Neo-Nazi terrorists in the US

NovaSaber

Well-known member
Citizen

The headline says "suspected white supremacists", but then it says "Russell, who was the founder of the notorious neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen" just a few paragraphs down, and "She allegedly had a document on her computer referencing Hitler and the Unabomber" a few more below that.

A Florida man and a Maryland woman have been arrested on federal charges of plotting to attack multiple energy substation with the goal of destroying Baltimore, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday.
The suspects, Sarah Clendaniel of Catonsville, Maryland, and Brandon Russell of Orlando, Florida, were allegedly fueled by a racist extremist ideology as they "conspired to inflict maximum harm" on the power grid with the aim to "completely destroy" Baltimore, U.S. Attorney Erek Barron and a top FBI official said at a Monday morning press conference.
Russell is quoted in court documents saying that attacking power transformers is "the greatest thing somebody can do." He is accused of providing instructions and location information for the substations he and Clendaniel allegedly sought to target as part of their plot, federal prosecutors said.
 

KidTDragon

Now with hi-res avatar!
Citizen
The headline says "suspected white supremacists", but then it says "Russell, who was the founder of the notorious neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen" just a few paragraphs down, and "She allegedly had a document on her computer referencing Hitler and the Unabomber" a few more below that.
That is awfully suspect. We might want to keep an eye on them.
 

Ungnome

Grand Empress of the Empire of One Square Foot.
Citizen
The 4th estate is in SUCH bad shape at the moment... Either it's corporate controlled, thus wanting to maximize profit(ABC = Disney, after all) or the platform is so biased that anything you get from it has to be filtered and researched further to find something actually resembling the truth of the situation. and sometime's it's both (Fox New, cough) A cut and dry case won't get as many views which equals less ad revenue so definite becomes suspected in the reporting...... Reason 438 to hate the current state of the world.
 

NovaSaber

Well-known member
Citizen

The Terrorgram Collective is at the heart of the international neo-Nazi accelerationist movement, the most extreme and explicit iteration of white supremacism, which advocates deadly violence and other acts of destruction to hasten the collapse of society so that a whites-only world can be built in its place. The collective produces propaganda — audiobooks, videos and memes — that travels across the web in hopes of inspiring the next Christchurch shooter, who killed 51 Muslims in two mosques; the next El Paso shooter, who killed 22 Hispanic people in a Walmart; the next Pittsburgh shooter, who killed 11 Jews in a synagogue; and the next Buffalo shooter, who killed 10 Black Americans in a grocery store.

The Terrorgram Collective maintains a horrifying hagiology of these shooters, calling them “saints” and sanctifying their likenesses with medieval-style church drawings. Last year, to the alarm of antifascists and counterterror organizations, the collective produced a 24-minute documentary that glorified the murders committed by 105 “saints” over the last 50 years.

Evidence compiled by a coalition of anonymous antifascist researchers — including from SoCal Research Club, @WizardAFA, @SunlightAFA and @FashFreeNW — and published this week on Left Coast Right Watch, an investigative news outlet, reveals that one of the Terrorgram Collective’s main propagandists is Dallas Erin Humber, a 33-year-old woman living in Sacramento, California.
HuffPost has corroborated the research indicating that Humber is the person behind multiple Telegram accounts associated with the Terrorgram Collective, and identifying her as the narrator of the collective’s documentaries and audiobooks.

"Neo-Nazi dildo saleswoman" was not on my bingo card for 2023.
 

Rhinox

too old for this
Citizen
Glad that she's now a known quantity and will be monitored.
These radicalization tactics are not new. Trouble is, every time one is quashed, two more pop up.
 

Nevermore

Well-known member
Citizen
Just as a reminder, this is a popular statement against Nazis here in Germany. It's jused for T-shirts, buttons, stickers and other accessories. I'm not wearing it, but it says everything I think about this breed of assholes:
FCK NZS.jpg
 


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