The White Supremacist Movement
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The most significant branch of the radical white supremacist movement
in the 1980's and 1990's is Christian Identity. "Identity is based
on the premise that the Jews are literally Children of Satan--the seed
of Cain, that people of color are `pre-Adamic' mud people--God's failures
before perfecting Adam, and that white Christian Aryans are the `Lost
Sheep of the House of Israel'-- chosen people, and therefore America
is the biblical promised land," explains Lenny Zeskind, research
director of the Center for Democratic Renewal.
" Some Identity members collect weapons and ammunition in expectation
that the Biblical `End-Times' are near," says Zeskind who wrote
a monograph on Christian Identity for the Division of Church and Society
of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. "Identity
theology binds together a number of previously isolated groups...Important
sections of the Ku Klux Klan, the neo-Nazi movement, the Posse Comitatus,
the Aryan Nations, and other groups have adopted Identity theology," Zeskind
reports.
Identity is based primarily on an earlier religious concept called "British
Israelism." The group most responsible for spreading Christian Identity
in the 1980's was the Posse Comitatus, a loosely-knit survivalist movement
which grew out of the Christian Identity teachings of Col. William Potter
Gale in California. Survivalists believe the collapse of society is imminent,
and thus they collect weapons and conduct field exercises in armed self-defense
and reconnaissance. Some survivalists store large quantities of grains,
dried foods, canned goods, water and vitamins in anticipation of long-projected
economic or political collapse and racial rioting. Many have moved to
isolated rural areas. Not all survivalists are part of the white supremacist
movement, but many are.
The Posse Comitatus, Latin for "power of the county" but more
accurately transliterated as "to empower the citizenry," is
the legal concept used by sheriffs in Hollywood westerns to round up
a posse and chase the varmints. In modern legal terms it means the right
to deputize citizens to carry out law enforcement functions, and it also
is the basis of a federal law preventing the use of federal troops in
civilian law enforcement without the express consent of the President.
Members of the Posse Comitatus, however, promote an unsubstantiated belief
that the Constitution does not authorize any law enforcement powers above
the level of county sheriff, and that state and federal officials above
the county level are part of a gigantic conspiracy to deny average citizens
their rights.
Many Posse and Identity adherents believe Jews, Blacks, Communists,
homosexuals and race-traitors have seized control of the United States.
They refer to Washington, D.C. as the Zionist Occupational Government
(ZOG). They read the novel "The Turner Diaries" in which an
underground white army leads a revolution against ZOG.
In 1969 H. L. "Mike" Beach in Portland, Oregon began issuing "Sheriff's
Posse Comitatus" charters and handbooks. Soon Gale began issuing
his own charters and a handbook called the "Guide for Volunteer
Christian Posses." Early factionalism gave way to an informal political
and religious movement which began to grow. In the early 1970's a Posse
manifesto was issued in booklet form. In late 1974 a national Posse convention
was held in Wisconsin with 200-300 attending.
The most visible and active branch of the Posse for many years was in
Wisconsin. The press gave much attention to Wisconsin Posse leader James
Wickstrom, although his claims to hold some vague national leadership
post was flatly contradicted by the autonomous and anarchistic nature
of the Posse itself.
States where Posse activity was reported in the 1980's included: California,
Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana,
Nebraska, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Texas, Washington,
Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
The most violent Posse confrontation involved the mishandled attempt
to serve legal papers on Posse activist Gordon Kahl. Two federal agents
from the Justice Department's U.S. Marshals Service were killed, and
several persons wounded. Kahl fled underground and was later killed in
another mishandled attempt to flush him from a fortified bunker. Kahl
and other white supremacists killed or jailed by the government have
become martyrs to Posse adherents and other racists. After the Gordon
Kahl incident, many Posse and Christian Identity members decided to carry
out activities in secret or through front groups.
While the Posse was growing in the Midwest and west, members of Ku Klux
Klan and Nazi groups joined together for a deadly assault on an anti-Klan
rally in Greensboro, North Carolina on November 3, 1979. Five members
and supporters of the Communist Workers Party were killed in the shootout.
Following the Greensboro shootings and the death of Gordon Kahl, a number
of previously-antagonistic racist groups in America began to make contact
with each other, and began to establish informal means of communication
and information sharing. Christian Identity was the glue than held the
groups together.
Not all Klan groups accepted the new Identity-based coalition, but those
that did began to call themselves the Fifth Era Klan to demark what they
hoped would be the fifth period of growth by the Klan since its inception.
The Fifth Era Klan adherents sought to forge ties with other racist groups
across the nation. One concept hotly debated was the idea of a mass movement
of white supremacists to the pacific northwest where there were relatively
few minorities and a low population density. Racist groups began to stage
joint activities, sometimes built around survivalist encampments. As
this cooperation became more formalized, what emerged was, in effect,
a white racist alliance which shared a belief in Identity. One of the
leaders of the movement in the northwest was Identity Pastor Richard
Butler of the Church of Jesus Christ--Christian which operated out of
a compound called Aryan Nations in Hayden Lake, Idaho.
The members of the group variously called The Order, White American
Bastion, or The Silent Brotherhood, who were convicted in Seattle for
staging armed robberies and murdering Denver talk show host Alan Berg,
were predominantly adherents of Identity organized out of the national
meetings held at Butler's Aryan Nations. According to the Klanwatch
Intelligence Report of the Southern Poverty Law Center:
A look at the backgrounds of some of the 23 Order members prosecuted
in Seattle illustrates the cooperation between radicals that now permeates
the extremist right: Five had Klan ties, one had been a Nazi party
member, a half-dozen were Aryan Nations, one was a veteran tax protester,
four CSA's [Covenant, Sword and Arm of the Lord] five National Alliance
members....Many of the 23 were united by Identity...
" Aryan" or "White" as used by Identity ostensibly
refers to persons of Nordic, Anglo-Saxon or Germanic stock, or at the
very least, persons stemming from Northern or Middle European ancestors.
The Identity definition of "Aryan" is more closely related
to mythological or operatic reality rather than any scientific or anthropological
definition of Indo-European peoples. Aryan actually is a term used by
linguists to trace the common roots of the Indo-European languages.
Christian Identity borrows paranoid conspiratorial beliefs from reactionary
groups such as the John Birch Society with their claim that secret cabals
run most world governments under orders from wealthy elites such as the
Rockefeller family acting through groups such as the Trilateralist Commission,
the Bilderberger banking conference, the Council on Foreign Relations,
and officials of the Federal Reserve Bank.
From ultra-right Christian fundamentalists comes the idea of a secular
humanist conspiracy involving liberal elites such as radical academics,
teachers union leaders, journalists and network television programmers
and gay men and lesbians who pave the way for leftists, socialists and
communists. These are the core beliefs of persons such as Reed Irvine
of Accuracy in Academia and Accuracy in Media, and Phyllis Schlafly of
the Eagle Forum. Pat Robertson, leader of the Christian Coalition, recently
wrote a book attacking president Bush's New World Order and echoing many
paranoid conspiratorial charges of the reactionary and fascist right.
Robertson also throws in a discussion of sinister networks of Masonic
lodges and the shadowy Illuminati group. It is these reactionary forces
that made TV appearances during the Republican convention in 1992.
White supremacists add to the bizarre brew a list of racial enemies
such as Jews, Blacks, Latinos, Asians, Indians, indeed all non-Aryans.
The Posse Comitatus also sees as agents of the conspiracy all state and
national elected politicians, and all law enforcement officials above
level of county sheriff such as game wardens, Internal Revenue Service
agents, federal Marshals, and the FBI.
Christian Identity wraps all the conspiracy theories together and adds
the myth that white Christian Americans are God's Chosen People fighting
a religious war against satanic forces. Identity combines the worst aspects
of Hitlerian racial theories, the Spanish Inquisition, and the Crusades.
Persons who believe in Christian Identity generally:
· Support white power & Aryan supremacy;
· Believe in Black genetic inferiority;
· Possess romanticized notions of Aryan culture;
· Are virulently anti-Communist, anti-liberal and anti-modernist;
· Manifest a jingoistic patriotism a la "Rambo;"
· Mistrust government & law enforcement agencies;
· Fear Black power & Black pride;
· See any positive media coverage of non-Aryans as a Jewish-Communist
Plot;
· Resent Black job gains in the working class & professions;
· Think Black politicians are pawns of Jews;
· Believe Black activism is directed from Moscow or Tel Aviv;
· Practice armed survivalism as a defensive necessity.
The fascist right has targeted for recruitment members of tax protest
groups, farm and ranch organizations, former or current members of the
Ku Klux Klan and various Nazi groups, supporters of Lyndon LaRouche,
persons organizing against government repression or covert action, alternative
health care advocates, antiwar organizers, and persons concerned about
peace in the Middle East.
In the past the KKK and other racist and fascist groups in the U.S.
intertwined with the political and law enforcement power structure of
the communities in which they operated, especially in the rural South.
The new racist Identity movement, however, is openly hostile toward most
law enforcement officers because they are seen as collaborating with
the Zionist Occupational Government. Thus Identity's critique of government
misconduct is central to their ideology, and has resulted in repeated
armed conflicts with government agencies which in turn have used questionable
tactics to target this sector of the racist right.
Cooperation among racist groups was enhanced in the 1980's by the establishment
of several racist computerized bulletin board systems and the distribution
of a cable TV program "Race and Reason" hosted by California's
Tom Metzger, head of White Aryan Resistance. Here is an example:
EXCERPT FROM RACIST COMPUTER BULLETIN BOARD SYSTEM (BBS)
ARYAN NATIONS BBS--HAYDEN LAKE, IDAHO--Posted circa 1985
MESSAGE #2: CABLE TV/THE NEW HOPE
Cable TV--public access--and you
The passage of the "Cable Franchise Policy and Communications
Act of 1984" (Public Law 98-934) has insured that any Aryan patriot
in America who so desires may have local access to cable TV for the
airing of any program that he may care to produce or replay.
Equipment, facilities, and channels are available for use from the
local cable company, the only qualification being that one is a resident
or working within the viewing range of the cable company.
On Tuesday, Nov. 20, 1984, History was made for the movement. At
12:00 noon on channel 9, cable TV, the following was seen by some 69,000
subscribers to Qube Cable TV: interviews of--Glen Miller, Grand Dragon
of the North Carolina Ku Klux Klan; Virgil Griffen, hero of the Greensborough,
NC shoot-out; Thom Robb, Chaplain, Knights of the KKK; Pastor Robert
Miles of the Mountain Church--two hours of uninterrupted, uncensored
racialist christian programming.
There can be little doubt that more new people were reached, more
effectively, during the course of this two-hour broadcast than in the
combined total of all other efforts for the year. There are 850 public
access cable stations in the U.S. No other method, activity, or campaign
of any nature can match this avenue of propagation. None!
This being the case, it now becomes the duty of each and every Aryan
leader and member to determine if there is a public access station
in his area and, if so, to ask for time on that station for one of
the pre-recorded programs....
Already the blacks, mexicans, orientals and queers are claiming air
time. what possible excuse could be given by an Aryan nationalist for
not going "on the air" if there is a cable network in his
area? Too difficult, perhaps? Tell that to the blacks and mexicans
who are producing their own shows....
Hail his victory!
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