conference.

It's not enough to prosecute these murders as murders. They are hate-motivated crimes and each of these men had been under some sort of police surveillance prior to their actions. Isn't it time we started rounding up promoters of hate before they kill?

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.




Now here is more than you ever wanted to know about Bonnie Erbe (pronounced Ur-bay). Suffice it to say she is no middle-weight Daily Kos idiot. She has, among other things, her own PBS show.

Also, she's a big animal lover but on the other hand, as she says here, for her "abortion is not a tragedy."

OK. So I sent her an email. Here it is.


Subject: I'm confused. Are you proposing a Department of Pre-crime or new Palmer Raids?
Date: 6/13/2009 7:08:12 A.M. Central Daylight Time
From: GeorgeMason1776
To: bonnieerbe@CompuServe.com

You recently wrote in a piece entitled, "Round Up Hate-Promoters Now, Before Any More Holocaust Museum Attacks."
:

"(Playwright Janet Langhart Cohen) said something must be done about ridding the Internet and the public dialogue of hate speech. I agree. . . It's not enough to prosecute these murders as murders. They are hate-motivated crimes and each of these men had been under some sort of police surveillance prior to their actions. Isn't it time we started rounding up promoters of hate before they kill?"

I'm confused. Your bio at pbs.org calls you a "nonpartisan, award-winning American journalist" and indicates that you "graduated from Barnard College in 1974, Columbia University with an M.S. in Journalism in 1975 and a J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center in 1987," and that you were on "the law revue at Georgetown and graduated cum laude."

So as a both a journalist and a lawyer, can you explain to me how your proposed roundup would be targeted consistent with the First Amendment? And what would your big "round up" look like? The Palmer Raids? The Alien and Sedition Acts? Or perhaps a more individually targeted Department of Pre-crime as defined by Janet Napolitano and executed by the minions of Eric Holder, the same people who brought us Waco?

Or are you looking for something more Orwellian like the Thought Police?

Now I understand that these questions are going to challenge your obvious leftish cognitive dissonance. Anyone who can in one breath proclaim that "abortion is not a tragedy" and simultaneously identify yourself as " a strong supporter of compassion for animals" without irony defines moral cognitive dissonance. Cherishing stray cats more than human life is not unheard of, of course. Adolf Hitler loved dogs too.

But I am curious, Ms. Erbe. How do you craft a law to accomplish your purpose without yourself being arrested when the regime changes? Do you think the "Lightworker" will be in power forever?

Ms. Erbe, I have fought neo-Nazis at street level all of my life. I despise them as the immoral scum between the cracks of the human sidewalk of civilization that they are. But I have sense enough to know that even they have the right to free speech. Do you remember nothing from Constitutional Law 101? How about History 202?

You wish to sweep away those that you find "hateful." Have you ever considered that there are many who find your ideas "hateful?"

Most of the Founders understood that you should never pass a law that you wouldn't be willing to see enforced upon you by your own worst enemy. (John Adams didn't, but then he and his party were swept from power by the reaction to the Alien and Sedition Acts.) If you really believe what you wrote, and worse, get what you ask for, the resulting armed resistance to such a tyrannical proposal would sweep away the safe, mythical cocoon within which you seem to live.

And if you think that tyranny and civil war cannot come to this country, as divided ideologically and morally as we presently are, you are whistling past the graveyard of history.

But as none of this is going to make an impression upon you, at least tell us -- please -- exactly what form of tyrannical oppression are you proposing?

Mike Vanderboegh
PO Box 926
Pinson, AL 35126
sipseystreetirregulars.blogspot.com


Aftermath of a Palmer Raid, 1919.

Friday, June 12, 2009

The "Joints," peeping toms, loping mules and Camp Jejune.

Peeping Tom: "Joint" in training.

jejune

Main entry:
Pronunciation: \ji-ˈjün\
Function: adjective
Etymology: Latin jejunus empty of food, hungry, meager
Date: 1646
1 : lacking nutritive value
2 : devoid of significance or interest : dull
3 : juvenile, puerile


A good friend of mine, a retired LTC of Marines, responded to my complaint about wasted tax dollars with an observation that the agents must know the silliness of keeping close tabs on me. I responded:

They do, but they can't help themselves. Somewhere, deep down in their psyches, they're peeping toms whacking off outside the window.


He then recalled:

Years ago at Camp Jejune, a Marine MP suspected his wife was screwing one of his buddies, so while on the night shift drove close to his quarters, parked and went to his house. Stood on a garbage can, peeped in the bedroom window, and there was his wife and his buddy going at it, but good. The on-duty MP got aroused, and started loping his mule to the extent that he fell off the garbage can, creating quite the racket & causing neighbors to turn on lights and come running to see what the hell was going on... there he stood, trying to get his mule back in the stable as someone's flashlight exposed this activity, and the buddy poked his head out of the window, joined by the wife...

Rumor has it that the Marine on the garbage can later had a very successful career in the ATF, and the Marine shagging his buddy's wife became a high-level career attorney with the DOJ, including time as a very successful US Attorney in Boston during Whitey Bulger's era...

He retired and became a defense attorney for pedophiles...


"Blues Came To Texas Loping Like A Mule" -- song by Blind Lemon Jefferson, early East Texas bluesman.

Huh.

Never knew what that meant until today.

On a lighter note: Hannah, to the consternation of her Air Assault brother, jumps out of a perfectly good airplane.









To the "Joints" from yesterday: My tax dollars at piss-poor work.

Joint Task Force Surveillance Training: Swift, silent, stupid.

F Troop Rides Again

Very sloppy field craft. VERY sloppy. I am not getting my tax dollars' worth from you guys. Can't you do better than THAT?!? I mean, where's the sophisticated electronics that are supposed to give you stand off ability? Is it a matter of priorities? What am I, chopped liver? Sheesh.

Waco Jim, you need to spank your children and urge them to be smarter, if that's possible. I mean, what if they had to cover somebody really dangerous like a biker gang or MS-13 or something, instead of just an old, fat white guy with a cane whose only crime is that he publicly disses your otherwise "pristine" reputation?

Answer: They'd be dead.

What? You don't like these guys? Leadership means driving your people to be the best as this is the most effective way of taking care of them. These guys weren't even up to the standards of the 90s, and they were piss poor back then. With skills like that, they'd get creamed in a truly dangerous environment.

Goodness gracious, if you're going to pretend to be America's jack-booted Stasi, at least demonstrate SOME competence. What wannabes.

"Howls of derisive laughter, Bruce." -- Monty Python.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Mistaken Identity, Part 3: "Women who have abortions are race traitors and should be stoned to death," or "'Christian' Identity is for pantywaists."

Symbol of "Christian" Identity. Note this is not the cross of Jesus' crucifixion, but the juxtaposition of a German "sieg rune" or "victory rune" upon a sword.

"Women who have abortions are race traitors and should be stoned to death."

On 10 August 1999, a big bad "race warrior" named Buford O'Neal Furrow attacked the North Valley Jewish Community Center in Los Angeles.

The shooting injured three children, and a receptionist. He also shot dead US Postal Service carrier Joseph Ileto who was Filipino American. Furrow was a member of the white-supremacist group Aryan Nations in 1995. On January 24, 2001 Furrow pleaded guilty to all of the counts against him. In exchange for pleading guilty, Furrow avoided a possible death sentence, but was instead sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. According to the indictment, Furrow expressed no regrets for any of his crimes. Furrow was also an engineer who worked for several years on the B-2 stealth bomber project for Northrop Grumman. Furrow's former girlfriend was Debbie Mathews, widow of Robert Jay Mathews. -- Wikipedia.

(Bob Mathews was the leader of the neo-Nazi terrorist group called The Order which in the 1980s robbed armored cars and killed an unarmed Jewish radio talk show host in Colorado as he carried his groceries into his house. Mathews was later tracked down and killed by the FBI at a house on Whidbey Island in Washington state.)

The night of Furrow's assault, Jeff Stein, a reporter who had worked with J.D. Cash and me on the Identity links to the Birmingham abortion clinic bomber Eric Robert Rudolph, interviewed us both and the following story appeared at Salon.com.

"Aryan warrior" Buford Furrow.

"Christian Identity is for pantywaists"

Right-wingers debate Buford Furrow's goals and his organizational ties.


By Jeff Stein

Neo-Nazis are hoping attacks like Buford O. Furrow's push the nation toward stricter gun control, say conservative students of right-wing hate movements, because they believe such restrictions will touch off anti-government warfare.

"They really believe 'The Turner Diaries' is the road map to their success," says J.D. Cash, an Oklahoma reporter with long associations among right-wing activists who broke stories about Timothy McVeigh's links to white-supremacist groups like Christian Identity.

"The Turner Diaries," an apocalyptic novel embraced by McVeigh and other Christian extremists, portrays a "patriot" who foments a right-wing backlash against the government's effort to crack down on guns by setting off bombs.

Police found Christian Identity literature in the van of Furrow, a 37-year-old Washington state man who turned himself into Las Vegas police after allegedly wounding three children, a teenager and an adult with bursts of automatic weapons fire at the North Valley Jewish Community Center in Granada Hills, Calif., a Los Angeles suburb, Tuesday. Furrow is also suspected of the murder of a postal worker an hour after the community center shooting.

The discovery of Christian Identity material led some commentators to link Furrow to notorious abortion bombing suspect Eric Rudolph, who disappeared into North Carolina's Smokey Mountains after police connected him to the bombing of an abortion clinic in Birmingham, Ala., in January 1998. The Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Ala., which tracks hate groups and has a file on Furrow, believes he followed the beliefs of the so-called Phineas Priesthood, a branch of Christian Identity. That loose-knit group also has been linked to 1996 bombings and bank robberies in the Spokane, Wash., area.

But the Christian Identity links to Furrow are less apparent than the movement's links to Rudolph, right wing experts told Salon News. Furrow is close to the neo-Nazi Aryan Nation in Washington state, while Rudolph had no known neo-Nazi associations.

"We're talking about two different regions here, two different sets of friends, two different sets of beliefs," said Mike Vanderboegh, a leader of the Alabama militia movement, in a telephone interview. Vanderboegh has made a hobby out of ridiculing Christian Identity followers and excludes them from his organization. "Rudolph is more Identity, this guy is more Nazi, is my read on it," he said.

"Rudolph, to the extent that we know about his associates and his friends, hung around with Nord Davis' Christian Identity folks" in North Carolina, "while this guy was hanging around Bob Mathews' widow and the Aryan Nations," Vanderboegh said.

Furrow lived with Debbie Mathews, whose husband, Robert J. Mathews, founded the neo-Nazi group the Order, a violent offshoot of the Aryan Nations.

Nord Davis, who died two years ago, hosted Christian Identity military training camps at his mountain home near Andrews, N.C., where Rudolph disappeared. Ex-Green Beret and self-styled Populist Party leader James "Bo" Gritz led some of the sessions. Rudolph, who has been indicted in other bombings, including the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, was educated briefly at a Christian Identity commune in Missouri, where he embraced white supremacy and neo-Nazi literature, according to his brother.

Rudolph knew Nord Davis, according to North Carolina sources, but was not known to train at his camp. He learned how to make bombs from found materials in the Army, when he was assigned to an air cavalry unit, according to a law enforcement source.

Another difference between Rudolph's bombings and Furrow's alleged attack Tuesday was that Rudolph's missions always appeared to be aimed at police, as well as the primary target -- a key tenet of Christian Identity tactics, according to manuals associated with the movement. No security personnel were attacked at the Jewish Community Center.

Christian Identity offers a convoluted, Old Testament gloss to traditional anti-Semitism and racism, teaching that white Northern Europeans are the real Israelites and all others are "mud people." Neo-Nazis and chrtisitian Identity followers, who have a scattering of churches, mainly in the South, share anti-Black, anti-Jewish, anti-gay and anti-abortion sentiments.

"I think in some ways Christian Identity is designed for pantywaists who are afraid to declare themselves true Nazis," Vanderboegh jibed. "These are the folks who have to tell their mommas or their wives, "It's OK that we hate blacks and Jews, dear, because God and Jesus told us it's OK. Whereas the Nazis don't worry about that kind of thing. They're sort of beyond excuses.

"You know, when you've got Adolf Hitler as your standard-bearer, what else have you got to be embarrassed about?" Vanderboegh said.

"They each come to their pus-filled beliefs by different roads, but they agree on the destination."

Vanderboegh agreed with J.D. Cash that the neo-Nazis hope to incite and gain control of pro-gun sentiment by attacks like the one on the Jewish Community Center.

"It definitely makes sense from their point of view," Vanderboegh said. Their "long-term goal is to climb up the resistance tree" of anti-gun control forces in "a civil war that will be provoked by the complete confiscation of guns."

"Trust me, conflict will break out," Vanderboegh said. "It doesn't take the neo-Nazis to start it, but they're more than happy to benefit from it."


With the hindsight of going on ten years, I would say that we made too much of the differences between Hayden Lake (the Aryan Nations) and Nord Davis' bunch in North Carolina. Sometime in the Eighties, the differences between the classic pagan Nazis and the British Israelists of Identity began to meld into a plastic racism and anti-semitism that covered the entire spectrum of cognitive dissonance.

The Klan, which in the 60s despised neo-Nazis, began to warm to them and the neos, for their part, dropped the militant Odinism and embraced the perverted "Christianity" of the Identities. Made insecure by their individual small numbers, they found strength when they had their "pan-racist" get togethers, usually at Richard Butler's Aryan Nations compound at Hayden Lake, Idaho.

Constitutional militiamen are "white on the outside, black on the inside with a Jewish brain." -- Identity "Pastor" Richard Butler, Aryan Nations, Hayden Lake, Idaho.


How often does your pastor "Sieg Heil" in church? Nazi? "Mistaken Identity"? How about both.

(For a glimpse of one of these get-togethers in Michigan, see if you can find a 1991 documentary entitled "Blood in the Face." Note that news reports today place our Christian-disdaining Holocaust Museum shooter as living in Hayden Lake, Idaho in 2004-2005.)



Abortion clinic bomber Eric Robert Rudolph was raised in Identity by his mother. Though he claimed during his trial that he was Catholic, he later admitted in prison that:

"Many good people continue to send me money and books. Most of them have, of course, an agenda; mostly born-again Christians looking to save my soul. I suppose the assumption is made that because I'm in here I must be a 'sinner' in need of salvation, and they would be glad to sell me a ticket to heaven, hawking this salvation like peanuts at a ballgame. I do appreciate their charity, but I could really do without the condescension. They have been so nice I would hate to break it to them that I really prefer Nietzsche to the Bible."

Eric Robert Rudolph, Identity terrorist and abortion clinic bomber.

So why would Rudolph want to bomb an abortion clinic? Was it because the Mistaken Identities, so un-Christian in most every other way, were "pro-life" as the "main stream" media allege?

Jim Ridgeway, the left-liberal screenwriter for Blood in the Face, is (oddly enough) intellectually honest when it comes to facts. I know this because he gave J.D. Cash, Glenn Wilburn and me a fair shake in an article he wrote for George magazine on the Oklahoma City Bombing independent investigation. Here is what Ridgeway wrote on 6 June about that very question.

A Brief History of the Radical, Violent Right: How Racist Hate Groups Joined Up with Abortion Terrorists

By James Ridgeway, MotherJones.com.

Posted June 6, 2009.

Alleged murderer Scott Roeder was once a white separatist before he became an anti-choice zealot -- many others have followed the same deadly path.

The revelation that Scott Roeder, the alleged murderer of Dr. George Tiller, belonged to an anti-government, white separatist group called the Montana Freemen might seem like an unlikely twist. After all, such groups are generally thought of as either indifferent to the issue of abortion or actively enthusiastic about its potential for reducing the nonwhite population. As it turns out, however, the journey from radical racialist to anti-abortionist isn't as unusual as you might think.

Roeder's connections to the right-wing fringe began well over a decade ago, according to the Kansas City Star. His ex-wife, Lindsey, said that after a few years of marriage, Roeder became increasingly involved with the Freemen and its anti-government ideology. "The anti-tax stuff came first, and then it grew and grew. He became very anti-abortion…That's all he cared about is anti-abortion. 'The church is this. God is this.' Yadda yadda." Noting that she vehemently disagreed with her ex-husband's views, Lindsey Roeder told the Star that he moved out in 1994. "I thought he was over the edge with that stuff," she said. "He started falling apart. I had to protect myself and my son."

In 1996, Roeder was arrested in Topeka after sheriff deputies stopped his car because it had no license plate. Instead, the Star reported, "it bore a tag declaring him a 'sovereign' and immune from state law. In the trunk, deputies found materials that could be assembled into a bomb." Roeder was convicted, sentenced to two years probation, and told to stay away from far-right groups. A state appeals court subsequently overturned the conviction.

Roeder and the Freemen belonged to a little-recognized nativist political movement that began in the early 20th century, flared up periodically, and then ripped through the American heartland during the farm depression of the mid-1980s. This movement was often called "the posse," after a core group named the Posse Comitatus.

Like any political movement, it consisted of a myriad of shifting entities that appeared and disappeared. But even though the names of the groups often changed, they all held tightly to the notion that the true white sovereigns, who had rightfully been given this land by God, were being threatened by race traitors "inferior races" creeping across the borders from Mexico and lands farther south. A favorite posse image was a drawing of a man hanging by the neck from a tree on a hill. Below in the distance stands a group of armed men. A sign is scrawled on the drawing. It says "The posse."

Over the years, this movement has encompassed various remnants of the Ku Klux Klan, what was left of Lincoln Rockwell's Nazis, the national socialists of William Pierce, and skinheads. Sometimes, adherents of the Posse ideology operated underground. Sometimes, they attempted to win support via electoral politics, like the white supremacist David Duke, who ran numerous times for statewide and national office. Terry Nichols, who along with Timothy McVeigh carried out the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995, dabbled with the concept of sovereign citizenship. The militia movement, too, was an outgrowth of the posse movement. Daniel Levitas, author of a book about the phenomenon, has described Roeder's group, the Montana Freemen, as "the direct ideological descendants of the Posse Comitatus."

(MBV Note: "The militia movement, too, was an outgrowth of the posse movement." Ridgeway knows better than this, at least he did in the 90s, but I guess you can only expect a leftist's memory to work for so long.)

The Freemen aimed to rid the nation of "14th Amendment citizens" -- anyone who wasn't a white Anglo Saxon directly descended from God. Nonwhites, or "mud people," weren't really people at all, but God's failed attempts to create Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. A bad Xerox copy, they used to say. These beliefs derived from a school of thought known as Christian Identity, which holds that Jews, blacks, and other minorities aren't actually people and therefore don't deserve constitutional rights. Instead, those rights are reserved for so-called "white Sovereigns," who aim to take over government and run it through grand juries of the people, with laws enforced by old-time posses.

The Freemen achieved notoriety in 1995, when they moved into a foreclosed farm in Garfield County, Montana, which they named Justus Township. Here they cached weapons and ammunition, dug bunkers, stockpiled food, and cut off a county road. They prepared for a siege with the feds. But the FBI eventually brought in an attorney connected to the Aryan Nations and worked out a surrender deal. Some of the Freemen were prosecuted for running a check scam. (One of the most detailed accounts of the Freemen and the unraveling of the far-right movement is contained in Blood and Politics, a new book by Leonard Zeskind. He is the leading historian of the scene.)

(MBV Note: I haven't read Zeskind's book, but I disagree with the characterization. He is one of the promulgator's of the false "Narrative of 1995." Insofar as this: "But the FBI eventually brought in an attorney connected to the Aryan Nations and worked out a surrender deal," this was Kirk Lyons. Lyons was the attorney who made his racist bones defending Identity clients in the Fort Smith, Arkansas sedition trial in the 1980s. He married imprisoned Order assassin David Lane's sister. In 1995, it was revealed that he shepherded Andreas Carl Strassmeier into and across the United States, vouching for him to Identity "Pastor" Millar at Elohim City -- himself later revealed to be an FBI snitch --, where he became security chief. Strassmeier, J.D. Cash believed, as so do I, was the principal federal provocateur inside the OKC bombing conspiracy. After press attention turned to the Identity links to the bombing in the wake of the revelation that McVeigh had called Strassmeier at Elohim City a few days before the bombing, Lyons smuggled Strassmeier out of the country via Mexico back to his native Germany. Lyons' own alibi for the day of the bombing was highly suspect, according to law enforcement sources at the time. Lyons has played all sides of the street all of his adult life, and was certainly an FBI informant long before he sought to be a "disinterested party" in the Freeman standoff. He also recently helped engineer a racist coup within the national leadership of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. "Identity, FBI, Identity, FBI. It's hard to tell where one ends and the other begins," or so said J.D. Cash before his death.)

One might think that the divisions between pro-life Christians and far-right racists would preclude any sort of working alliance. Evangelical Christians thought that the creation of Israel was a sign of the Second Coming of Christ and became keen supporters of that country. The racialists, meanwhile, hated Israel and detested Jerry Falwell for supporting it. The Klan historically loathed Catholics, and modern far-right leaders like Tom Metzger in California thought abortion was a great way to stem the tide of brown and black babies who were burdening the welfare system and who as adults would threaten white political power.

In the early and mid-'80s, however, the racialist underground often railed against abortion. I wrote about this development in the Village Voice:

Bob Mathews, leader of a terror gang known as The Order, saw abortion as the suicide of the white race. Jim Wickstrom, the Christian Identity leader of another underground terror group called the Posse Comitatus, ranted against Jewish doctors and nurses who engaged in abortion. Posse screeds claimed the space program was part of a plot to get rid of aborted fetuses by blasting them into space.

By the 1990s, the far right had started to attack abortion clinics. Ray Lampley, a far-right racialist in Oklahoma, and two members of a national militia were convicted in federal court of conspiring to bomb abortion clinics (along with gay bars, welfare offices, an Anti-Defamation League office, and the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama). In Spokane, Washington, three men who claimed ties to a group called the Phineas Priesthood were charged with the bombings of a newspaper office and a Planned Parenthood clinic. The group is named for a Bible story in which Phinehas slew an interracial couple. Today's Phineas Priesthood has been popularized by the white separatist William Pierce, whose 1989 book, The Hunter, tells the story of a drive-by killer who starts out murdering interracial couples and works his way up to killing Jews in order to save the future of white civilization. Paul Hill, who was sentenced to death for the murder of an abortion doctor and his escort, has written an essay calling for "Phineas actions." In 1994, he told USA Today, "I could envision a covert organization developing -- something like a pro-life IRA." (Hill was executed in 2003.)

What was the bridge between the posse movement and anti-abortionist fanaticism? The Sovereign crowd viewed women as chattel, and the prospect of an independent woman deciding to seek an abortion didn't sit well with them. I gained some insight into this line of thinking in another piece I once wrote about a young woman in Oklahoma who aspired to join the Christian Identity group, hoping that its followers would teach her to shoot and become a guerrilla. Instead, the men asked her for sex. When the woman replied that she wanted a relationship first, one of them replied, "Women are for breeding." According to one faction of the group, women who have abortions are race traitors and should be stoned to death. With that in mind, the fact that some members of the far-right became violent anti-abortionists perhaps shouldn't come as such a surprise.


Racists like Identity don't give a hoot in hell if abortionists kill black or Jewish babies. It bothers the heck out of them when those babies are white.

Is this "pro-life"?

No.

Let's recap:

Bob Mathews and the Order? Identity.

Aryan Nations? Identity.

The Freemen? Identity.

Ray Lampley? Identity.

Elohim City, Oklahoma, support base of the Aryan Republican Army bank robbery gang, where McVeigh called two days before the OKC bombing? Identity.

Eric Robert Rudolph? Identity.

The Holocaust Museum shooter? Two years at Identity Central, Hayden Lake, Idaho.

Scott Roeder? Almost certainly Identity.

Starting to see a pattern?

(More on Roeder's connections in Mistaken Indentity, Part 4.)

Round Up the Usual Suspects: "Attacks validate DHS report, some say." (Uh, by "some" they mean the ADL and SPLC.)

"Major Strasser has been shot. . . Round up the usual suspects."

Well, it didn't take them long to get out the tar bucket and the broad brushes. ADL and SPLC are pointing to the Tiller killing and the Museum murder as proof positive the discredited Homeland Security report was right after all.

Why is it so important to them that the DHS report be rehabilitated? Because they wrote it and it fits their agenda. If I had the money, I would buy this clueless reporter a copy of Professor Churchill's book, To shake Their Guns In the Tyrant's Face. Churchill calls for scholars to go "Beyond the Narrative of 1995."

The militia movement has been the subject of at least a dozen books and hundreds of articles, yet it remains one of the most poorly understood political movements of the twentieth century. In the months after the bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building by Timothy McVeigh, civil rights organizations issued at least a dozen published reports on the militia movement, and civil rights activists offered "expert" commentary in hundreds of news stories. Within a year, books by leading figures associated with civil rights organizations, including Morris Dees, Kenneth Stern, and Richard Abanes, offered a coherent narrative of the origin of the movement.

What America learned in these months was that the militia movement was an outgrowth of the racist Right. Civil rights activists portrayed the militias as the armed wing of a much larger "Christian Patriot" movement. They warned that Christian Patriots numbered in the millions and that Christian Patriotism called for restoration of white, Christian, patriarchal domination. The Christian Patriot movement as a whole, and the militias in particular, were antidemocratic, paranoid, virulently anti-semitic, genocidally racist, and brutally violent. Much of this literature suggested that Timothy McVeigh was the movement's highest expression. In this narrative, the militias and the Patriot movement took on the guise of the perfect racist "other," and the threat they posed was best articulated by Morris Dees' apocalyptic vision of a "gathering storm."

This "narrative of 1995" produced by civil rights organizations, coupled with the horror of the Oklahoma City bombing, triggered what Steven Chernak has referred to as a moral panic. Through published reports, their influence over the news coverage of the movement, and testimony at prominent public hearings, leading militia "experts" injected their portrait of the movement into public consciousness and popular culture. In news coverage, popular novels, episodes of Law and Order, and movies such as Arlington Road, the public became well-acquainted with the archetypal militiaman, usually protrayed as warped by racial hatred, obsessed with bizarre conspiracy theories, and hungry for violent retribution.

The moral panic over the "militia menace" strongly resembled previous moral panics over the "communist menace" that had swept the nation in the aftermath of World War I and again in the early 1950s. Less well known than these two Red scares is America's "Brown Scare." In the late 1930s, political activists on the left warned that an array of far right opponents of President Roosevelt and the New Deal . . . constituted a fifth column composed of fascist brownshirts . . . (T)he ensuing moral panic facilitated a campaign of repression waged by the U.S. governemnt against the Far Right during World War II. In 1995-6, the moral panic over the militia movement blossomed into a second American Brown Scare.

The literature produced by the second American Brown Scare has had significant impact on academic analysis of the movement, and this poses a problem for continuing scholarship. The civil rights organizations that produced the narrative of 1995 conceived of themselves as political opponents of the militia movement, and these organizations made the legal suppression of the movement one of their central political objectives. That political objective has systematically shaped their reporting on the movement. Their analyses might serve as a primary source base for an interesting analyis of how the activist Left perceived the Far Right at the turn of the millennium. To use this literature as a primary source base in an analysis of the character of the militia movement itself is to allow the movement's opponents to define it.

Unfortunately, much of the scholarship on the militia movement produced in the last ten years has not broken free from the influence of the narrative of 1995. Too many scholars have relied on the reports and books generated by the Brown Scare as primary evidence of the character of the movement. Others who have avoided this first error have nevertheless allowed the narrative of 1995 to unduly influence their research agendas. Finally, even the best scholarship on militias tends to inappropriately conflate the militia movement with other movements on the far right of American politics and to overstate the influence of millennial thought on militia ideology. . .

The final academic legacy of the Brown Scare is an emphasis on the allegedly close association of militia groups with other far right organizations, such as white supremacist groups, Christian Identity ministries, common-law courts, and tax protest societies. The narrative of 1995 lumped all of these disparate far right groups together in the "Christian Patriot movement," a misguided simplification that has led a number of senior scholars to blur the lines between different groups with quite different worldviews . . .

Since the turn of the millennium, three scholars have begun the task of freeing scholarship of the militia movement from the narrative of 1995. . . As an historian, I hope to contribute to this field an insight gained in the study of other partisan political crises in Ameerican history: in evaluating the ideology of an insurgent movement, one must not allow the movement's partisan allies, much less its partisan enemies, to speak for it. (pp. 7-11)


Exactly. Read the article below, the link is here. I will have some comments on the other side.

Mike
III

Attacks validate DHS report, some say

By JOSH GERSTEIN | 6/10/09

Civil rights activists say a string of recent attacks blamed on right-wing extremists, including Wednesday’s shooting at the Holocaust Museum, show that conservative critics were too quick to fault the Department of Homeland Security over an April report warning about the potential for such violence.

The report was roundly criticized by Republicans for painting conservatives as a threat—particularly military veterans and those opposed to abortion or immigration – and DHS later withdrew the report.

“I think this latest round of killing once again shows how ridiculous the criticism from the right of the Department of Homeland Security report was. That whole brouhaha was absurd,” said Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center. “Rush Limbaugh and John Boehner can go on until the end of time about how [the report] was an attack on conservatives, but in reality it was a perfectly sober assessment of what was going on out there.”

“We felt the DHS report was pretty right on,” said Deborah Lauter of the Anti-Defamation League. “Clearly the election of Obama, the current financial crisis, and the discussion of immigration reform –those things have certainly fueled the right wing extremist movement in this country….There are clear indications that the rhetoric is manifesting. We hope it’s not the tip of the iceberg.”

The 88-year-old man alleged to have killed a security guard at the Holocaust Museum Wednesday, James von Brunn, was a hardcore white supremacist and Holocaust denier who often railed against Jews and African-Americans.

In 1981, he took a shotgun to the Federal Reserve to make what he called a citizen’s arrest over high interest rates. On his website, Von Brunn complained bitterly about being railroaded by a judicial system that included a Jewish judge and African-Americans on the jury.

The sharpest criticism of the report, titled, “Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment,” was focused on a part of the report asserting that “the return of military veterans…could lead to the potential emergence of terrorist groups or lone wolf extremists capable of carrying out violent attacks.”

A spokesman for Boehner, Michael Steel, said assertions that Republicans went too far in castigating the report were inappropriate to discuss in the wake of Wednesday’s shooting.



It is vitally important that such bias not enter into the decision making loop of law enforcement. Yet this is exactly where we are today. as I have said before:

The moral panic whipped up by the Narrative of 1995 has now been embraced by the federal government and by many state law enforcement organizations and will guide their decisions in the coming months and years. People can, and have been, killed needlessly over such lies and stupidities. -- The SPLCization of Law Enforcement in the 21st Century: Conflation, moral panic and the "Narrative of 1995."


The ADL and the SPLC have a lot of money riding on the "Narrative of 1995." It is no wonder they are trying to breathe life back into the Frankenstein corpse of the Homeland Security report.

Pity the poor Aryan, beset by Jews AND Christians. I guess the solution is to shoot up the Holocaust Museum.

Done in by the "Jewish-Christian Conspiracy"? Nazi Suicide in Leipzig, April 1945. I guess Hitler had nothing to do with it. Photo by Lee Miller.

James von Brunn is not dead yet. They say he took two shots to the head. I guess that proves my Uncle Bill's theory that Nazis lack brains. ("Shoot 'em in the balls," was his solution.) Further proof can be found here. Thanks to Wretched Dog for the tip.

Mike
III

CHRISTIANITY and the HOLOCAUST.

by James W. von Brunn

As duped Aryan sheep begin to understand the "Holocaust" they also begin to better understand Christianity. Both have similar origins. Both have identical objectives.

Saul of Tarsus, after helping friends stone to death a disciple of Jesus Christ, set forth toward Damascus. As he trudged the dusty road a blinding, excruciating light suddenly crashed his brain. The world whirled into a crimson vortex. He heard his own scream, far away. Then there was quiet. When he awoke he was lying on the road. He looked up. A man in a white cloak was standing there his hands outstretched. His hands bore deep scars. Saul trembled with fright. Then Jesus smiled, pulling Saul upright, saying, "Fear not, Saul of Tarsus, I come to you from our Father." It was a miracle.

Saul and Jesus earnestly, fervently, joyously conversed with one another. Arm in arm they tarried there. Jesus told Saul he was his own. Jesus was loving, loving, forgiving, forgiving. Saul became his disciple there and then -- struck by the Holy Spirit. Finally, following Saul's vows of fidelity, love, and obedience, the visitation ended when, before Saul's wondering awe-struck eyes, Jesus to Heaven in a halo did rise. It was a miracle.

We are told that this extra-sensory experience, somewhat like an epileptic fit, suddenly changed the hateful, murderer Saul (later, St. Paul) from a hater of Jesus into a Jesus lover. Really?

Saul, ten years younger, had not met The Master vis a vis before Jesus' crucifixion. Had they met earlier Saul probably would have crushed Christ's head with a rock.

Saul, and most Israelis, detested Jesus and his blasphemous ideology almost as much as they detested Romans; more even than they detested Greeks, Babylonians, Assyrians, Canaanites, Egyptians, Persians, et al. In truth, as bigoted Judeophobes know, God's "Chosen People" hated their God's only Son.

Matthew emphatically states that Israelis so hated Jesus Christ that THEY crucified him (Pope John Paul II, Zionist, said that Matthew is wrong! What's that? "The Word of God" is wrong?).

ACTUALLY, on the road to Damascus -- brooding about Rome, relishing the bloody image of the disciple he had stoned to death; sweaty, sore footed, thinking of the blasphemous ravings of the Nazarene -- Saul had an incredible, earthshaking IDEA. A light-bulb inspiration. He, Saul -- a Roman citizen -- suddenly realized how he could destroy Rome! Saul trembled uncontrollably with fear and joy. He would simply promulgate the insane teachings of Jesus! What better way to destroy a Nation -- any Nation -- than to undermine her hubris; her gods, ethics, mores, history, her gene-pool -- in short, Saul would DESTROY ROMAN CULTURE. Then, as night follows day, with her foundations rotted, the Roman Empire would FALL. Saul decided to begin the HOAX by inventing a miraculous encounter on the road to Damascus with the reincarnated Jesus the Christ!

Toward that end -- no different than Hollywood script-writers today -- Saul created a bogus a la Spielberg docu-drama stuffed with lies, miracles, guilt trips, betrayal, virgin birth, eternal damnation, salvation -- a scenario appealing to the superstitious, vulnerable, ignorant yearning sheep -- he named his hoax "Christianity."

The New Testament was written in Greek. Paul - who believed the World was flat, that Joshua made the sun stand still, and Jehovah spoke from a burning bush -- wrote one-third of it, perhaps more. The events described in the 24 Books are often contradictory, fail the time-line, defy both archaeology's and nature's immutable laws, and are suicidal if practiced. Nevertheless, the shamans bought it, taught it, and the illiterate public was coerced, brainwashed, threatened, tortured, murdered, and enthralled. The Encyclopedia Britannica states that over 6,000 major redactions exist between the Septuagint (translation of Aramaic into Greek) and its St. James biblical translation.

The Gospels profess that only Christians may enter Yahweh's Kingdom of Heaven. To qualify, among other demands, Christians must LOVE THEIR ENEMIES (Jews); give away their personal belongings; eschew knowledge; judge not, despise nature, abandon earthly pleasures, acknowledge that all YHWH's children are equal; and above all else worship YHWH, the jealous, wrathful, vengeful, unforgiving, genocidal, anthropomorphic tribal god (Jesus' father) created by Hebrews in their image and likeness. Omnipotent, omniscient YHWH promises Hebrews that they alone shall inherit the earth, that it is commendable to steal from Gentiles, better yet -- kill them.

Whereas Gentiles, if they fail to worship YHWH, are transported straight to Hell. And it is written, "A little child shall lead them."

These dangerous, imbecilic, concepts, tenets, and teachings, often treasonous, DESTROYED the Roman Empire and drenched the soil of Europe with Aryan blood for almost 2000 years!

The Big Lie technique, employed by Paul to create the CHRISTIAN RELIGION, also was used to create the HOLOCAUST RELIGION ... CHRISTIANITY AND THE HOLOCAUST are HOAXES.
"Christianity" destroyed Roman Civilization. The "Holocaust" Religion is destroying Western Civilization. The Aryan gene-pool dies, "unwept, unhonored and unsung."

jvb

"Kill the Best Gentiles!"

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Ever ask yourself WHY neo-Nazis and Mistaken Identities commit violent acts?



Here, courtesy of David Codrea, are the first six chapters of an old hate-filled anti-semite's book called "Kill the Best Gentiles!" With luck, the anal sphincter who wrote it will be dead by morning and roasting in Hell a second or two later.

The big-time "racial warrior" managed to kill a security guard at the Holocaust Museum in Washington D.C. as described here. He is even now being celebrated on racist and anti-semite web sites. Big deal. A gang-banger on meth could have done a better technical job. If this is their idea of a "racial warrior" then so's Mickey Mouse.

Kindly read the article and I will have a comment on the other side.

Mike
III

Gunman shoots, kills, guard at Holocaust Museum

Jun 10 03:40 PM US/Eastern

By NAFEESA SYEED

Associated Press Writer

(AP) - An elderly gunman opened fire with a rifle inside the crowded U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum on Wednesday, killing a security guard before being shot.

Authorities said they were investigating a white supremacist as the suspect.

The assailant was hospitalized in critical condition, Washington, D.C., Mayor Adrian Fenty said.

D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier said the gunman was "engaged by security guards immediately after entering the door" with a rifle. "The second he stepped into the building he began firing."

One law enforcement official said James Von Brunn, 89, a white supremacist, was under investigation in the shooting, and a second official said the elderly man's car was found near the museum and tested for explosives. They spoke on condition of anonymity, saying they were not authorized to discuss the investigation just beginning.

Von Brunn has a racist, anti-Semitic Web site and wrote a book titled "Kill the Best Gentiles."

In 1983, he was convicted of attempting to kidnap members of the Federal Reserve Board. He was arrested two years earlier outside the room where the board was meeting, carrying a revolver, knife and sawed-off shotgun. At the time, police said Von Brunn wanted to take the members hostage because of high interest rates and the nation's economic difficulties.

Writings attributed to Von Brunn on the Internet say the Holocaust was a hoax and decry a Jewish conspiracy to "destroy the white gene pool."

"At Auschwitz the 'Holocaust' myth became Reality, and Germany, cultural gem of the West, became a pariah among world nations," the writing said.

The museum houses exhibits and records relating to the Holocaust more than a half century ago in which more than six million Jews were killed by the Nazis.

Museum officials identified the guard who was killed as Stephen T. Johns. In an e-mail, director Sara Bloomfield said he "died heroically in the line of duty."

The museum where he worked is located across the street from the National Mall, and within sight of the Washington Monument. The museum, which draws about 1.7 million visitors each year, was closed for the day after the shooting, and nearby streets were cordoned off by police. Surrounding roads were closed at least temporarily and blocked off with yellow tape. Police cars and officers on horseback surrounded the area.

The attack was the third in a recent wave of unsettling shootings that appeared to have political underpinnings.

A 23-year-old Army private, William Andrew Long, was shot and killed outside a recruiting office this month in Arkansas and a fellow soldier was wounded. The suspect, a Muslim convert, has said he considers the killing justified because of the U.S. military presence in the Middle East.

Late last month, abortion provider Dr. George Tiller was shot to death in his church.

At the White House a few blocks away from the Museum, press secretary Robert Gibbs said he informed President Barack Obama of the events and the chief executive was "obviously saddened by what has happened."

Only last week, Obama visited the site of a German concentration camp at Buchenwald in Germany where he noted, "There are those who insist the Holocaust never happened." He added, "This place is the ultimate rebuke to such thoughts, a reminder of our duty to confront those who would tell lies about our history."

The museum normally has a heavy security presence with guards positioned both inside and outside. All visitors are required to pass through metal detectors at the entrance, and bags are screened.

Linda Elston, who was visiting the museum from Nevada City, Calif., said she was on the lower level of the museum watching a film when she and others were told to evacuate.

"It was totally full of people," Elston said. "It took us a while to get out."
She said she didn't hear any shots and didn't immediately know why there was an evacuation. The experience left her feeling "a little anxious," she said.

A museum official said a couple of thousand people were inside the facility when the shooting broke out.

The museum, the largest U.S. memorial to the Holocaust, opened in 1993 and has been a target of at least one domestic terrorism threat in the past. In 2002, prosecutors said two members of white supremacist groups had plotted to build a fertilizer bomb—like the one used to destroy an Oklahoma City federal building—to blow up the Holocaust museum. Authorities said the two had plotted to incite a race war.


MBV: Ever ask yourself why neo-Nazis and Mistaken Identities commit violent acts?

Look again at the last sentence of the above story. These racist cretins are stupid like a fox. They know that they'll never be able to convince enough people politically to adopt their pus-filled beliefs. What they count on is provoking the government by their terrorist acts into cracking down on American gun owners in order to start an American civil war, race war, any kind of war. In the blood and chaos, they expect to be able to advance their cause by manipulating well-intentioned fools (Lenin called such people useful idiots) into doing their bidding. These people will tie their flank to the racial collectivists in the expectation that they are allies, only to find at the end a knife in the ribs or a bullet in the back. How do I know this? Why I've read the Turner Diaries, the neoNazi onanist fantasy. (And yes I mean onanist, not Odinist. Look it up.)



People ask me why I am so intolerant of anti-semites and racists.

It is because I am an ex-collectivist myself. I know how these people think and what they dream at night. Do you know what they dream?

The Nazis, the hard-core Norse biker god Nazis, believe that Jesus was an effeminate Jew and fodder for the gas chambers.

The Identities, not happy with the way God and his Son the Christ have made men in God's image, are trying to remake God in THEIR image.

But at the end of the day, all of them dream of a "racially pure" world and the rest of us -- that is all of us who do not agree and all of our kind, men, women and children -- in mass graves. ALL. OF. US.

Get it?

That is why they assassinate people and blow things up (when they're able to screw up their courage to do so). They want the government to react blindly and to radicalize us into working with them.

And the gangster government, that part of it that is all tyrannical appetite, is more than happy that they do it.

As I continue my series tomorrow on Mistaken Indentities and who Scott Roeder really worships, I will discuss what we can expect to see in the future, how the militia movement dealt with it in the past, and how gangster government uses these filthy pieces of moral smegma as catspaws. I will also discuss how we can beat them.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Abortionist says killing of Tiller the "equivalent of Pearl Harbor"

Equivalent of this?

We are two different countries. This proves it.

Mike
III

here.

Abortion doctor: Tiller killing a hate crime

Decries 'anti-choice domestic terrorists'


By Julia Duin
Washington Times
Monday, June 8, 2009

Nebraska abortion doctor LeRoy Carhart called on the federal government Monday to treat all activities by "anti-choice domestic terrorists" as hate crimes after last week's fatal shooting of Dr. George Tiller.

Equivalent of THIS?


"This is the equivalent of Martin Luther King being assassinated," he said of the killing of one of the nation's best known late-term abortion doctors. "This is the equivalent of Pearl Harbor, the sinking of the Lusitania and any other major historic event where we've tolerated the intolerable for too long."

Scott P. Roeder, 51, has been charged with first-degree murder and two counts of armed criminal action in the Tiller case.

Equivalent of THIS?!?


"I think there is absolutely no difference in putting a cross in front of a person's home because of what race they belong to than there is putting a cross in front of our homes because we do abortions," he said.

Pro-life protestors had put crosses in front of Dr. Tiller's Wichita, Kan. clinic, he said, adding that he was one of three physicians who rotated in every three weeks to assist in providing late-term abortions.

EQUIVALENT OF THIS?!?!?


In town for a memorial service at National City Christian Church in honor of Dr. Tiller, Dr. Carhart, 67, spoke Monday under the auspices of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, which encompasses 40 denominations and religious groups.

"Tonight is the night to honor Dr. Tiller for what he contributed to society," he said. "We all lost something when Dr. Tiller died."

Dr. Carhart would not talk about whether he had federal marshal protection, although at least one person accompanying him appeared to be part of a security detail. He said he did not have marshals protecting him before Dr. Tiller's killing.


EQUIVALENT OF THIS?!?!?

Horseshit.

This just in: Rule of law officially dead -- the Supreme Court says so.

If anyone had any illusions that gangster government would be restrained by the Supreme Court, go here. The damage that this will do to future investment is incalculable. The rule of law is dead. The rule of gangster government enriching their allies at the expense of others is here. I'll have one final comment on the other side.

Mike
III

High court won't block Chrysler sale

Jun 9 06:27 PM US

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court has cleared the way for Chrysler's sale to Fiat, turning down a last-ditch bid by opponents of the deal.

The court said late Tuesday it had rejected a plea to block the sale of most of Chrysler's assets to the Italian automaker. Chrysler, Fiat and the Obama administration had warned that the high court's intervention could have scuttled the sale.

A federal appeals court in New York had earlier approved the sale, but gave opponents until Monday afternoon to try to get the Supreme Court to intervene.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg ordered a temporary delay just before a 4 p.m. deadline on Monday.

Now the court has freed the automakers to complete their deal.


The Court of Last Appeal.

Mistaken Identity, Part 2: Which master does Scott Roeder serve? (Clandestine meetings in an old missle silo with a charismatic FBI informant.)

The schematic of an Atlas missile silo.

After the Great Kansas Martian Hog Farm Shootout, Identity adherent Morris Wilson lost his leadership position in the KUCM. Immediately after the Oklahoma City bombing, Wilson and the other Kansas Identity folks seemed to disappear like smoke. The 2nd Amendment core of the militia unit soldiered on for a while, but eventually disbanded, still mystified about what Wilson and the "militant bunch" had really been up to. All of which begs the question: what part did Scott Roeder play in "the militant bunch?"

Let's take Mr. Peabody's Wayback Machine into the past to the early months of 1995. The place is an old missle silo outside Wamego in Pottawatomie County, Kansas. The "militant bunch" is having a meeting. The host is this man. Meet Ronald Griesacker, aka Ronald Laycock. At the time the meeting takes place, Griesacker is a prison guard, an employee of the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Freeman con man, Identity apologist, FBI informant and "Political Emperor of all American Soil."


His picture above from the Illinois Deadbeat Dad Registry doesn't quite do him justice. Here's what I hear from folks in Kansas who were in the Patriot movement back then.

The meetings in the silo were hosted by Griesacker, attended by Morris Wilson and others of "the militant bunch" AND Scott Roeder. However one report has it that -- during one meeting at least -- Roeder was there before the meeting, excused himself, and only came back in to the silo after the meeting was over.

Did Roeder not want to be in on the meetings? Why? Weak stomach for anti-semitism? If he was that squeamish why was he there in the first place?

Did Griesacker not want him to be there for the meetings?

Why?

Was there something about the Freeman meetings that Roeder objected to? Again, if so, why was he there anyway?

Was it rather, as some have suggested to me, a matter of cell security on Griesacker's part?

I do not know.

I do know what happened not long afterward:

Kansas Freemen Busted for Bogus Checks

Robert A. Riccomini, a 14-year employee of the Kansas Department of Corrections was arrested in connection with bogus checks that began circulating throughout Kansas in 1995. Riccomini, 45, of Emmett was charged in Shawnee County District Court with attempted theft for writing a phony check in 1995 for more than $20,000 to the Capitol City State Bank in Topeka. He was released on $2,500 bond. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for Nov. 3.

Riccomini was part of a group of "freemen" in the St. Marys area, along with Ronald Griesacker, Rockie Broaddus and Ernest Cartmill. In an article for the Americans Bulletin, Griesacker wrote that the group was trained by the Montana Freemen.

Training included "biblical concepts that intermingled with our government" and, apparently, Schweitzer's check writing scheme. The group reportedly disbanded in the Spring of 1996 after federal agents arrested LeRoy Schweitzer in Montana (Americans Bulletin, Dec. 1995, Kansas City Star, Sept. 18).


Riccomini was arrested. Griesacker, his work buddy, walked. That happened a lot in the following years. On 22 March 1998, my friend Carl Worden of the Southern Oregon Militia issued this request via Internet:

Intel Wanted: Ronald Arthur Griesacker

Date: Sun, 22 Mar 1998 22:27:28 PST

Ladies & Gentlemen: Please post nationwide: We are looking into an individual by the name of Ronald Arthur Griesacker. Mr. Griesacker goes by a number of aliases, sometimes using the last name "Augustus", "Laycock", "Patrick" -- you name it. It is probably easier to identify this individual by appearance, family and M.O., so here goes:

5'10", 170 Lbs., DOB 6/14/56, race: white, blue eyes, brown hair. Sometimes facial hair, sometimes clean shaven. Travels with wife and five children. Known to have had a federal arrest warrant on him in 1995 with a notation that he is usually armed and considered dangerous -- no bond. The charge was fraud. That warrant has somehow become "suspended". NCIC now reports no current wants on Mr. Griesacker.

M.O.: Known to promote the use of commercial liens and subsequent warrants, similar to the system used by the Freemen. He also sets up questionable "trusts". He may approach known patriot individuals or organizations and promote his system, get them to become active participants in his schemes, then disappear just before federal authorities move in to make arrests. This has reportedly occurred 3 times, the last time I know of, he was involved with the Republic of Texas -- and McLaren -- and disappeared just before federal authorities moved in to make arrests. He may approach sympathetic patriot organizations with a story that he is being sought by authorites from past arrests, and that he barely escaped. He may ask to be hidden in return for his expertise on setting up trusts, liens and warrants. He is reportedly ingratiatingly persuasive, gaining the absolute confidence of his newfound "friends".

We are tracking Mr. Griesacker at this time. We know Mr. Griesacker was a corrections officers -- a lawman in Kansas -- prior to the warrant being issued in 1995 for fraud. I am convinced Mr. Grieasacker is now a paid, freelance federal agent who has agreed to perform his "services" for the feds in return for favorable consideration regarding the aforementioned fraud charges. That's just my opinion, but I have extensive information now available to me that supports that opinion conclusively. If you are currently dealing directly or indirectly with this individual at this time, you should take immediate steps to distance yourself from him and any scheme he may have convinced you to participate in. I would also recommend you immediately seek the counsel of a criminal defense attorney. Please pass any and all information to me regarding what you know about this individual. We consider him extremely dangerous for reasons I cannot divulge at this time. Thank you.


Subsequent to this, Griesacker's run as an informant came to a temporary halt.

Read "The Tattler's Tale" which appeared on Pitch.com, a Kansas alternative newspaper, in September 2002, here.

Tattler's Tale

Ronald Griesacker helped lock up right-wingers, then went to prison himself.


By Mark Kind
Published on September 12, 2002

On September 27, Ronald Arthur Alexander Augustus Griesacker will be a free man, more or less, but probably not a Freeman -- because that's what got him thrown into prison 43 months ago.

Griesacker was supposed get his wrists slapped a little bit harder: He was sentenced in February 1999 to 57 months without parole on nine counts of bank fraud, one count of mail fraud and a conspiracy charge stemming from $2 million in worthless checks he'd passed off as government drafts. But he was released from a maximum-security prison in Florence, Colorado, eighteen months early on May 30 and has been shuffling around Wichita, Kansas, halfway houses ever since, according to federal officials.

Come the end of the month, he'll be free to return home to St. Mary's, Kansas, thirty miles north of Topeka.

Formerly named Ronald Laycock, he -- along with his wife and their five children -- was adopted in the mid-'90s by retired NASA engineer Ignatius Griesacker of St. Mary's. Father and son both worship in that town's dominant church, the Society of Saint Pius X, a Catholic faction excommunicated by the Vatican for being too conservative.

What's suspicious is that Ronald Griesacker got out of prison so soon, say the investigators, lawyers and militiamen who worked to lock him up in the first place, some of whom call him "John Doe No. 3." After the Oklahoma City bombing, Griesacker blithely hopscotched among his anti-government buddies' fortified compounds in Montana, Missouri, Kansas and Texas, encouraging them to pick fights with the government and making sure they left paper trails. Griesacker may have been the decade's most-successful anti-terrorism government informant: His buddies were sent to prison for decades. In fact, what's really odd may be that Griesacker went to prison at all.

"He definitely, in my opinion, was an informant, because he had real good luck, and everybody he was with had real bad luck," says retired Shawnee County Sheriff's Sergeant J.D. Mauck.

Mauck is peeved because he believes Griesacker (and other anti-government Freemen) victimized many more central Kansans than he was punished for, but state and federal investigators waited until legal deadlines had nearly expired before allowing local police to help with the investigations. There were "tens of millions of dollars [in offenses] that died for the statute of limitations," Mauck says.

In the jittery months after Timothy McVeigh, Terry Nichols and others unknown built the Oklahoma City truck bomb at Geary State Fishing Lake, 80 miles southwest of St. Mary's ("Ryders of the Storm," June 14, 2001), Griesacker went to Jordan, Montana.

There, he hung out with Freemen who had proclaimed their community, Justus Township, a sovereign nation and who would later face down federal agents for 81 days. Back in Kansas, he and other Topekans -- all former Kansas prison guards or police officers -- took out ads in a rebel newspaper announcing the establishment of eighteen "Common Law Courts" in Kansas and bragging that they "attended a school of learning, taught by LeRoy M. Schweitzer, Dale Jacobi, Rodney O. Skurdal, Daniel E. Peterson and others of the infamous 'Montana Seven' (all sovereign freemen of irreproachable character)."

Eventually the Montana Freeman compound fell into U.S. government hands. Leader Schweitzer got 22 years in prison. Griesacker remained free but immediately turned up in Missouri Freeman circles, Mauck says. By June 1996, Missouri authorities had cracked down on Freemen in the eastern part of the state. They received sentences as long as seven years, but Griesacker remained at large.

By late 1996, Griesacker was living with the secessionist Republic of Texas Freemen, teaching the same check-writing scheme. He made side trips to visit other militia groups, hooking up with Brad Glover in Towanda, Kansas, whom two Missouri State Patrol troopers were tracking undercover. In May and July of 1997, federal agents defeated the Republic of Texas, and Glover was arrested on charges of attempting to take over Fort Hood, Texas (where he thought Chinese troops were training).

Griesacker disappeared, and members of the Republic of Texas went on trial for mail fraud.

By March 1998, defense lawyers for Republic of Texas leader Richard McLaren theorized that Griesacker had entrapped their client by promoting the bank-fraud scheme while working as a federal informant.

Dallas attorney Thomas Mills determined through phone records that Griesacker was in Oregon. He also discovered a federal warrant for Griesacker's arrest. He faxed the warrant to Carl Worden of the Southern Oregon Militia, who learned that his local police could not find the warrant listed in the national database cops use to check on anyone they find suspicious. Worden tells the Pitch that the feds must have had Griesacker on a leash: They'd been threatening him with arrest on the secret warrant if he didn't help bring down militia groups, but the feds didn't have to worry about some local cop busting him because the warrant wasn't visible in the national database.

Worden got busy. "We found out [Griesacker] was trying to set up one of our local boys here," he says. "I contacted the local sheriff and told him we had a federal fugitive and he needed to be picked up. I faxed the warrant to the sheriff, telling them to contact the federal authorities in Kansas."

Meanwhile, Mills had obtained a subpoena requiring Griesacker to come to Texas to testify. Federal prosecutors had no choice -- they promptly piled onto Griesacker. "The day after we got the subpoena issued, the grand jury indicted [Griesacker]," Mills tells the Pitch.

Griesacker proved worthless to Mills. "The evidence I have, beyond a shadow of a doubt, will clear all of the defendants," Griesacker told Mills on April Fools' Day 1998, according to the Dallas Morning News. But he refused to detail his activities at the Republic of Texas because U.S. District Judge A. Joe Fish would not grant him "sovereign judicial diplomatic immunity." McLaren was found guilty and sentenced to 12 years on fraud charges as well as more than 100 years on various violent felony charges, including kidnapping. Glover, too, was found guilty and sentenced to five years on weapons charges.

On November 4, 1998, the Associated Press reported that a Wichita federal court had found Griesacker guilty of enough felonies to lock him up for 280 years. Somehow, serving as his own attorney, he managed to get just 57 months.

One of his first stops in the federal prison system was the cushy medical camp in Springfield, Missouri. By October 11, 2001, he'd been transferred to Florence, Colorado, home of the nation's most heavily secured prison outside Guantínamo Bay, Cuba. He wrote the Pitch last September 9 from a Minnesota prison to explain the transfer: "Because of one word which I used 'TORT' and the guard stating that he heard me say 'TORCH' I am now being transferred to a higher custody prison. And just think, before this, I was camp eligible as they would say. Now ... I'm to be transferred to Florence, Colorado."

He signed the letter, "Arthur Alexander Augustus, Potentates Insolitar Mentis Ameraudur Totius Americanum Patriae," which translates roughly as political emperor of all American soil.

Responding to a question from the Pitch regarding his Freeman activities, Griesacker wrote, "As to your other alluring comments, in respect to my alleged involvement in advocating anything or any recognition such deserves at any point in time rests with those and history to whom conditions permit."

He didn't like prison much: "Furthermore, in regards to my so-called living conditions of which are surely to be desired by the most fashionable destitutes; I would have you know, they are the blight upon the senses of all Freedom loving people of all walks of life. And, as to my health, under these conditions are not amenable to ageing [sic] gracefully by any respectable standard of human just civility."

As of September 4, 2002, according to federal Bureau of Prisons officials, Griesacker was at Mirror Incorporated, a Wichita halfway house. He has not returned phone calls from the Pitch. He's been similarly silent with Ignatius Griesacker, the St. Mary's man who adopted him. "I haven't had contact with him for four years," Ignatius tells the Pitch. Ignatius had been away from St. Mary's back in the days when Ronald had been promoting the Freeman movement in Kansas, he says. "I didn't agree with that whole thing."

For the moment, Ronald Griesacker's probation officer won't let him be a Freeman. "Griesacker shall not participate in any anti-government or tax-protester activities or associate with any individuals who are known members of these groups or possess any literature supporting these groups during the term of supervision," says Brad Roux of the Kansas City, Kansas, office of the Bureau of Prisons.

But the Central Point, Oregon, rebel whom Worden says was being "set up" by Griesacker tells the Pitch that he's had numerous telephone discussions with Griesacker at the Wichita halfway houses he's been in since May 30. "He sounds like he's in very good spirits," says Robert Kelly, publisher of The American's Bulletin.

Although in 1995 Kelly published Griesacker's early declaration forming "common law" courts in Kansas, he thinks Griesacker isn't violating the rules of release by talking to him. "I'm not anti-government, and I'm not a tax protester," Kelly explains. He also disputes the notion that Griesacker is a federal informant or a criminal. "I've not seen any evidence anywhere that he has injured anybody." The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms declined to comment.

Ignatius Griesacker can't predict whether Ronald will return to St. Mary's, but Mauck expects the adopted prodigal son to hurry back to Ignatius as soon as he needs money.

Evidence released during the Oklahoma City bombing trials showed that Timothy McVeigh placed phone calls to a member of the Society of Saint Pius X in St. Mary's.

Terry Nichols once teamed up with a Kansas Freeman to file fraudulent paperwork, says Suzanne James of Topeka, who worked as a victims' advocate in the Shawnee County prosecutor's office when the Freemen were writing bad checks. McVeigh's lawyer often spoke of evidence that suggested federal agents knew about the bombing before it happened.

Such details feed speculation that Griesacker might also have known something about the bomb plot hatched in central Kansas.

Attorney Mills called him "John Doe No. 3" during McLaren's trial. He claims that a private investigator, John Culbertson, "has a picture of an individual in downtown Oklahoma City at the scene of the bombing that appears to be Griesacker."

Culbertson (who was recently appointed temporary administrator of the congressional office of convicted and expelled Representative James Trafficant of Ohio) tells the Pitch, "We got a picture at about 10 o'clock in the morning. He's there in a polo shirt and bulletproof vest." (An e-mailed copy of the photo is too blurry to be persuasive.)

Suzanne James suspects that Griesacker even informed the ATF about the bombing before it happened. Culbertson suspects the feds were nonetheless outwitted by McVeigh; James suspects they simply failed to take the threat seriously.

"I think Griesacker probably told his handler about it, and it was written off," she says.


So who was Griesacker working for when he and Scott Roeder were buddies? Good question.

As far as I can determine, we can ask him if we can find him. He's been on parole since 2002. The Illinois Child Support authorities have the following info on Griesacker here.

Name: Ronald A. Griesacker AKA Ronald Laycock
Date of birth: 06/14/1956
Race: Caucasian
Sex: Male
Height: 5'09"
Weight: 170 lbs
Hair color: Brown
Eye color: Blue
Amount owed in past-due child support: $94,499.
Last payment received: none.
Last known address:
614 4th Street, Apartment 7
Nicollet, MN 56074
Number of children: 5


I know a reporter who would dearly love to talk to Griesacker about, Wilson, Roeder, the missle silo and, oh yeah, the FBI. Matter of fact, so would I.

NOTE: In Mistaken Identity, Part 3, I'll discuss what Identity is, what the history of Identity is in abortion clinic violence and why they shouldn't be mistaken for being "pro-life."