Who are the most influential white supremacists in the U.S. over the past century? Here's an off-the-cuff "Worst 10" list (I reserve the right to change my mind), in more or less chronological order.
1. William Joseph Simmons resurrected the long-gone Ku Klux Klan for the 20th century, patterning it after fraternal organizations and taking advantage of anti-immigrant, anti-Semitic, and anti-Catholic sentiments--growing it to millions.
2. Gerald L. K. Smith was one of the most prominent hardcore white supremacists of the mid-20th century--and one of the best orators. Ironically, he started off as a lieutenant of Huey Long. He also built that big Jesus statue in Arkansas.
3. Robert B. Patterson essentially led the "genteel" opposition to desegregation in the South during the Civil Rights era as the leader of the White Citizens Council movement.
4. Wesley A. Swift was the person most responsible for the modern Christian Identity sect, a racist and anti-Semitic religious sect whose adherents were responsible for countless violent acts from the 1970s-2000s. Disciples included Richard Butler and William Potter Gale.
5. George Lincoln Rockwell didn't start the first neo-Nazi group in the U.S., but he created the first significant one, from which most modern neo-Nazi groups are directly or indirectly descended. He tried to articulate a version of Nazism for a North American audience.
6. Willis Carto was a shadowy figure who had his hand in everything for many decades, but was perhaps most important as a white supremacist publisher (through the Liberty Lobby and Noontide Press) and promoter of Holocaust denial.
7. David Duke was a neo-Nazi, then a Klansman, then a one-man show for decades, the person most of the U.S. public thought of in the late 20th century when they thought of white supremacy. His electoral runs brought him fame--but also a stint in federal prison.
8. John Tanton was a Michigan ophthalmologist and white supremacist who founded most of the major anti-immigrant groups in the U.S. active today--the so-called "Tanton Network." Though he remained behind the scenes, he was very influential in promoting American xenophobia.
9. Don Black started as a Klan member and David Duke disciple, and even tried to take over a Caribbean island, but really came into his own in the 1990s, bringing white supremacy to the World Wide Web with his website Stormfront.
10. James Mason was a pretty peripheral figure in the neo-Nazi world in the 1970s and 80s but experienced a late-life revival in the 2010s after young white supremacists discovered and promoted his calls for accelerationist violence.
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Let's see how antisemitic Twitter is doing right now. I know; I'll search on the recent uses of the term "Holohoax," a Holocaust denial expression meant, as you no doubt figured out, to characterize the Holocaust as a hoax.
Hmmm. Quite a references. Let's look at a few.
Here's a typical one, making essentially highly qualified claims ("soldiers") to assert falsehoods. Others found plenty of documentation. Note as well their explanation for the Holocaust denial laws that some countries have.
This post, from an hour ago, is similar, asserting things (like there were no gas chambers killing people) for which there is an incredible abundance of evidence.
Gather round, people, while this thread tells you of the George Santos of the mountains of West Virginia, a man named Joseph De Soto, recently elected to the WV state legislature, and who was just arrested for threatening to kill other members of that body.
This past year, De Soto--a recent arrival to West Virginia--ran for a seat in the state house. He beat the incumbent in the GOP primary. Unfortunately, not a single Democrat ran against him; his only opponent was from the tiny right-wing extremist Constitution Party. De Soto won.
De Soto boasted, though, a sterling resume--he was a "physician-scientist," biblical scholar, conservative writer, and former U.S. Army combat medic. He had three doctorates, including medicine, pharmacology, and "national security."
The sovereign citizen movement emerged in Wyoming in the 1980s. By the mid-1980s, sovereign citizens were printing their various notices and declarations in the classified sections of Wyoming newspapers.
Here's (part of) a 1985 declaration by sovereign citizen Murray Watson claiming that he has signed no contracts that would put him under the jurisdiction of admiralty law (a common sovcit belief is that a conspiracy replaced the common law with admiralty/maritime law).
A couple of months later, John Allemand Jr. published a similar document. Here's a segment:
This is a little thread about the benefits of phraseology searching when monitoring/conducting research on extremism, whether you are a scholar, journalist, activist or something else.
My example is from the sovereign citizen movement, which is peculiarly susceptible to this
methodology (as you'll see), but it is broadly applicable for many different types of extremism, though much less useful for movements, such as the boogaloo movement, that tend to communicate primarily in memes.
I'm going to start with something I found in an old newspaper. My original research question was basically, "When did sovereign citizens first start using the phrase 'threat, duress and coercion' in their documents or on other documents, such as when signing a driver's license?"
This is a thread that seems as if it is about one person, but there's a TWIST, and it's actually about another person, and about how the influential extremists are not always the ones you read about on the news or hear about on social media.
Ready?
Last night I thought about making a post about the first prominent white supremacist I met face to face. After some thinking, I realized it was probably Nord Davis, a Christian Identity adherent from North Carolina. I saw him at an event in Ohio in 1996 not long before his death.
Davis's greatest notoriety probably came after his death, as it was revealed that he'd had ties to the family of 1996 Atlanta Olympics bomber Eric Rudolph. Here's Nord in the early 1970s, when he was running for office on the far right American Party ticket.
I'm in procrastination mode today, so let's talk about sovereign citizen license plates, an always interesting subject. I've made hundreds of posts about sovcit license plates, so why not a few more?
Specifically, I want to talk about their origins and early use!
The sovereign citizen fixation with license plates pre-dates the movement itself (which began to cohere in the late 1970s). It starts with its parents: the tax protest movement and the Posse Comitatus. Anti-gov't extremists really did not like having to have (& pay for) plates.
Some simply wouldn't use them. Here is tax protest guru Vaughn Ellsworth arguing for this tactic in 1975.