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echo: mens_issues
to: All
from: Jay_stutz{at}yahoo.Com
date: 2005-02-20 21:28:00
subject: Re: Plasterin` Neo-Nazi Fiends Comin` Fo` Yo Mama!

- wrote:
> http://www.nationalvanguard.org/story.php?id=4642
>
>
> Plasterin' Neo-Nazi Fiends Comin' Fo' Yo Mama!
> Posted on: 2005-02-20
>                                                  [ Printer friendly ]
>
>  LA TIMES throws in all the buzzwords.
>
> by H. Millard
>
>
>
> HERE'S THE FIRST paragraph in a recent Los Angeles Times article
> entitled "Neo-Nazis Aim to Upgrade PR" written by Times Staff Writer
> Stephanie Simon: "White supremacist groups around the country are
> moving aggressively to recruit new members by promoting their
violent,
> racist ideologies on billboards, in radio commercials and in leaflets
> tossed on suburban driveways."
>
> That wording is goofy. Who would try to recruit new members by
> promoting "violent, racist ideologies on billboards, in radio
> commercials and in leaflets tossed on suburban driveways"? Probably
> wouldn't get too many new members that way. Maybe what Ms. Simon
meant
> was that some pro-white groups are starting to understand that their
> views aren't something to be hidden away in dark attics and that they
> have the right to advertise their ideas, philosophies, religious
views
> and worldviews on billboards, in radio commercials and in leaflets
> tossed on suburban driveways and that their views should be presented
> in the marketplace of ideas as with all other ideas so that everyone
> can make informed decisions about which ideas make sense. Yes, that's
> probably it. That's probably what Ms. Simon meant. She wants people
to
> be free to express their ideas so that others can decide for
> themselves about these ideas.
>
> Well, on the other hand, maybe that's not what Ms. Simon meant.
> Anyway, I read on to see if I could learn more. I suddenly became
> alarmed. One fiendishly sneaky group -- the National Alliance --
which
> appears, from their Web site, to be as close to the terms Neo-Nazi
and
> White supremacist as the term Republican is to Communist has
> apparently done the unthinkable thing of "plastering nearly every
> commuter train car" in St. Louis with a placard that declares... oh
> no... declares... cover the eyes of your young children...
declares...
> I can't stand to look.... declares.... are you ready... declares...
> here it comes: "The Future belongs to us!" Huh? Is that what Ms.
Simon
> means by a violent racist message? That can't be right. And what
about
> that "plastering"? It turns out that what really happened was that
the
> group bought ads on the trains just like any other advertisers and
the
> train company put up the placards.
>
> Geez. Maybe it's just me, or maybe I've seen too many movies, but
from
> my reading of the article I had conjured up a mental Hollywood style
> caricature of maniacal goose stepping brown shirted tattooed guys
> storming the trains at gunpoint and whipping out large wallpaper
> brushes and buckets full of wallpaper paste and then running up and
> down the aisles plastering the whole train inside and out and all the
> people riding it, with placards saying "Kill all the Jews and
Blacks."
> Those vile plastering Neo-Nazi, white supremacist, haters! Never mind
> that the conjured up picture was wrong. Hey, don't fret about
details.
> This is about creating a negative image. Neo-Nazi, white supremacist,
> White Nationalist, White anti-genocidist, conservative, free speech
> advocates, any white person with some iota of genetic or racial
> consciousness, what's the diff? We can't let them communicate with
> others. Why, free speech is un-American.
>
> When you strip the Times article of its nonsense and the usual smear
> words and innuendoes, you realize that there's not much meat in the
> piece. The group in St. Louis just bought advertising space and put
up
> a short hook type message designed to make readers curious enough to
> call the telephone number listed. Big deal. The Republicans and
> Democrats, carpet stores, hospitals, real estate agents and all sorts
> of businesses and various groups do this sort of thing all the time.
> It's called advertising.
>
> Well maybe I missed something. The article goes on to describe more
> evil that these fiends did: They distributed flyers on driveways! Oh
> No! What evil and despicable people. Lock all the doors.
>
> Hey, wait a minute, don't various companies, including the Los
Angeles
> Times, also do this? But, I'm just being silly. Surely it wasn't the
> act of throwing the flyers on driveways that was the problem, but the
> message. The message must have really been vile. Probably said stuff
> like "Kill all non-whites." Those flyer distributing placard
> plastering Neo-Nazi, white supremacist, haters!
>
> Actually, the flyers just said: "Love your race." Oh, how horrible.
> Such hate. Three words: "Love," "your"
"race." Of course, you can see
> the hate dripping from those three words? No? Well, then you must be
> one of those haters. You fiend. I bet you're out there planning on
> burning down black churches if any have been rebuilt after they were
> all burned down a few years ago by Neo-Nazi, white supremacist,
> haters. You do remember that story, right? You might even have read
> about it in the Times.
>
> Here's another gem from the Times article: "Civil-rights advocates
> [not named by the Times] call this new emphasis on legitimacy
> insidious, [Insidious, I say!] because it may lure people [lure
> people!] into neo-Nazi circles before they fully understand what
> they're being sold." Awww crap. This sure sounds like a regurgitation
> of the old low I.Q.rant about watching out for hippies who might try
> to slip marijuana into your pockets when you're not looking. Why, if
> you're not careful you'll be a pothead living a life of dissolution
in
> the gutters of America.
>
> I also learned from the article that these Neo-Nazi, white
> supremacist, placard plastering haters are sneakily starting to wear
> conservative suits and take part in various civic affairs in their
> communities, just as if they're, gulp, citizens. Those fiends! Don't
> they know they're not supposed to wear conservative suits and that
> they're supposed to sneak around in the dark and not take part in the
> public life of this nation that their taxes help support? They're
> probably also trying to fool people by not breaking laws. Outrageous!
> Don't be fooled by these law abiding people wearing conservative
suits
> who spread messages that aren't hateful -- they're trying to lure you
> in.
>
> Ms. Simon is apparently not fooled. She seems to have gotten much of
> her information from "watchdog groups" and "hate-group
monitors," and
> she writes: "But perhaps an even greater fear is that the new public
> relations strategy [of pro-white groups] will let neo-Nazis recast
> themselves as just another voice on the political spectrum -- even
> when that voice may be advocating genocide."
>
> Ms. Simon doesn't bother to tell readers where she got that stuff
> about "advocating genocide." Ho hum. I checked some of the most
likely
> Websites and I found articles about stopping genocide, not advocating
> it. Oh, those darn details again. Furthermore, many of these groups
> are just another voice on the political spectrum. Just as with all
> other groups they have a right to believe as they want and to convey
> those beliefs to others. And, they don't have to slink around in dark
> alleys. They deserve the same protections of our laws that are
> afforded to all other non-violent groups.
>
> Remember not to let your guard down, dear friends. Be careful, there
> are insidious people out there wearing conservative suits. They may
> come up to you and tell you things such as the fact that crime
> statistics show that whites are more likely to be the victims of
> violent crime by blacks than blacks are likely to be the victims of
> violent crime by whites, and other hateful things.
>
> If any of these law abiding conservative suit wearing people try to
> lure you with facts or ideas that seem to make sense, you just tell
> them that you don't want to hear facts or ideas that haven't been
> given the seal of approval by those who don't like aware white
people.
> If they still don't get it, just tell them that you find facts and
new
> ideas to be as hateful as the belief that the earth is round.
>
>
>
> _________________________________
>
>
> All three of hard-to-pigeonhole H. Millard's books are now listed on
> Amazon.com. They're also available at quality brick and mortar stores
> or can be ordered by them for you.
>
> 1. OURSELVES ALONE & HOMELESS JACK'S RELIGION (subtitled: messages of
> ennui and meaning in post-american america)
>
> 2. ROAMING THE WASTELANDS (H. Millard's sacred cow 's )
>
> 3. THE OUTSIDER (H. Millard's underground classic story of
alienation)
>
> 2005 H. Millard
>
>
> Source: Author
>
Good article. One looks aghast at the continuing feminization of
America. Oprah, Katy Couric, Senators Diane Feinstein and Barbara
Boxer, last but not least Hillary. Giving women the vote was a
tremendous blow to rational civilization.

Jay
>
>
>
>
> 2005 NationalVanguard.org and the National Alliance.



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