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Rev.Cambeul

2024-03-06, 11:33:45
Creator Audiobooks with built-in eReader
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CreatorGöth

2024-01-30, 22:01:22
RaHoWa!!! Good to be back! 🤚🏻

Rev.Cambeul

2023-11-12, 17:57:45

Rev.Cambeul

2023-07-29, 02:08:13
Edit: WE BEAT 'EM! F.T.V!

Rev.Cambeul

2023-07-24, 01:07:37
White Rights Right Now!
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Another Win!
She was Rehired

Rev.Cambeul

2023-07-06, 11:47:20
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Rev.Cambeul

2023-03-15, 11:53:21

Rev.Cambeul

2023-03-01, 14:21:52
Audio Book
Nature's
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NER Audio Pt 1
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CA-TV

CreatorGöth

2023-02-21, 15:17:30
Are you reading NER? You should be. It's Founding Day. ;D RaHoWa!!! Hail Ben Klassen!!!

Rev.Cambeul

2023-02-21, 15:01:39

CreatorGöth

2023-02-20, 18:48:05
75 flyers out this month. This is the last week of February. Are you getting your flyers out? R!

Rev.Cambeul

2023-02-13, 14:38:06
Put a flyer on or near a town sign. Take a pic & upload it to our Gallery.

Spread the Word of R!

CreatorGöth

2023-02-11, 05:32:36
25 flyers a week is all it takes, my fellow Prospects. Show your dedication and march forth with pride. RaHoWa!!!

Rev.Cambeul

2023-01-28, 23:22:16

Art

2022-08-19, 22:07:58
Call out the Jewish menace daily.

Rev.Cambeul

2022-03-10, 09:28:45
March 10 RaHoWa Day
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 :rahowa

Rev.Cambeul

2022-02-27, 01:49:13
The Church of Creativity thanks Sister Kerry's generous donation to PM Joe. RaHoWa!

FelixRex

2022-02-21, 06:44:59
Happy Holy Days! RaHoWa!

Rev.Cambeul

2022-02-21, 01:06:40
Feb 21 Founding Day
1st Publication of NER
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Rev.Cambeul

2022-02-20, 09:59:17
Feb 20 Klassen Day
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Rev.Cambeul

2022-02-07, 05:53:00
The Church of Creativity thanks Sister Kerry's generous donation to PM Joe. RaHoWa!

FelixRex

2022-01-20, 03:38:36
Happy Ray Day!

Rev.Cambeul

2022-01-18, 02:34:01
PM Joe just called and wishes everyone a

Happy
James Earl Ray Day

:rahowa

FelixRex

2022-01-16, 15:26:24
Happy to help. :ok

Rev.Cambeul

2022-01-09, 05:14:12
P.M. Joe thanks @Br.FelixRex for his latest donation. R! :ok

Rev.Cambeul

2022-01-01, 07:28:40
1/1
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Today is Purity Day

Rev.Cambeul

2021-12-31, 13:55:50
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Rev.Cambeul

2021-12-30, 06:25:49
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Rev.Cambeul

2021-12-29, 09:37:30
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Rev.Cambeul

2021-12-28, 03:24:54
28/12
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Today is Unity Day

FelixRex

2021-12-27, 21:12:59
We need more nigger free holidays! Happy Festum Album >:D

Rev.Cambeul

2021-12-27, 02:21:45
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Rev.Cambeul

2021-12-26, 04:10:00
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Rev.Cambeul

2021-10-16, 02:25:32
Notice from PM Joe: The Zionist Swine are now rejecting mail with "Rahowa" included in it. Advises to use alt-:
R! 18! 23/23 31/23 W23

Rev.Cambeul

2021-10-07, 12:33:10
Check out our new Shortened Web LinkIt also works for all @creativityalliance.com email addresses.

N567

2021-09-28, 15:02:24
I agree with you Rev Cambeul. Fags must be killed using pneumatic cattle stunners and thrown into the trash compactors of garbage trucks before being thrown into the furnaces of waste-to-electricity power plants to be used as fuel for electric power generation and the production of ash fertilizer and fly ash concrete strengthener. RaHoWa! White Power!

N567

2021-09-28, 15:00:09
It is great news to know that high testosterone badass Rev Joe Esposito is being released in 2023. He is a great asset to the White Power Movement! RaHoWa! White Power!

Rev.Cambeul

2021-09-07, 09:10:12
Kiddy fuckers are the worst kind of Faggotry. Gassing is too good for them. They need to be crucified.

Rev.Cambeul

2021-07-31, 07:34:02

FelixRex

2021-07-30, 06:37:18
R! Rev. Joe free in 23!

Rev.Cambeul

2021-07-29, 13:18:16
P.M. Joe sends @Br.FelixRex his thanks for his latest donation. RaHoWa!

N567

2021-07-22, 14:20:08
Rev. Cambeul: in response to your comment about Zac Wylde opposing the idea that White Pride is equal to Black Pride. I believe that he is a fucking fag that should be gassed.

Continues @ Link

2019-06-30 Indiana: 20 Years Since Ben Smith WCOTC Shootings

Started by Rev.Cambeul, Wed 03 Jul 2019

Previous topic - Next topic

Rev.Cambeul

I didn't see anything in the article anywhere that said that Ben Smith had quit the WCOTC, nor that he knew that his law degree would have been for nothing, as the state was going to refuse allow Smith to obtain a law license.

Also, at the time and for years afterwards, there was intense debate within law enforcement agencies and within the WCOTC and wider Creator community itself whether or not Matt Hale had prior knowledge of the intent to commit the shootings and ordered that Smith quit the WCOTC prior to beginning his shooting spree. Whatever the truth is, the FBI came to the conclusion that Hale was dangerous and had to be taken out - And that is why he's serving 40 years on an unrelated conviction that should have resulted in a sentence of no more than five years.

By the same token, after the shootings, many Creators quit and turned their backs on Hale, because of the way Hale appeared pleased - gleeful even that he could use Smith's actions and resulting death as a tool for self-promotion. A psychopath is what many Creators called Hale then - and still do today. Especially considering that it was after all, Hale's own rejection by the state for a law licence that set fellow law student, Ben Smith on his path of murder self-destruction - that at least they appear to acknowledge in the following article.

Today we Creators say what Hale never did: The Ben Smith shootings were a tragedy for all involved.




'No Hate Speech. No Hate Crimes. Not in Our Town. Not Anywhere.'

IU graduate student Won-Joon Yoon was murdered on July 4, 1999, by a white supremacist on a three-day shooting spree targeting black, Asian and Jewish people across Illinois and Indiana.

Abby Malala | Indiana Daily Student | 30 June 2019

https://www.idsnews.com/article/2019/06/no-hate-speech-no-hate-crimes-not-in-our-town-not-anywhere

A memorial stone sits on the front lawn of Bloomington's Korean United Methodist Church on East Third Street, passed by people who don't know who it's memorializing.

The man who died on July 4, 1999 was named Won-Joon Yoon. He was a member of the church. He was 26.

What the memorial doesn't say is Yoon's death was the culmination of a three-day long shooting spree across Illinois and Indiana committed by a known white supremacist who had been spreading hate in Bloomington for over a year.

It doesn't say Yoon was murdered in broad daylight on the church's front lawn.

***
The Fourth of July fell on a Sunday in 1999.

Yoon had just been accepted to IU's doctoral economics program after completing bachelor's and master's degrees at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Illinois.

Yoon wanted to return home to South Korea for the summer before he began his career at IU but moved to Bloomington to familiarize himself with his new college town. His father insisted it was a good idea, according to an IDS article. He had only been living in Bloomington for about a month and a half when the Fourth of July rolled around.

As Yoon waited outside the Korean United Methodist Church with fellow congregants on Sunday morning, 21-year-old Benjamin Nathaniel "August" Smith fired four shots into the crowd from his car parked at the front of the church. Two shots hit Yoon in the lower back.

Fellow IU student Pyung Ho Kim was next to Yoon when the shooting occurred. Kim said in an interview with the Indiana Daily Student the next day he thought the sounds of gunfire were firecrackers. It wasn't until a bleeding Yoon fell on Kim that anyone had realized what had happened.

The shooting occurred at 10:54 a.m. By 11:47 a.m., Yoon was dead.

The Bloomington Police Department reported an unidentified man followed Smith's light blue 1994 Ford Taurus all the way to Nashville, Indiana, noting the license plate number and bringing the information back to officers in Bloomington.

Later that day, Smith stole a van from a gas station in Ina, Illinois, after abandoning his own vehicle. He was pursued in a police chase down a two-lane highway in southern Illinois. Ultimately Smith committed suicide 37 miles away in Salem, Illinois. He was pronounced dead at about 10:40 p.m. Sunday.

***
Though he hadn't yet started classes at IU, Yoon helped count ballots for the IU Board of Trustees election. He also had a passion for airplanes and a cat named SoHo.

Yoon had flown to the United States from his hometown of Seoul, South Korea to begin his bachelor's degree in aviation management at SIU, according to an Indiana Daily Student report. He went on to complete a master's in economics before moving to Bloomington.

Flowers were piled around a framed photo of Yoon at a July 6 press conference on the lawn of the Korean United Methodist Church. Mourners added flowers as Yoon's father Shin Ho Yoon expressed his grief over the loss of his only son.

"With his death, gone are the dreams, hopes and happiness my family has had with my son," he said, according to an IDS report. "He was gunned down by one insane, full of racial hatred, young American man."

Despite losing his son, Yoon's father said he still saw Bloomington and IU as a safe, welcoming place after witnessing the community's outpouring of support for Won-Joon.

In a letter to the IDS published on July 8, 1999, an ex-girlfriend of Yoon's remembered his devotion to his religion and his kindness.

"The Won-Joon I knew was a sensitive, caring and religiously devout individual who enjoyed and appreciated America's diversity while maintaining a quiet pride about his Korean heritage," Abigail Baker wrote.

Baker also called for Americans to take action against the gun violence happening in America at the time. Just months earlier a shooting at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado had claimed the lives of 15 people, including both shooters.

"Wake up, America!" Baker wrote. "These tragedies might seem distant now, but next time, it could happen to someone you know — or even to you."

Yoon was cremated. The urn carrying his ashes was at a memorial service in his honor at the Musical Arts Center on the evening of July 12. The service was called a "Community Gather to Heal and Unite" and was organized by Bloomington United, a group of prominent members of the community who had come together to combat hate.

Over 3,000 people went to the memorial service. Several founding members of Bloomington United still live and work in Bloomington and remember the aftermath of Yoon's death.

Rabbi Sue Silberberg, director of the Helene G. Simon Hillel Center, recalled the MAC overflowing with supporters, many spilling out into the lobby and the front lawn.

The shooting attracted national attention. President Bill Clinton sent U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno and one of his assistants, Benjamin Johnson, to speak at the memorial.

Members of Bloomington United, university representatives and city representatives including then-Mayor John Fernandez also spoke.

Melanie Castillo-Cullather, director of IU's Asian Culture Center, cried as she gave an emotional speech at the memorial.

"While they are learning to find their classrooms, they are also learning this folklore of fear," she said, according to an IDS article. "How safe are we when there are so many hate groups out there? We can't continue to live in fear or behind locked doors."

A candlelight march from the MAC to the Korean United Methodist Church ended the memorial.

Beverly Calender-Anderson worked for United Way at the time of Yoon's murder and now works as the director of Bloomington's Community and Family Resources Department. She said Yoon's memorial was one of the moments that made her fall in love with the Bloomington community.

"It was probably one of the most moving events I've ever been a part of in Bloomington," Calender-Anderson said. "I think if we had just let that moment pass without any kind of significant showing, I would not have felt the same about this community."

Bloomington United was formed in 1998 in response to Smith's leafleting around town. It was a rag-tag group of concerned citizens, said Doug Bauder, founding member and director of IU's LGBTQ Culture Center.

Silberberg said the organization placed an advertisement in the Herald-Times asking for donations for signs to be made.They raised enough money to make about 10,000.

"You could not go down a street in Bloomington where you did not see the signs," Silberberg said.

"No Hate Speech," the black and white placards read. "No Hate Crimes. Not in Our Town. Not Anywhere."

Bloomington United organized a rally on Nov. 10, 1998 on the Monroe County Courthouse square called "A Rally Against Hate." Smith attended the rally as the sole counter-protester, holding a sign that read "No hate speech means no free speech."

Barbara McKinney, a member of Bloomington United, remembered seeing Smith at the rally. She wanted to talk to him but decided not to because her young son was with her.

One member of Bloomington United who did speak with Smith was Gwen Jones. She said she had never experienced "in-your-face" racism before as a black woman.

"So, knowing he was this radically racist person, I wanted to talk to him and see if he would say something to hurt me," Jones said in a 2018 interview with Bloom Magazine. "I wanted to see what this would feel like. But I didn't get that at all. He just seemed like a very troubled young man. I felt like he needed help."

On the morning of July 4 1999, Bloomington United was preparing to march in a celebratory parade downtown. Silberberg had gotten a call from then-Mayor Fernandez informing her of Yoon's shooting on the other side of town.

Several members of Bloomington United said they were made aware they could be potential targets with Smith still on the loose. Surrounded by police wearing bulletproof vests underneath plain clothes, they decided to march anyway.

"We didn't want to let him terrorize us," Silberberg said.

Calender-Anderson was in Chicago on the morning of the Fourth of July but returned to Bloomington later in the day. She recalled seeing snipers on the roofs of buildings near the football stadium where a fireworks display was to be set off that night. Bauder also remembered snipers at the tops of buildings in the downtown area during the Fourth of July parade.

Bauder said Mayor Fernandez had announced Yoon's murder to the crowd gathered at that night's fireworks display.

"This sadness grew over the crowd," Bauder said. "To think that this could happen on the Fourth of July as a young man was entering church."

***
Smith began distributing white supremacist literature around Bloomington and the IU campus in the summer of 1998, with initial reports being made to the IU Police Department in late May.

IU's Dean of Students at the time, Richard McKaig, said he was unsure if there was a breach of IU's code of student ethics.

"As I understand it, the conversation was indeed that he had posted the fliers, and he didn't intend to violate any University regulations," McKaig said in a 1999 IDS article. "He wasn't out to individually harass a person or violate University posting regulations."

The fliers being distributed included strong racist anti-black and anti-immigrant rhetoric, as well as criticism of American liberalism and calls for white people to form separate, all-white societies.

"The Voice of White America has been silenced," one flier read.

"Freedom and tolerance are the bywords of Liberalism, and are supposed to be what Democracy stands for," another flier said. "But a great deal of White Americans' problems are caused by the fact that they have tolerated the decadent freedoms instated by the Left-wing."

Students and citizens found fliers on car windshields on campus and around town, as well as at Wells Library.

One sticker found at Wells Library in particular drew public concern. It referenced an organization called World Church of the Creator, a neo-Nazi hate group, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Smith was a member of WCOTC, which was founded in East Peoria, Illinois, by Matt Hale. Hale appointed himself "Pontifex Maximus" of his church, which is Latin for "supreme religious leader."

Hale regarded Smith as a sort of protégé. Smith had testified for Hale as Hale pursued an Illinois law license. Hale was denied his license on June 30, 1999. Two days later, Smith began his shooting spree.


Bloomington authorities were reluctant to call Yoon's murder a hate crime, according to an IDS article, despite the murder being linked to the shootings Smith committed in the Chicago area in the days prior.

Police said in a 1999 IDS article the shootings began on Friday, July 2 in West Rogers Park, Illinois, where Smith wounded six Orthodox Jewish men walking home from services.

Smith then drove to Skokie, Illinois, where he shot and killed retired Northwestern men's basketball coach Ricky Byrdsong as he walked down the street with two of his children, ages 8 and 10 at the time.

Byrdsong was the team's first black head coach.

Smith then shot at two Asian American men in the nearby neighborhood of Northbrook but did not wound either of them.

On Saturday, July 3, Smith shot at three black men in Springfield, Illinois, wounding one of them. Four hours later in Decatur, Illinois, a black minister was shot twice, once in the shoulder and once in the hip.

Later that Saturday evening, six Asian American men were shot at near the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where Smith had previously attended school. One of the men was injured.

Finally, Smith's shooting spree came to an end on the morning of Sunday, July 4, when he shot Yoon on the front lawn of his church.

***
In a documentary by filmmaker Beverly Peterson called "Invisible Revolution," Smith is featured driving the light blue Ford Taurus he used in his shooting spree. As he throws pamphlets onto Bloomington residents' front lawns from his driver side window, he calls himself an "Aryan Santa Claus."

Back at his apartment at Touchdown Terrace near Memorial Stadium, Smith shows off a letter from WCOTC naming him "Creator of the Year." WCOTC would eventually be renamed as a religion called "Creativity."

As Smith is being interviewed, a glimpse of a tattoo on his chest is visible. The tattoo reads "Sabbath Breaker."

"We have one hell of a fight on our hands to preserve the existence of our White Race, as Hitler found out some 50 years ago," the letter reads. It ends with the phrase "RAHOWA," an abbreviation of "racial holy war."

"If they violate our constitutional rights and say we can't put out our literature, we have no choice but to resort to acts of violence and really to plunge this country into a terrorist war they've never seen before," Smith said in the next scene.

The footage of Smith featured in "Invisible Revolution" was filmed just two weeks before he began his shooting spree.

Richard McKaig said Smith had initially been accepted to IU straight out of high school in 1996 but instead went to Illinois.

When Smith was placed on probation at Illinois for domestic violence toward his girlfriend and possession of marijuana and related paraphernalia, he decided to leave.

Despite indicating in his transfer application why he had been placed on probation at his former school, Smith's transfer was approved by IU in 1998.

"Admissions doesn't screen values," McKaig said in an IDS article published July 12, 1999. "A lot of people questioned that from the University, but there's not a lot we can do."

Both the City of Bloomington and IU asked Smith to stop leafleting. However, because Smith was never found to have been targeting individual homes or cars, the most he could be charged with was littering.

In "Invisible Revolution," members of Smith's hometown of Wilmette, Illinois discuss the racist pamphlets he had distributed there.

"I don't believe that there's going to be a solution to the problem of intolerance and hatred through law enforcement," said Chief George Carpenter of the Wilmette Police Department.

Wesley Baumann, then-principal of New Trier High School where Smith had once attended school, also expressed doubt as to how the community could combat hate.

"I worry about the expectations placed upon schools," he said.

The IDS published a letter to the editor from Smith on June 11, 1998. Smith was now referring to himself as August Smith, reportedly because the name Benjamin sounded too Jewish.

"It is true that the fliers were racially-oriented, but to label them racist, bigoted or prejudiced demonstrates bias," Smith wrote.

He also criticized the presence of organizations at IU such as the Black Student Union and the Latino Student Union.

"These institutions provide a social center where minorities can come together to discuss the issues and concerns of their people," Smith wrote. "But where do white people go to discuss their issues and concerns? There is no White Student Union established to help white students organize and react to the problems our people face. This is why the White Nationalist Party was established."

***
Shortly after the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, which resulted in the death of a counter-protester, members of Bloomington United decided to take a more active role in the community once again.

McKinney now works as the director of Bloomington's Human Rights Commission. She said even today, Bloomington struggles to talk about race.

"When I meet white people and I tell them what I do, they say 'How do you keep busy in Bloomington? How many human rights issues are there?'" McKinney said. "And when I meet people of color and I tell them what I do, they say 'How can you do that with a staff of two? There must be a huge number of issues.'"

Silberberg said people need to remain vigilant in responding to instances of hate and discrimination within their community.

"We can't get complacent," she said. "I think many of us got complacent and thought we conquered it, and we haven't. It's worse than ever now."

Bauder said he isn't sure if Bloomington has become more accepting in the 20 years since Yoon's death.

"I want to say yes," Bauder said.

He said current issues like the alleged white supremacist vendors at the Bloomington Farmer's Market worry him.

"There were some pretty nasty things said there, including from people of color who don't feel welcome at the market," Bauder said. "There are people who don't feel safe and don't feel heard in this community."

Years ago there were annual memorial services in honor of Yoon, but they have stopped in recent years. Bauder said he tries to lay flowers on the church lawn every Fourth of July.

The grass at the Korean United Methodist Church slightly conceals Yoon's small memorial marker. Underneath Yoon's name and the dates of his birth and his death, flanked by two crosses, there is a brief inscription.

It's the last two lines of Psalm 23. Yoon's favorite Bible verse.

"Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever."
Admin Edit:  Superstitious claptrap.
Reverend Cailen Cambeul, P.M.E.
Church Administrator, Creativity Alliance
Church of Creativity South Australia
Box 7051, West Lakes, SA, Australia, 5021

Email: Admin@creativityalliance.com
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