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Messages - RaspStarb

#41
QuoteWilson's tilt toward nature in the age-old nature/nurture debate may have put him on the map, but it also made plenty of enemies. Fellow Harvard biologists Stephen Jay Gould and Richard Lewontin denounced sociobiology, saying it provided a genetic justification for racism and Nazi ideology. Wilson's classes were picketed. In one famous incident, demonstrators at a scientific meeting stormed the stage where he was speaking and dumped a pitcher of water over his head, chanting, "Wilson, you're all wet!"

Gould (deceased) and Lewontin are/were two of the most virulent, anti-White jews in liberal academia.  They are always brought in to discredit a White Man's scientific findings on race, genetics, biology and psychology.  For more on these jews, see David Duke's "My Awakening" Chapter 18 (and earlier in Chapter 11).  To wit:

"As far as Blacks and Whites are concerned, egalitarianism still dominates. Richard Lewontin, Leon Kamin and Stephen Jay Gould, are its three self-acknowledged Marxist Jews and the leading academic exponents of egalitarianism. In spite of an avalanche of fresh scientific data proving the vital role of genes in producing individual and group differences, racial egalitarianism is still the holy writ of anthropology and human psychology as characterized by the popular media. The writings of Lewontin, Kamin, Gould, Rose, and other egalitarians frequently appear in the pages of magazines such as the Smithsonian, Natural History, Nature, Discover, Time, Newsweek, and other wide-circulation publications. Television programs often interview them as "authorities" on the subject of race - and seldom are their opponents allowed to challenge them. Most of the leading egalitarian spokesmen are self-described Marxists, a slight detail seldom mentioned in the media. Imagine if they were self-proclaimed Nazis; I suspect the reaction to them would be very different."
#42
White Supremacist at Peoria Univ. Punished for Action

Jet (Nigger magazine), p. 36
Mar. 5, 1990

Matt Hale, 18, a self-proclaimed White supremacist who believes minorities are biologically inferior to Whites and should be segregated, was recently placed on disciplinary probation at Bradley University in Peoria, Ill., for distributing fliers on campus announcing formation of a White Supremacist party.

#43
Judge orders Hale's group to pay up

Chicago Sun-Times
May 24, 2005
By Natasha Korecki

A federal judge ruled that white supremacist Matt Hale's former hate group has to pay nearly half-a-million dollars in attorneys fees in a trademark infringement lawsuit.

U.S. District Judge Samuel Der-Yeghiayan said Monday Hale's group is liable for more than $450,000 plus interest in attorney's fees after losing the lawsuit brought by the Oregon-based TE-TA-MA Foundation in 2000.

It is the same lawsuit that first embroiled U.S. District Judge Joan Humphrey Lefkow with Hale's former World Church of the Creator, now named the Creativity Movement. The foundation had trademarked the "Church of the Creator" name and went to court to stop Hale's group from using it.

Lefkow ruled in Hale's favor but was reversed by a higher court and ordered to issue fines against Hale for every day his group didn't comply. Lefkow later became a target when Hale solicited a government informant to kill her. Hale was convicted of murder solicitation last year and last month was sentenced to 40 years in prison. He's appealing his conviction while being held in a Colorado maximum security prison.

'Beyond the pale'

The issue of attorneys fees also made its way to a federal appeals court, which found Hale's group liable because of accusations that his members left threatening phone messages for opposing attorneys as the case was litigated.

"By any reasonable measure, the World Church's actions were egregious and beyond the pale of acceptable litigation conduct," Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals judges wrote.

Hale said in court records that imposing fines would be a "travesty."
#44
Hale loyalist turns on him at trial

Chicago Sun-Times
April 14, 2004
By Natasha Korecki

The witness finally came clean after the White Man's Bible was slammed before him on the stand.

Yes, he followed many of the racist doctrines in this book. And yes, he even blamed Sept. 11 on the Jews.

But this wasn't white supremacist Matt Hale's testimony during the second day of his trial Tuesday.

It was government witness Jon Fox, a former Hale confidant whose extremist opinions were exposed before a racially diverse jury as defense attorneys tried to discredit key pieces of the prosecution's case.

Fox and federal informant Tony Evola, who could testify today, are crucial to proving charges that Hale solicited the murder of federal Judge Joan Humphrey Lefkow.

Fox testified Tuesday that he was with Hale when he refused to be served with a court order asking Hale to stop using the phrase World Church of the Creator on the group's Web site and elsewhere. An Oregon-based church had trademarked the name, which was the subject of a court case in which Lefkow ruled against Hale.

"He shouted out to me he wanted them dead, the judge, the attorneys. ... He wanted the church burned down around [the pastor's] head," said Fox, who had a closely shaven head and a long, bushy beard. "He just straight up asked me if I or anyone in my organization could do that. I told him no."

Fox also testified that he witnessed Hale write an e-mail that Fox feared would incite members to riot. But defense attorney Thomas Durkin countered that Hale was quoting Ben Klassen, who authored the racist teachings in the White Man's Bible.

Durkin accused Fox of being an unreliable witness motivated by a personal grudge.

Both Fox and an earlier government witness, James Burnett, admitted they had lied to federal agents during the investigation, either to protect Hale or out of fear of charges against themselves. Fox also publicly attested to his leader's innocence in front of television cameras just after Hale's arrest in January 2003.

Durkin said Fox later became Hale's chief accuser because he wanted to take Hale's lead position as Pontifex Maximus in the group. Fox acknowledged Tuesday that he did want to start a new group with a new name but denied he wanted to oust Hale.

Durkin also said Fox had a personal vendetta against Hale, holding him responsible for Fox's young daughter becoming pregnant by another group member. Fox insisted he didn't blame Hale.

Durkin, who on Monday filed an emergency order trying to dismiss Fox as an incompetent witness, also said Fox could have memory problems due to manic depressive disorder. Fox said he doesn't have memory problems.

Burnett, the other witness against Hale, talked about the inner workings of Hale's group and testified Monday that Hale celebrated a 1999 shooting spree at a public meeting of Hale followers. He also testified that Hale called Lefkow a "traitor" and said she was "married to a Jew."

But Durkin got Burnett to note the group's small-scale following. The "world" church headquarters is in a room in the house of Hale's father and most public meetings only draw a handful of people, Burnett said. As one of Hale's closest followers, Burnett's tasks included vacuuming.
#45
Minority View: Montana congregation dwindles for racist World Church of the Creator

The Billings Gazette (Billings, Montana)
March 28, 2004
By Allison Farrell

These days, "Carl" spends a lot of time reading paperbacks in the public library of a gritty Montana town tucked up close to the Canadian border.

But it wasn't long ago the lanky 49-year-old spent his time reading "The White Man's Bible," "The Little White Book" and other racist publications.

An incurable drifter, Carl bounced in and out of prisons across the Northwest until he found a home with the World Church of the Creator several years ago, a white supremacist group that until recently had a toehold in Montana.

With the group's national leader, Matt Hale, sitting in a Chicago jail; the recent death of group member Fred Poloson of Plains; and the defection of both Dan Hassett of Missoula and Carl, the group has dwindled to two.

It seems one of the remaining two men, Slim Deardorff of Superior, isn't holding up so well. The 73-year-old grandfather, who lives alone in a trailer several miles up a dirt road outside town, says he has an "easier time falling down than standing up" these days.

His hands are weak and shake with effort, and he has a hard time following the train of his own thought. He barely eats but drinks gallons of homemade beer. He keeps track of time by writing the daily temperature on a yellowing calendar hanging on the wall.

"They're just a bunch of has-beens and wannabes," Carl said of church members in a recent interview. His name has been changed to protect his identity.

"One day I just asked, 'What am I doing?' " Carl said. "There was no integrity. There was no sense to it."

So Carl, who was living on Deardorff's property in an old travel trailer without electricity or plumbing, hitched his home to the back of his truck and hauled out.

"I drove off and never came back," he said.

But before he left, Carl used his key to the group's storage shed in Superior and took all of their remaining publications - about $41,000 worth of books written by the group's founder - and sold them to the Montana Human Rights Network for $300. The network monitors the radical right and other hate groups.

Carl said he wanted to hamstring the group's fund-raising ability. The books, which sell for $10 apiece, were the group's major source of income.

Carl also turned over boxes and boxes of the church's internal documents and e-mails that were stored in the shed. Page after page details the group's strained alliances, infighting and petty bickering.

The documents record Deardorff's brief contact with both the National Alliance and the Ku Klux Klan, and they highlight Hale's ego. The vast majority of the documents, however, paint a picture of paranoia and organizational chaos.

Montana creators

Carl found his way into the World Church of the Creator two years before Montana "creators" split from Hale, the group's "Pontifex Maximus." Hale, a legitimate-looking spokesman with a law degree, maintained the group's headquarters in his home state of Illinois.

Carl said newspaper articles announcing the group's annual rendezvous at Deardorff's place in 1999 enticed him to reconnect with members he met years ago while working at a cedar mill in southern Idaho.

"Some of the ideas did interest me," Carl said. "It answered questions I had."

The movement, which believes that Jews control the government and that minorities are subhuman, explained away a lot of Carl's angst. It explained why he - a self-described "poor, oppressed and picked on" man - could never get ahead in the world.

Carl never graduated from high school and has a long rap sheet that details years of drug convictions and property crimes. He was last arrested in Oregon in 1995 for possession of methamphetamine.

He's been married three times and had two daughters with a woman who later died of a heroin overdose. He said the seeds of his racist views were planted while growing up on his grandparents' wheat farm in an eastern Washington town of 300.

"Everyone always had the attitude that blacks are this or that and made fun of them," Carl said. "The Posse Comitatus used to ride in our (hometown) parade." (According to the Anti-Defamation League, the Sheriff's Posse Comitatus was an anti-government group that served as a precursor to the Montana Freeman and the Christian identity movement.)

"I just didn't want nothing to do with the blacks," Carl said. "I guess I thought they were ignorant."

Carl fell deeper into the white supremacy movement when he moved onto Deardorff's property in 2002. He bided his time there while collecting disability pay for a work-related injury.

In his year and a half at Deardorff's, Carl chopped wood for the old man and did other odd jobs around the junk-strewn place. And while Deardorff wasn't doing any work around his propane-powered house, he was driving a wedge between the Montana creators and Hale.

The split

The Montana creators voted to impeach Hale in spring 2002, Hassett said in a recent phone interview. Hale, he said, was a "megalomaniac" who was issuing death threats to members who challenged his authority. Hale harassed members and treated women horribly, he said.

"At the time we were impeaching him, he sent me a death threat and spread false rumors about me on the Internet," Hassett said.

As documented in the hundreds of e-mails Carl turned over, while Hale was being ousted by the Montana creators, Deardorff contacted the National Alliance and asked their leader to suggest a replacement. Hale found out about the treachery and kicked Deardorff out. Hale kept his own faction of creators in Illinois.

At the same time, Hale was fighting with Hassett over $8,700 and a vast store of books he handed over to Hassett for safekeeping.

In an e-mail, Hassett told Hale that he turned the money into gold and silver bars and put them in Deardorff's cabin in Superior for safekeeping. But the cabin was destroyed by fire in 2002, and some of the bars were destroyed along with it, Hassett wrote to Hale.

Most of the money was recovered, Hassett recently said. But, he added, Hale had no claim to it because he had been impeached.

Hale was furious and spent the early months of 2002 sniping back and forth with Hassett via e-mail, demanding "absolute obedience and loyalty." Hale later kicked Hassett out of the group.

No one knows for sure what happened to the money, but Deardorff said Carl dug up and stole all the silver and gold buried on his land before he left. Carl denies the charge.

Mineral County Sheriff Anita Parkin said Deardorff filed charges against someone else in June 2003 for stealing "gold and silver bars and a pistol," but never filed any charges against Carl. Carl moved off Deardorff's property at the end of 2003.

"We was going to use the money to rebuild the church," Deardorff said, "We've been trying to rebuild."

After the Montana creators' split from Hale, they appointed Dane Hall of California to lead the handful of members left in their splinter group. The group has been losing ground ever since.
 
 
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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)
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