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L.A. TIMES REFUTES WEIRD HAROLD COVINGTON'S LIES ON P.M. KLASSEN
Newsgroups: alt.politics.nationalism.white, alt.politics.white-power, alt.revisionism, triangle.politics, alt.nswpp
From: devr...@nospam.net (Eric DeVries)
Date: 1998/07/07
Subject: L.A. Times Refutes Covington's Lies on Klassen
L.A. Times Refutes Covington's Lies on Klassen
The excerpts in this article were taken from an article which
appeared in the Sunday Los Angeles Times magazine on December
12, 1993. The article was called "Marketing Hate", by Sarah
Henry, and its main topic was the short-lived attempt by one
Rick McCarty, to take Ben
Klassen's "Church of the Creator" and aggressively market it.
It did contain some very interesting background information
on Klassen which completely contradicts Covington's insane
portrayal of the man. I had read every issue of Covington's
slander sheet "Resistance" up to the time this article was
published, so I am very familiar with Covington's claims.
Although I mever believed all, or even many, of his charges -
who could? - I thought Klassen must be guilty of something.
This article convinced me Covington is a completely
unreliable liar who knows nothing about the people he
defames.
For example, the source of Klassen's money is revealed,
something Covington never knew. Covington always claimed that
Klassen stole his money, or was set up by Jewry as a front.
In this fable, Klassen was given millions of dollars by Jewry
to make a phony "racist" organization they controlled. The
insanity of that claim is clearly revealed here.
Covington also never said that Klassen was married and had a
family. I don't know if Covington even knew that or not, but
it's a lot easier to slander someone as a "homosexual" if you
never mention to people that the "homosexual" is married and
has a child. While I'm not naive enough to believe that
proves Klassen never did what Covington accuses him of, it
certainly makes it far less likely. Would a man really start
drugging and raping teen age boys at the age of 70, after 40
years of marriage? I doubt it, especially when there has been
no critical examination of these claims, only their endless
repetition by the proven liar Covington. Besides, Harold
himself was the number two man to the proven Jew and
homosexual, Frank Collin. Did Harold really know nothing
about his fuhrer's sexual tastes, as he claims? How do we
know that Covington wasn't participating in his fuhrer's
activities himself?
Read the relevant pieces of the article below and judge for
yourself if Covington's fables are true. The complete text of
the article can be found at the Times website at http://www.latimes.com. Search the archives for 1993 in the
magazine section for the phrase "Church of the Creator" and
you'll find the article. It will cost you $1.50 to get the
article, but you can read the whole thing for yourself from a
publicly available source. Covington's charges are always
attributed to anonymous others whose existence can't even be
shown, let alone that they actually know what they are
supposedly talking about.
Compare what Klassen did with his life to what the creep
Covington has accomplished in his. Although I never liked
Klassen's "church", or was a follower of his, I must say that
Klassen is 1000 times more deserving of respect than
Covington ever will be. Much of Covington's hate towards
Klassen is motivated by his venomous envy, especially for
Klassen's wealth. The same spite motivates Covington's hate
for Dr. William Pierce and the National Alliance. Covington
hates anyone who has been more successful than he is - and
it's pretty easy to be more successful than Covington.
More information about Weird Harold Covington can be found here.
[Begin Times article excerpt]
"TO LEARN ABOUT THE ROOTS OF THE CHURCH OF THE CREATOR, ONE
HAS to travel to western North Carolina, to the tiny rural
town of Otto, just shy of the Georgia border. It's a pretty
place, dotted with wildflowers
and surrounded by rolling hills. The community, too small to
be incorporated as a city, consists of a couple of gas
stations, a few craft shops, a home-style restaurant, post
office, flea market and country music hall.
For more than a decade, it was also the home of Ben Klassen,
founder and driving force behind the Church of the Creator.
Klassen, who first registered the COTC in 1973 in Lighthouse
Point, Fla., moved to Otto permanently in 1982. There, on his
22-acre property, he built a house of worship, an oddly
shaped three-story church, complete with the COTC's
white-power insignia. He also built a small warehouse, for
stockpiling the group's extensive array of publications, and
a little-used school for gifted (white) boys.
According to townsfolk, Klassen was intelligent,
philosophical and quiet, a polite man who kept to himself. He
lived with his wife and daughter in a large but simple
A-frame home overlooking his church, in a secluded
sub-development whose entrance bears the sign: PRIVATE ROAD,
PROPERTY OWNERS ONLY, NO TRESPASSING.
But if Klassen wasn't active in Otto, his ideas were well
known around town. "I got along with Ben just fine. Now, I
sure didn't get along with his beliefs, but I figured he had
a right to them," says J. J. Ayers, a Klassen neighbor just
back from Sunday service at the local Baptist church. "He'd
get all stirred up about the n- - - -rs and the Jews--he
hated them. And he made that pretty clear," adds the
79-year-old farmer. The community left him to his own
devices. As one longtime resident of this dry Bible Belt
county explained: "Our pastor told us just to sit still and
not do anything and let God take care of it."
Ben Klassen was born in Ukraine to German-speaking Mennonite
parents. His family, described in his books as "early victims
of Jewish Communism," lived briefly in Mexico and then moved
to Canada, where he earned a degree in electrical engineering
and a bachelor of arts. In 1945, Klassen settled in the
United States and became a citizen three years later. He had
a varied career: He was a farmer, a schoolteacher, a nickel
miner, an engineer, a realtor and a Republican state
assemblyman in Florida for a short time. Klassen was also the
inventor of one of the first electric can openers and, in
later life, an accomplished oil painter. (Speculation over
where Klassen's money was made--he admitted pouring a small
fortune into the COTC--is divided between the can opener and
real estate.) But Klassen's greatest achievement, he
believed, was creating a religion for the white race, a group
he dubbed "Nature's Finest."
Disillusioned by the ultraconservative John Birch Society, to
which he belonged during the 1960s, and fed up with party
politics after working on the 1968 presidential campaign of
George Wallace's American Independent Party, Klassen
developed his own ideology. In 1938, when he was 20, he had
borrowed "Mein Kampf" from the library. "The book . . . was
to influence my life more than any other," he wrote later. It
took another 30 years, but it was at this young age that "the
vague outlines" for his "full-fledged racial religion for the
White Volk" began to take shape. That religion would become
Creativity: a creed that maintains that one's race is one's
religion.
"It is hard to tell at this point in history whether the n- -
- -rs, or the Mexicans, or the Cubans, or the Haitians are
the biggest threat to the White Race in America," wrote
Klassen in a July, 1990, issue of Racial Loyalty. "The point
is they all are, as are the . . . other mud races who are
starving in their own countries and want to get on the backs
of the White Man's generous subsidy."
Klassen was not, by most accounts, a charismatic leader. In
public appearances, he favored a bolo tie with the COTC's
emblem and a Hitler-style mustache. But he was a
prolific writer: During his 20 years as head of the COTC, he
pumped out racist propaganda at a prodigious rate--more than
15 books, including the organization's three sacred texts:
"The White Man's Bible," "Nature's Eternal Religion" and
"Salubrious Living," a guide to healthy habits for white
warriors that he co-authored. Klassen also wrote many of the
diatribes in Racial Loyalty, signing off with "For a Whiter
and Brighter World, Creatively Yours." Though Klassen didn't
know it at the time, his writings would later position the
COTC as a front-runner in the new world order of racism. Some
of his books are considered classics in today's white-power
movement, and Racial Loyalty is regarded as "good" hate
literature both in the United States and abroad, where such
publications are hard to come by; in Germany and Canada, for
example, it is illegal. The paper has features like "Cupid's
Corner," a matchmaking service for finding the
right--white--mate: "White Men and Women, be fruitful and
multiply! This planet is all ours!"
Although Klassen claimed that his creation was a religion, he
had mixed success convincing government officials of that
notion. In 1982, when he built his church in Otto, the
organization was granted tax exemption "as a bona fide
nonprofit religious organization" from the North Carolina
Department of Revenue--a "fact" Klassen cited repeatedly.
What Klassen failed to make public, however, was that the
state's approval was contingent on a federal government
ruling, and the IRS has no record of an exemption."
[Text regarding Klassen's tax exemption fight deleted]
"Along with the COTC's problems, Klassen faced personal
difficulties in 1992. His wife of many decades died after a
long battle with cancer. In July, he sold most of his
compound, including the church and school, to a former leader
of the American Nazi Party. Although the Otto headquarters
had never been a hive of activity, he firmly believed he had
"succeeded in spreading . . . our creed and program to most
of the racially conscious groups all over the world and our
creed is now well rooted," as he wrote upon his retirement.
During this past summer, the 75-year-old Klassen began work
on his final project. He had registered a part of his
remaining land for a burial plot and was seen clearing it. He
went into town to arrange for his gravestone, and on his
property he burned shredded documents and took other files to
a landfill. On Aug. 7, Klassen quietly committed suicide. His
daughter, who had been visiting her father, discovered that
he had taken an overdose of sleeping pills. A suicide
note--not made public--referred to a chapter in "The White
Man's Bible." In the book, Klassen wrote: "Suicide (is) not
dishonorable. Like the ancient Romans we believe that under
certain circumstances suicide is an honorable way to die,
rather than live on in shame, humiliation or captivity."
Speculation surrounding his suicide has swelled in recent
months. Some say Klassen feared a lawsuit because of the wave
of violent crimes by COTC members. Others say he was
despondent over his wife's death. Still others contend that
it was a simple matter of his life's work being done. Klassen
would no doubt be pleased that his meticulous planning has
resulted in an impressive memorial. On a fall day in Otto,
his former property--a little shabby from neglect--is ringed
by the reds, burnt oranges and golden hues that mark the
changing of the seasons. Tucked between the church and
Klassen's home is a thin strip of grass--freshly mowed--that
leads to his grave. A large, gray tombstone bears the Church
of the Creator's insignia, and beneath two carved roses
bracketing Klassen's name, and the years 1918-1993, is the
inscription: HE GAVE THE WHITE PEOPLE OF THE WORLD A POWERFUL
RACIAL RELIGION OF THEIR OWN."
[End Times article excerpt]
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