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douglas9

(4,358 posts)
Thu Apr 17, 2014, 05:06 AM Apr 2014

Veterans and White Supremacy

EVANSTON, Ill. — WHEN Frazier Glenn Miller shot and killed three people in Overland Park, Kan., on Sunday, he did so as a soldier of the white power movement: a groundswell that united Klansmen, neo-Nazis and other fringe elements after the Vietnam War, crested with the bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building in 1995, and remains a diminished but potent threat today.

Mr. Miller, the 73-year-old man charged in the killings, had been outspoken about his hatred of Jews, blacks, Communists and immigrants, but it would be a mistake to dismiss him as a crazed outlier. The shootings were consistent with his three decades of participation in organized hate groups. His violence was framed by a clear worldview.
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Related in Opinion
Room for Debate: Is the Threat From Hate Groups Overlooked?AUG. 12, 2012

You can’t predict whether any one person will commit violence, but it would be hard to think of someone more befitting of law enforcement scrutiny than Mr. Miller (who also goes by the name Frazier Glenn Cross). I’ve been studying the white radical right since 2006. In my review of tens of thousands of pages of once classified federal records, as well as newly available archives of Klan and neo-Nazi publications, Mr. Miller appears as a central figure of the white power movement.

The number of Vietnam veterans in that movement was small — a tiny proportion of those who served — but Vietnam veterans forged the first links between Klansmen and Nazis since World War II. They were central in leading Klan and neo-Nazi groups past the anti-civil rights backlash of the 1960s and toward paramilitary violence. The white power movement they forged had strongholds not only in the South, but also in the Pacific Northwest, Colorado, California and Pennsylvania. Its members carried weapons like those they had used in Vietnam, and used boot-camp rhetoric to frame their pursuit of domestic enemies. They condoned violence against innocent people and, eventually, the state itself.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/16/opinion/veterans-and-white-supremacy.html?_r=0

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Veterans and White Supremacy (Original Post) douglas9 Apr 2014 OP
"Is the Threat From Hate Groups Overlooked?" Prophet 451 Apr 2014 #1
Douglas9 and like minded souls DashOneBravo Apr 2014 #2

Prophet 451

(9,796 posts)
1. "Is the Threat From Hate Groups Overlooked?"
Thu Apr 17, 2014, 05:43 AM
Apr 2014

Easy answer: Yes. Remember that report about right-wing terrorism that came out a few years back and had the right up in arms that anyone would dare think there might be right-wing terrorists? Miller is the kind of hatemonger it was talking about.

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