but he loves the Promethean Propagandist Paul Goble

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seemslikeadream » Wed Apr 08, 2015 1:53 pm wrote:American Dream's OP ....
but he loves the Promethean Propagandist Paul Goble
Racists, Neo-Nazis, Far Right Flock to Russia for Joint Conference
The “fringe of the fringe” gathered in St. Petersburg on Sunday to rail against Freemasons, LGBT people, and “Zionist puppet filth.”
posted on March 22, 2015
German far-right leader Udo Voigt speaks at the International Russian Conservative Forum in St. Petersburg on Sunday.
ST. PETERSBURG — A Scottish anti-abortion campaigner named Jim Dowson was railing against “Nazi fascists in the EU” in a hotel conference room when an image of a bare-chested Vladimir Putin riding a bear galloping through the Siberian wilderness appeared behind him.
“The salvation of my generation is the great Russian people, because Vladimir Putin understands that the rights of the majority should be put before the whims and perversions of the minority,” Dowson said. “Obama and America — they’re like females! They’re feminized men. You have been blessed by a man who is a man! And we envy that.”
Russia’s appeal to Europe’s fringe was on full show Sunday at the International Russian Conservative Forum, a conference organized by a pro-Kremlin ultranationalist party to cement far-right ties, as one participant put it, “from Gibraltar to Vladivostok.” United by their hatred of Washington, the European Union, and LGBT people, about 200 far-right politicians and activists from across Europe gathered in St. Petersburg’s Holiday Inn to rail against liberal tolerance and implore Russia to lead the fight for Christian morality.
“Constantinople has been and gone,” said Nick Griffin, leader of the British National Party until last year. “Rome and the persons who came from Rome have gone the same way. It’s absolutely inevitable that in the lifetimes of most of the people in this room, Western Europe will either become an Islamist caliphate or there will be a terrible civil war or perhaps both. Which makes the survival of Christendom absolutely impossible without the rise of the Third Rome: Moscow.”
Since returning to Russia’s presidency in 2012 on the heels of unprecedented protests against him, Putin has sought to recast Russia as a bulwark of conservative values. Though designed to shore up political support at home, measures like bans on offending religious believers and “gay propaganda” have also struck a chord with many on the European right who now see the Kremlin as an ideological fellow traveler. Leaders of anti-immigrant parties across Europe have received enthusiastic welcomes in Moscow. Others have visited Crimea and rebel-held eastern Ukraine to provide a fig leaf of legitimacy to separatists votes there as observers.
Russia has responded in kind. RT, the Kremlin’s foreign-language propaganda network, gives heavy airtime to insurgent European parties and rolling coverage to anti-EU demonstrations. A Russian bank gave France’s Front National — whose leader, Marine le Pen, is an open admirer of Putin’s — an $11.7 million loan last year. Many in Bulgaria saw a Russian hand in anti-fracking protests that helped reverse a shale gas deal with Chevron. One lawmaker from Hungary’s ultranationalist Jobbik party is even under investigation on charges of being a Russian intelligence agent.
Sunday’s conference aimed to formalize the relationship. Its program was adorned by a line from remarks Putin made in 2013 accusing Europe of backing away “from the Christian values at the foundation of European civilization.” Rodina, the party that organized the conference, caucuses with Putin’s United Russia party and enjoys the patronage of Dmitry Rogozin, a deputy prime minister who once led the party.
The very fact that the conference was happening at all suggested the Kremlin’s tacit approval, if not outright support. Last December, police repeatedly disrupted a streamed speech in the same venue by exiled oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, arguably Putin’s top critic, then ended it by turning off the hotel’s electricity. Former Kremlin spin doctor Stanislav Belkovsky had to move a lecture for Khodorkovsky’s foundation in St. Petersburg twice after similar harassment on Saturday. Eight members of a small crowd that gathered outside the Holiday Inn to protest the conference were arrested.
Rhetoric at the conference, however, outstripped — and sometimes contradicted — Russia’s official line. Of the three members of the European Parliament there, one, Germany’s Udo Voigt, has described Adolf Hitler as a “great German statesman.” The other two hail from Greece’s Golden Dawn, whose logo is a barely disguised swastika. “It’s a bizarre lineup,” Jared Taylor, an American “racial realist,” told BuzzFeed News. “It’s the fringe of the fringe.” Speakers railed, variously, against Freemasons; the corrupting influence of Hollywood; “Nazi fascists in the EU”; a “global cabal” of “bloodsucking oligarchs”; non-white immigrants practicing “alien traditions”; “fags and dykes”; and “Zionist puppet filth.”
This may have proved a bit much in Russia, where Putin frequently rails against “neo-Nazis” in Ukraine and has raised rhetoric over World War II to levels unseen since Soviet times. Rodina’s leader, lawmaker Alexei Zhuravlev, had been scheduled to open the conference, but mysteriously failed to appear. “I have to go to Donbass immediately,” he tweeted on Friday, using a Russian name for the conflict zone in east Ukraine. “It’s an urgent matter. No further details.” Igor Morozov, a member of Russia’s upper house of parliament, also dropped out. State TV crews were conspicuously absent.
Conference speakers insisted their critics had it all wrong. “Everything that’s happening in the Donbass is anti-fascism. Everything that Ukraine does is fascism. There’s no other fascism in the world,” said Alexei Zhivov, leader of an obscure organization called the Battle for Donbass. Others tried to outdo each other in their fealty to Russia and Putin personally. “It is striking how cleverly and subtly President Putin is avoiding armed conflict,” said Voigt, the German far-right leader. Kris Roman, a Belgian man who runs a “think tank” called Euro-Rus that appears to consist solely of himself, listed several Kremlin critics who were murdered or died suspiciously. “I know where they live,” he said. “They live in hell.”
The irony of denouncing fascism and Nazism while espousing essentially the same views seemed to be lost on some participants. Dowson, the anti-abortion campaigner, called Obama a Nazi. “I don’t find it derogatory to be called a fascist,” Roberto Fiore, a former European lawmaker from Italy, told BuzzFeed News — apparently having forgotten that he signed an “anti-fascist memorandum” in Crimea last August. Russian nationalists who have fought alongside separatists in Ukraine handed out patches embossed with a kolovrat, a Slavic pagan equivalent to the swastika. “They have no idea,” Taylor, the American, said. “Well, they have an idea, but it’s a wrong idea.”
The conference, slated to last for eight hours, was forced to end early after the hotel reported a bomb threat. Organizers announced that it was a hoax and shepherded participants away to sign a joint resolution on the next steps for the movement, then awkwardly milled around when it emerged that none of them had actually read it.
The flurry of press attention alone seemed to justify the price of admission — attendees paid for their own flights — for many. Griffin said he hoped that the conference was just the start of more help from Russia. “If someone offered you a pot of money, would you take it?” he said.
seemslikeadream » Wed Apr 08, 2015 4:07 pm wrote:Wars and the resulting death started by neocons .....1 ..2 ....4...6 ..who knows?
Wars and folks killed by David Icke......0
and further more I don't believe Icke ever made a penny off of killing machines
K. Kersplebedeb
Some interesting things i read in March
| Filed under: this week's stuff to read | K. Kersplebedeb | April 5th, 2015
“DRAWING LINES AGAINST RACISM AND FASCISM” By Spencer Sunshine, Political Research Associates, March 5, 2015
League of the South's Michael Hill: "Desegregation and integration have been abject failures, just as our Southern forbears in the 1950s and 1960s said they would"
The President of the League of the South, Michael Hill has some pretty extreme and hateful views. Among his backwards "Southron" thinking is his belief that integration was wrong, and a failure, and that we should bring back Jim Crow era segregation. Hill linked to his newest missive titled, "It's time for some truth" on the Council of Conservative Citizens Facebook page. Hill writes:"Will things return to this in the South (see photo at right)? Let’s hope so. De-segregation and integration have been abject failures, just as our Southern forebears in the 1950s and 1960s said they would. Leftist policies have destroyed whole cities, schools systems, and other once-healthy institutions. It’s time to force the left to admit the truth and turn back the clock, as it were, to a more sane time and policy. The survival of our civilization depends on it."
Hill is right about one thing. Government (but not all Leftist) policies are responsible for destroying whole cities. Hill, supposedly a "Historian" of sorts, is knowingly ignoring a long history of White Supremacy, which is solely responsible for creating the mess we are faced with today in blighted inner cities, where poverty reigns supreme as the new slavemaster over disenfranchised and impoverished (mostly) peoples of color.
Hill wants to "turn back the clock". Take a good hard look, and make no mistake, this is what "turning back the clock" looks like to Dr. Mike:
Restoring the honor!
Anti-Semitic and Racist newspaper The First Freedom runs pieces by multiple Heritage advocates, as well as Neo-Nazi material, Heritage crowd is mum
Reprint of article penned by Camp 141 Sons of Confederate Veterans Cmdr. James W. King in Anti-Semitic newspaper The First Freedom
Dylann Roof Had Confederate Plates. Here's Why the Rebel Flag Still Flies in South Carolina.
—By Tim Murphy| Thu Jun. 18, 2015 12:31 PM EDT
[ibPro-flag demonstrators at the South Carolina Capitol after the flag was removed from the dome in 2000.]/b] AP
South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley will almost certainly order flags across the state to be flown at half-mast this week in honor of the black parishioners murdered Wednesday night at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston. But one flag will continue to fly as it always has—the Confederate flag in front of the Confederate Soldiers Monument on the grounds of the state Capitol in Columbia. In a photo posted by the New York Times, the alleged gunman, Dylann Storm Roof, is seen posing in front of a car with a license plate bearing several iterations of the flag. (In an odd twist, the Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Texas could refuse to offer specialty Confederate flag license plates that had been requested by the Sons of Confederate Veterans.)
Alabama Police Officers Suspended over Neo-Confederate Ties
Two police officers in Anniston, Alabama, have been suspended over allegations they belong to a hate group. The Southern Poverty Law Center outed the officers, both lieutenants, as members of the League of the South, a "neo-Confederate" white supremacist organization.
JUN 19
Developing: White Supremacist makes appearance in Union Springs, Alabama with the Alabama Flaggers
Southern White Nationalist Brad Griffin in Union Springs, Alabama
with Justin Burton of the Alabama Flaggers (Image courtesy
of Facebook)
The Alabama Flaggers have arrived in Union Springs, Alabama. They are reporting on their Facebook page that they have the Mayor of Union Springs blessings for their rally. They've even gone so far as posting a photo of the Director of the Alabama Flaggers, Freda Mincey Burton posing with two African American props, sorry, we mean cops. Oddly enough the group also posted a photo of Justin Burton with Brad Griffin, a well known White Supremacist member of two hate groups, the Council of Conservative Citizens and the League of the South.
Portion of an Anti-Defamation League article labeling Brad Griffin as a White Supremacist
(Image courtesy of Anti-Defamation League)
Mr. Griffin has stated that he would like to see White Supremacy restored in Dixie, and has detailed a plan where African Americans would be moved out of Dixie to make room for Whites, thereby creating an all-White ethnostate.
White Nationalist Brad Griffin describes how Whites can create an ethnostate in Dixie by re-establishing White Supremacy in the South at his blog Occidental Dissent. (Image courtesy of Occidental Dissent)
Mr. Griffin has been labeled as a White Supremacist by the Anti-Defamation League. Clearly the Mayor of Union Springs cannot stop the group from rallying on private property, but to allow the group to give the impression to the public that they support this rally is despicable. It's hard to believe that an African American Mayor, or an African American Police Chief would allow for the impression to be given to the public that they support the actions of a group who have aligned themselves with a blatant White Supremacist. In the Alabama Flaggers buddy Brad Griffin's ideal world, the Mayor and the Police Chief would not be allowed by law to reside in the same country as Mr. Griffin.
Director of the Alabama Flaggers, Freda Mincey Burton poses with
two African American Police Officers in Union Springs,
Alabama (Image courtesy of Facebook)
Restoring the honor!
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