Main Menu
• Shortened Link: W23.link » CreativityAlliance.com
• Beat the Censors on Social Media with ᵂ23 ᴰᴼᵀ ᴸᴵᴺᴷ
• Free @Rev.JoelDufresne P.O.W. USA - Prison Martyr - Bogus Charges
• Free @JamesCostello P.O.W. UK - 5 Years for Anti-Immigration Stickers
Bitcoin/BTC
Bitcoin/BTC Address:
3GyxbqYH3Hg6dpxVvS6PkFZ5FGbX1FLZ5N

US Dollar Coin/USDC
US Dollar Coin/USDC Address:
0xd5fffA0E8e5285Ee011c2D0404FFE7C6b867033d
Don't be a Jew - Donate Today

SPLC & ADL Think Conservative Constitutional Supporter Groups Are Nazi

Started by Rev.Cambeul, Sun 16 Aug 2020

Previous topic - Next topic

Rev.Cambeul

We're talking here about orgs that are basically satellite groups run by the Australian Liberal Party, the UK Conservatives and the Republican Party. And even if they are not run by them, they are basically the more militant voter base for all. Meanwhile, we Creators and others like us like the Creator influenced National Alliance are the ones that do not believe that we can vote ourselves out of the hangman's noose. To combine CA and the NA slogans: White Revolution is the Only Solution - RaHoWa!

Buy NER Today: NA SELL NER FOR $35 from RUDY STANKO

The spread of 'accelerationism' and its white-supremacist violence is now a global threat

David Neiwert | Daily KOS (Communist America) | 13 August 2020

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/8/12/1968799/-The-spread-of-accelerationism-and-its-white-supremacist-violence-is-now-a-global-threat

https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2020/06/23/there-no-political-solution-accelerationism-white-power-movement


Creativity is better than any Neo-Con Zio-Crap listed

Of all the radical right's multiple permutations in the era of Donald Trump—Proud Boys, QAnon conspiracy theorists, "Patriot" militiamen, and "Boogaloo Bois" among them—the most worrisome by far is the spread of white-power "accelerationism": a belief system predicated on the idea that modern human civilization (and especially its multicultural features) is a blight, and that the only solution is to encourage its destruction through acts of terroristic violence. Its followers explicitly embrace violence as the only viable means for change, because they see politics as a waste of time.

That phenomenon—like QAnon—is now spreading globally. A new report from the Southern Poverty Law Center's Jason Wilson explores how a notorious "accelerationist" neo-Nazi group called The Base—which has made headlines in the U.S. for various acts of domestic terrorism—has found fresh recruits in both Europe and Australia, including connections to the killer responsible for the March 2019 mosque massacres in Christchurch, New Zealand.

Rinaldo Nazzaro, aka "Norman Spear," the founder and main organizer of The Base—previously exposed by Wilson as a New Jersey man who stewed in neo-Nazi theories about creating a white homeland in the Pacific Northwest, but now appears to operate in Russia—has apparently been spreading his toxic ideology abroad as well.

It appears that Nazzaro targeted existing white-nationalist groups overseas for recruitment. In Australia, the bulk of the recruits came from the ranks of men who were involved in existing far-right groups. One of these—the Lads Society, cofounded by a longtime anti-Muslim activist named Blair Cottrell and other key figures in the far-right scene—promotes a violent brand of white nationalism that inspired, among others, Christchurch killer Brenton Tarrant. The group once invited Tarrant to join them, but he declined; however, they remained a mutual admiration society, even after the massacres.

Wilson's report illustrates the mindset of the "accelerationists":

Tarrant had been a devoted online follower of United Patriots Front (Cottrell's anti-Muslim group), and Cottrell in particular. When Cottrell and Sewell livestreamed their ecstatic reaction to the election of Donald Trump in November 2016, Tarrant reportedly wrote a series of comments on the group's Facebook wall.

"Knocked it out of the park tonight Blair," he wrote. "Your retorts had me smiling, nodding, cheering and often laughing.

He added, "Never believed we would have a true leader of the nationalist movement in Australia, and especially not so early in the game".

Their private chats indicate members of the Base are gearing up for what they hope will be a civil war or a "race war": " approve of wht [sic] McVeigh did. Killing innocent children only makes the wound deeper and more real for all involved," wrote one online chat participant. "They don't deserve to be spared in guerilla [sic] attacks."
Admin Note: McVeigh had a slant-eyed girlfriend. McVeigh was a Constitutional Militia based activist offended by unconstitutional behaviour by the US government. Nothing to do with us, but we are the ones targeted? On the good side, CREATIVITY is spreading. Even if they don't join us, they are living us - Because CREATIVITY LIVES.

However, as Justin Ward observes, "the main purpose of The Base is to facilitate real-life meet-ups of 'action-oriented' white nationalists to build interpersonal ties as the basis for future organized armed struggle. The network holds regional 'activity contests' where members are encouraged to go out in the woods and practice survival skills or engage in arms training."

The Base first attracted notice in 2019 when Nazzaro purchased a plot of forested land in a remote corner of northeastern Washington state and began holding paramilitary training exercises. Shortly afterward, its first involvement in domestic terrorism was manifested when a member from New Jersey was charged in a series of synagogue vandalisms in Michigan and Wisconsin, having traveled hundreds of miles to strike his targets.

Accelerationists, as SPLC analyst Cassie Miller explains, reject "political solutions" as inadequate to dealing with the threat of what they call "white genocide"—the hysterically fallacious belief that "white culture" faces an existential threat from multiculturalism and a demographic tide of nonwhite people: "the accelerationist set sees modern society as irredeemable and believe it should be pushed to collapse so a fascist society built on ethnonationalism can take its place."

Base leader Rinaldo Nazarro, when explaining why he had chosen to devote himself to "system collapse" rather than mass-movement or electoral politics on a December 2017 podcast, likewise cited demographics: "As time goes on, our numbers continue to dwindle, the pressure keeps getting ramped up on whites cause that's not gonna end. ... Like, look, there's no turning back the clock. Our numbers are just not gonna increase from here." With a shrinking white political bloc, Nazarro and many others contend, why pursue electoral strategies? Among a growing segment of the white power movement, there is a pervasive sense that they are out of time and out of institutional or political remedies.

Violence culminating in genocide is its ultimate agenda, though it may seek to downplay its embrace of violence when first recruiting young followers. As Miller observes, however, "there is no moderate, non-violent version of white nationalism. The "optics debate" was never just a discussion of strategy, but an attempt to distract from the fact that everyone who embraces white nationalism also—transparently or not—necessarily accepts violence as a political tool."

The spread of this view globally will have consequences well beyond the United States—and stopping it will entail reforms in what kind of material social-media platforms continue to enable. As Jason Wilson observes:

The Base's success in drawing on members of existing local groups, such as the Lads Society, shows how groups seeking to export accelerationist ideology can exploit existing networks of young men who have already commenced down the path of radicalization.

They are also aided by their use of information and communication technologies, including encrypted messaging platforms, which allow them to build global networks, away (or so they think) from the prying eyes of law enforcement and antiracist activists.
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
Crypto Coin Details in Forum Profile

Noli Nothis Permittere Le Terere
The only way to prevent 1984 is 2323
Joining the Creativity Alliance is Free
https://creativityalliance.com/join


"In the beginning of a change, the patriot is a scarce man, brave, hated, and scorned.
When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a patriot."
Mark Twain.


Similar topics (5)

 
 
Church Links Holy Books W.R.L. Friends Holoco$t Links
 

Legal Notices
Due to a 2003 CE decision in the US 7th Circuit Court Of Appeals, the name “Church of the Creator” is the trademarked property of a Christian entity known as TE-TA-MA Truth Foundation-Family of URI®. Use of the name “Church of the Creator” in any context is historical, and is presented for educational purposes only. The Church of Creativity makes no attempt to assume or supersede the trademark. Trademark remains with the trademark holder. [More ...]
 
The Church of Creativity is a Professional, Non-Violent, Progressive Pro-White Religion. We promote White Civil Rights, White Self-Determination, and White Liberation via 100% legal activism. We do not promote, tolerate nor incite illegal activity. [More ...]



Creator Origins
Church of the Creator: Founded by Ben Klassen - Year Zero (1973CE)
Your Own Creator Forum: Continuously Online Since 25AC (1998CE)
Creativity Alliance & Church of Creativity: Founded 30AC (2003CE)
Links: The History of Creativity | The Creator Calendar Explained
» Save the White Race - Join the Church of Creativity «

23 Words
What is good for the White Race is of the Highest Virtue;
What is bad for the White Race is the Ultimate Sin.


Main Website   Forum RSS Feed   Send Mail   About Us
Copyright © 30 AC - AC (2003 CE - CE), Creativity Alliance. All Rights Reserved.
Back to the Top