This is a thread about a Ku Klux Klan group that got what was coming to them when they messed with the wrong people in North Carolina in 1958.
If you'd like to know more, read on.
The story starts with James "Catfish" Cole, a Klan leader in North & South Carolina in the 1950s/1960s. Cole usually tried to terrorize Black Americans, but in the late 1950s he expanded his hate to Robeson County, where the local population was divided between whites, Blacks &
Native Americans, primarily Lumbee Indians. In early 1958, Cole and his fellow Klansman staged two separate cross-burning incidents to intimidate local Native Americans. Then Cole made a mistake, deciding to up the ante by holding a public Klan rally near Maxton, N.C.
The thing about public Ku Klux Klan rallies is that, well, they are public. As news spread of the upcoming anti-Indian Klan rally, local Native Americans got angry--and began buying guns.
[note racist language in below headline; this was typical of a lot of the coverage]
Despite local opposition and warnings, Cole was determined to have his Klan rally.
However, Cole's Klansmen did bring their own guns, setting the stage for a possible bloody encounter.
Cole did get nervous and demanded police protection.
Well, Cole and his Klansmen showed up. And the Native Americans of Robeson County showed up in force; estimates ranged from between several hundred people and a thousand. They meant business, firing hundreds of shots--mostly up into the air, to scare the Klansmen, who certainly
were scared. They shot the single light at the rally, plunging the area into darkness, and then stormed the field where the rally was to take place. Some Klansmen fled, as did their supporters who had come out to see them, while others huddled together around a car until the
state police showed up to bail them out of their self-created jam.
The anti-Klan counterprotesters even seized Klan flags and regalia left behind by the fleeing white supremacists.
A couple of people were wounded by shotgun pellets, but none too seriously. One of those wounded was a local reporter.
One of the leaders of the anti-Klan opposition was Simeon Oxendine (on the right, below), a Native American, VFW commander and son of the mayor of Maxton. He said, "I told the boys to take it easy. Slap 'em around a little, if you have to, but don't hurt 'em."
In the aftermath, Cole--the Klan leader--claimed he was discriminated against. But injury was about to be added to insult for Cole, as the county sheriff announced he was going to call for an indictment against Cole for inciting a riot.
The news probably wiped the smile off of Cole's face.
Cole was extradited from his home in South Carolina to stand trial in North Carolina (he was later allowed to post bond). Meanwhile, his Klan group foundered and some members deserted him.
Cole went on trial in March 1958. Trials of Ku Klux Klansmen in the Jim Crow south in the 1950s were no sure thing. All it would take would be one juror to refuse to convict.
But the jury in this case *did* convict Cole--and on the first ballot, at that. The judge sentenced Cole to 18 months "on the roads" (sounds like a chain gang) for inciting a riot.
Cole served his time--but not having learned any lessons, went back to Ku-Kluxing, gradually rebuilding his reputation among other white supremacists. In 1967, he was arrested for a cross-burning, but never even saw trial for it, as he died in a car accident shortly thereafter.
Simeon Oxendine, on the other hand, had a long and happy life as a local civic leader, becoming a member of the town council and the county board of education.
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His argument is not all that coherent, but it boils down to 1) the Capitol storming was just a "5-hour riot" and 2) they did not deny the authority of the existing political order and attempt to put some alternative order in its place.
Let's take these in order.
First, it's important to acknowledge that the actual storming of the Capitol was merely the final and, thankfully, unsuccessful part of a series of acts that occurred in many states and at many levels, from the day after the election up to Jan 6.
Indeed, many people have pleaded guilty already to some of those acts, while others await trial. It was more than two months in length, not five hours. Many of these acts involved extensive planning; some acts were planned by lawyers, others by extremists. Many of the extremists
I was doing some sovereign citizen monitoring today and went down a rabbit hole that resulted in me discovering that sovereigns in Arkansas have created their own "common law court."
There's an interesting history behind this.
Anti-government extremists began creating their own bogus judicial/quasi-judicial entities with the Posse Comitatus in the early 1970s. At the time, the focus was on creating "citizens grand juries."
In the early 1980s, however, some anti-government extremists began to conceive
that they had the right to create their own courts, which they tended to call "common law courts." This notion popped up regularly throughout the 1980s.
It was only in the mid-1990s, however, that the idea of "common law courts" really took off w/the sovereign citizen movement.
Your holiday gift from me, friends, is a new look at right-wing domestic terrorism in the U.S. I examined terror incidents (attacks & plots) from 2017-2022 to look at trends in right-wing terrorism.
The key takeaway is that, although there has been a long term increase in right-wing terror incidents since the mid-2000s, there's been a sharp rise in recent years. From 2017 to 2022, we've conservatively documented 67 such incidents.
The rise in recent years can be attributed to 1) a rise in white supremacist incidents, esp. motivated by "accelerationism"; 2) a rise (hopefully temporary) of anti-gov't "boogaloo" incidents; 3) newer forms of extremism like QAnon, incels; 4) consistent anti-abortion incidents.
Many antisemites, especially of the white supremacist variety, are obsessed with "naming the Jew," i.e., pointing out Jewish people in government, media, etc., in order to suggest Jewish control and conspiracy. The below example is from Montana this past October.
A couple of years ago, antisemites created a different "name the Jew" campaign, "Operation Blue the Jew." The idea was to find supposedly Jewish people in photographs and color them blue so everybody would know they were Jewish.
I've read literally thousands of books on the Second World War, but few have *fascinated* me in the way the 2007 book Tapping Hitler's Generals, by Sönke Neitzel, has. I've re-read it multiple times (indeed, I'm re-reading it now, which is why I make this thread).
The book emerged from a WW2 project (that remained unknown for decades after the war ended) in which the British (and later the U.S.) secretly recorded conversations by high-ranking German (& Italian) prisoners in Allied POW facilities.
Because the prisoners did not know they were being recorded, they spoke freely to each other on a range of subjects, occasionally providing useful intel but especially providing insight into the officers' opinions on the war, on Nazism, on war crimes, and similar subjects.
The article claims that Ventura looks back "shamefully" at how his gubernatorial victory "served as a catalyst" for Trump.
There are things the article doesn't mention, though.
"Jesse Ventura’s shocking election 25 years ago previewed Trump’s"wapo.st/40p3RdL
It doesn't mention his support for far right candidate Ron Paul. It doesn't mention his support for 9/11 conspiracy theories. It doesn't mention his appearance on the Alex Jones show. It doesn't mention his television show Conspiracy Theory, which gave legitimacy to things like
FEMA concentration camp conspiracy theories (beloved by the militia movement), HAARP, the Bilderberg Group, and 9/11 conspiracy theories, among others. Alex Jones was a frequent guest. It doesn't mention his show for Russian network RT America.