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I said I'd share extremist literature from time to time but it's been a while since I have. But today I was getting shoulder pain from being hunched over on a project, so I took a break to scan some pages & relax my shoulder. Thus I present to you the book "America Under Siege."
America Under Siege was a 1994 book promoting militia conspiracy theories at the dawn of the militia movement. I got my copy at a gun show in Ohio in early 1995. The book went through three printings in 1994 & various people have scanned the whole text & sell it on Amazon today.
The book purportedly is by "M. W. Jefferson" but was really written by Robert W. Pelton of Tennessee, who wrote other similarly breathless books. It provides "evidence" of UN troops in America, black helicopters, concentration camps, and the like.
These sample pages give you an idea of its general tone. Note the photos are from M.O.M. and the Patriot Report (more on them later). Some of the incidents were made up out of whole cloth, while others were exaggerated from a grain of truth. For example, the book claims that
there were 500 German "UN troops" being trained in El Paso, Texas. Well, kinda. For *decades*, German air defense troops have been rotated in and out of Fort Bliss to learn how to use US air defense missiles. It's no secret; they are part of the community. In fact, the children
of the troops went to American schools, including one of my closest friends in high school! In fact, the first girl I ever kissed was the daughter of a German soldier. Die Liebe wächst mit der Entfernung.
The back pages list additional "sources of patriot information." These include the newsletter of the Militia of Montana (MOM, as it was affectionately called), the first militia group, and the Patriot Report, a conspiracy newsletter produced by Christian Identity & anti-gov't
extremist George Eaton (Timothy McVeigh was a fan). Another source is The Jubilee, an anti-gov't magazine (w/connections to Christian Identity) and The Spotlight, the anti-Semitic conspiracy-laden newspaper (McVeigh again a fan) whose successor today is the American Free Press.
Publications like these, along with publications like "America Under Siege," VHS tapes from MOM and Mark Koernke etc., and right-wing shortwave radio programs were how ideas of the militia movement spread in 1993-1995.
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