and I'm going to let the
Usual Suspect respond to their crap(it's lengthy, and in full for the usual reason):
I received this email from an AP reporter in Montgomery this morning:
Mike: This is Bob Johnson at the Associated
Press in Montgomery. The Southern Poverty Law Center is at 11 a.m.
issuing their annual report on dangerous groups and militias. I wante to
see if maybe I could get some comments from you when it comes out.
Looking for someone who can give the other side for the SPLC.
Bob Johnson
Here is the resulting story.
Now I had difficulty finding the report at first and asked
Johnson to send it to me, He sent me a rough draft of his story. My
responses are interspersed throughout.
-----Original Message-----
From: Johnson, Bob bjohnson@ap.org
To: GeorgeMason1776 GeorgeMason1776@aol.com
Sent: Tue, Mar 5, 2013 12:40 pm
Subject: Emailing story: BC-US--Extremist Groups, 1st Ld-Writethru
Here’s what we already have on the wire about the SPLC
report. Please send me your comments and how you would like to be
referred to in the story.
Researchers report dramatic rise in ‘patriot’ groups after school shooting sparks gun debate
By BOB JOHNSON, Associated Press
Dateline: MONTGOMERY, Ala.
President Barack Obama's administration and the gun control
debate after the Connecticut school shooting have led to surging numbers
of anti-government “patriot” groups, according to a civil rights group
that tracks extremist groups.
The language used --
"anti-government 'patriot' groups -- is itself a lie. Only the wildest
of anarchists are "anti-government." The Constitutional militia
movement, of which I have been a leader for more than twenty years, is
not "anti-government." We are pro-government, of the sort that the
Founders would recognize -- small, of limited powers, reflecting the
sentiments of the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights
that merely secure and codify natural, inalienable and God-given rights.
In our view the present administration and its supporters inhabit a
fundamentally alien world view to that of the Founders and ourselves --
they believe that the people serve the government whereas we believe
that the government should serve the people. To the extent that the
present administration continues to exhibit appetites for our liberty,
property and lives we certainly oppose them, and organize with an eye to
confront them if forced to, but we are NOT "anti-government." What we
seek is not to coerce anyone to our point of view but merely to be left
alone. Since the growing tyrannical appetites of the Obama
administration (and others before it) as demonstrated by the so-called
"Obamacare" law and the current rush to disarm the citizenry are evident
for all to see, it is hardly an accident that people who they seek to
victimize would object and organize themselves to resist.
The second part of the lie is to characterize a
grab-bag of groups with contradictory aims and methods (even groups
that consider each other as philosophical enemies) -- into one so-called
movement. By conflating people and groups together as "extremists"
with an alleged common purpose, SPLC gets to exaggerate, for the
purposes of fund-raising, a threat which does not exist.
The Southern Poverty Law Center reported the rising numbers on Tuesday in its annual report on extremist groups.
Even a stopped clock is right
twice a day. For the reasons set out above, there certainly is a rise
in self-defense militias around the country, but the SPLC hasn't got a
single clue as to how deep and broad that movement is because no one
with any sense, after the experiences of the 1990s, is using the old
paradigm of publicly-announced militia formations. Today's groups are
small, quiet, made up of friends, relatives and neighbors on a local,
even neighborhood, basis, and thus are immune to federal snitches,
agents provocateur and even knowledge of the FBI or of SPLC. Actually,
SPLC knows this but since it does not fit with their fund-raising
strategy, they pretend an omniscience that simply does not exist.
The number of anti-government patriot groups,
one category tracked by the center, rose dramatically over the past four
years, from 149 groups in 2008 to 1,360 today, researchers reported.
That was up about 7 percent from the 1,274 active in 2011.
This is a wild under-estimation.
The election and re-election of the nation's
first black president and the rugged economy have fueled their growth,
said Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the SPLC. “The anger, angst,
frustration, fear surrounding the economy have very much poured fuel on
this fire,” Potok said.
This fits with the
collectivist sociology theories of SPLC and its intellectual brethren
but how does it explain the growth of black self-defense militias?
There is certainly concern that the present untenable government
spending and printing of money will collapse into social chaos, but
Obama being half-black has nothing to do with the growth of the armed
citizenry. This is one more example of how present-day so-called
progressives are reflexively obsessed themselves with race (and why they
feel it necessary to conflate true racist terrorist groups like the
Klan and NeoNazis with groups like ourselves who believe that the
Constitution extends to everyone regardless of race, creed, color or
religion). In their obsession with race, SPLC and others would put a
1930s Nazi gauleiter of Lower Swabia in the shade. It is their ultimate
weapon, when out-argued, to cry racism and point fingers.
On gun control, the debate following the
Newtown, Conn., mass murder of schoolchildren has led to “a kind of
white-hot rage unleashed on both the radical right and also within more
mainstream political circles,” he said.
"White-hot rage"? I don't see
it. The administration has declared its appetite for more of our
property and liberty. It is natural to oppose this grab but we cannot
afford "white-hot rage." We're lining up to flout their new laws with
carefully considered armed civil disobedience. If we were motivated
into a "white hot rage" professional liars like Potok could not walk the
streets of Montgomery in safety.
In the week following the Dec. 14 school
shooting, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said it conducted more
background checks for firearms sales and permits to carry than it has in
any other one-week period since 1998.
Yes, certainly. And what do
you conclude from this fact? Do the advocates of citizen disarmament
believe that we are buying all these weapons and billions of rounds of
ammunition merely to turn them in with the passage of the next law? We
are not.
Some critics believe the SPLC is too broad in
labeling hate and extremist groups, to the point of including legitimate
political organizations that oppose illegal immigration, gun control,
gay rights and other issues. The center's researchers say they use a
variety of methods to track anti-government groups and compile their
list from field reports, patriot publications, law enforcement sources
and news reports. Potok said only active groups are included. “We are
not just looking at one man and a computer,” he said.
The SPLC's symbiotic
relationship with the militarized federal police agencies is a matter of
record -- and it is a relationship which they profit from by numerous
so-called "hate group seminars" that propagandize their world view to
federal, state and local law enforcement. You may recall that SPLC
defended the ATF at the time of the "Good O' Boys Roundup" scandal, when
Alabama militia exposed their racist get-togethers which involved
disgusting conduct such as the issuance of "nigger hunting licenses" and
skits like one entitled "The Birth of the Black Race" which involved
the "magical" appearance of a black baby doll from inside a watermelon.
Disgusting stuff, but Morris Dee, in a story by Fox Butterfield in the
New York Times, alleged that the Gadsden Minutemen's videotape was a
forgery. It wasn't, as later proven by the FBI lab, but it WAS proof
that SPLC is a willing handmaiden to government racists when it suits
their agenda. Pretty ironic, huh?
The report states: “Generally, Patriot groups
define themselves as opposed to the 'New World Order,' engage in
groundless conspiracy theorizing, or advocate or adhere to extreme
anti-government doctrines.”
"Groundless conspiracy
theorizing" such as the Fast and Furious scandal, for example? Under
the SPLC definition of "extreme anti-government doctrines," the Founders
would have made their list.
The FBI defines military extremists as
anti-government groups often organized into paramilitary groups that
follow a military-style rank hierarchy and typically engage in
wilderness, survival, or other paramilitary training, according to a
September 2011 FBI report on domestic terrorism.
Yeah, well under that definition local search and rescue teams are "military extremists."
Along with the rise of extremist groups, Potok
said there have been several home-grown terrorist plots against
government buildings and leaders in recent months. He compared the
climate to time leading up to the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.
The propaganda of
collectivists like SPLC is certainly the same, as is the government's
militarized police actions, brought to fever pitch by the last three
administrations and the so-called "war on terror." The only difference
this time is that there will be no more free Wacos. SPLC and the
administration know this and they are counting on SPLC's lying narrative
to prepare the battlefield of a civil war they are apparently seeking
in national and world opinion. The SPLC thus remains one of the most
faithful lapdogs of federal tyranny.
The report cites several cases, including one
centered on a Georgia Army base involving a group known as F.E.A.R.
(Forever Enduring Always Ready). Federal prosecutors maintain that
F.E.A.R. was led by active-duty soldiers at Ft. Stewart who also plotted
bomb attacks in Savannah and aimed to poison apple crops in Washington
state.
So far I haven't seen an updated story with my reaction in it.
1 comment:
Thanks for that.
He's some writer.
Over the past few days I've been thinking about Tom Sharp's brace of South African novels, with their cast of a bunch of murderingly incompetent apartheid era cops, riding around in a "saracen" APC.
The more I think about them, the more I think of the here and now.
It was the early 1980s when I last read them (around 1981 or 82), and a bunch of trigger happy cops "safeguarding western civilization" from the supposed threats of communist terrorists, subversion and racial integration, seemed surreal exaggeration.
Transposed to the present day of Britain and the US, they're spot on, and rather than exaggerated, they're actually a bit mild.
Kommandant van Heerdan's imagined subversive plots are pretty simillar to what the SP lie centre seems to come up with
they even had an old English speaking lady marked as a subversive for donating a copy of Anna Sewell's little girl's horsey book "Black Beauty" to the town library.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Riotous-Assembly-Tom-Sharpe/dp/0099435454/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?ie
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