Crooks and Liars
Friday June 12, 2009 11:00 am
Von Brunn as a 'Lone Wolf': Killers act alone, but these are not 'isolated incidents'
By David Neiwert
[author David Neiwert Note: I was interviewed last night for CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 program to discuss lone wolves. My interview didn't air yesterday, but Cooper indicated they'd be reporting more on the "lone wolf" phenomenon tonight, so here's hoping my interview airs this evening. In the meantime, here's a warmup report, featuring the first of Cooper's pieces.]
When the Department of Homeland Security issued that law-enforcement bulletin on right-wing extremists two months ago, the mainstream right's chief shrieking point was that somehow the bulletin had conflated them with the extremist right-wingers.
Some typical headlines: "DHS Report Labels Conservatives as Radical Extremists". "The DHS Declares Everyone In America Is A Domestic Terrorist". "DHS To Target Conservatives." "New DHS Domestic Terrorism Report Targets Millions of Americans". And on and on. The upshot: Homeland Security was labeling conservatives America's chief terrorist threat.
But if you read the actual report, here's what it says is the chief domestic-terror threat America faces:
DHS/I&A assesses that lone wolves and small terrorist cells embracing violent rightwing extremist ideology are the most dangerous domestic terrorism threat in the United States. Information from law enforcement and nongovernmental organizations indicates lone wolves and small terrorist cells have shown intent—and, in some cases, the capability—to commit violent acts.
[..] DHS/I&A has concluded that white supremacist lone wolves pose the most significant domestic terrorist threat because of their low profile and autonomy—separate from any formalized group—which hampers warning efforts.
[..] Similarly, recent state and municipal law enforcement reporting has warned of the dangers of rightwing extremists embracing the tactics of “leaderless resistance” and of lone wolves carrying out acts of violence.
Now, here's the odd thing about "lone wolves": Right-wingers like to use the solitary nature of this kind of terrorist act to dismiss them as "isolated incidents." But in reality, the continuing existence of acts of this nature demonstrates primarily that the radical right in America is alive, well, and functioning better than it should. And the continuing -- and as we've seen this week, ultimately futile -- attempts by the right to whitewash their existence from the public consciousness have played no small part in helping that trend continue.
Watch the above video for an instructive comparison in how this is handled by a right-winger like Fox's Bill O'Reilly, and a more rational, rather centrist approach taken by Anderson Cooper and his guests on AC360 last night.
O'Reilly declares the matter over -- move along, move along -- because this was just a "lone nutcase." Meanwhile, Cooper and the SPLC's Mark Potok and anti-racist activist David Gletty have a thorough an rational discussion of what lone wolves are about.
As Potok explains, the "lone wolf" concept was popularized in the late 1980s by an Aryan Nations leader named Louis Beam as an extension of his strategy of "leaderless resistance." One white supremacist, a fellow named Alex Curtis, even went so far as to develop a "point system" for lone wolves.
A 2003 piece by Jessica Stern in Foreign Affairs described how even Al Qaeda was finding the concept useful. And she explains its origins:
The idea was popularized by Louis Beam, the self-described ambassador-at-large, staff propagandist, and "computer terrorist to the Chosen" for Aryan Nations, an American neo-Nazi group. Beam writes that hierarchical organization is extremely dangerous for insurgents, especially in "technologically advanced societies where electronic surveillance can often penetrate the structure, revealing its chain of command." In leaderless organizations, however, "individuals and groups operate independently of each other, and never report to a central headquarters or single leader for direction or instruction, as would those who belong to a typical pyramid organization." Leaders do not issue orders or pay operatives; instead, they inspire small cells or individuals to take action on their own initiative.
The strategy was also inspired by at least one "lone wolf" shooter: Joseph Paul Franklin, a racist sniper who in the late 1970s and early 1980s killed as many as 20 people -- mostly mixed-race couples -- on a serial-murder spree, and attempted to assassinate both Vernon Jordan and Larry Flynt. (Franklin was also the inspiration for William Pierce's Hunter, the follow-up novel to The Turner Diaries.)
There has been no dearth of lone wolves in the years since Beam set the strategy for the radical right: Eric Rudolph. Buford Furrow. Benjamin Smith. James Kopp. Jim David Adkisson. And now add Scott Roeder and James von Brunn to the list.
That's quite a trail of "isolated incidents," isn't it?
Brian Levin of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State-San Bernardino was interviewed by Newsweek about lone wolves this week, and the resulting piece is a worthy explainer:
Was this an isolated incident?
It's isolated in the sense that this guy was a lone wolf, certainly in that he acted alone, but he's part of a movement of anti-Semites and Holocaust deniers. He lists major Holocaust-denier groups on his Web site and how there is going to be a major Holocaust-denial conference on July 25 in Orange County, Calif. He may have acted like a lone wolf, but he is part of a movement.
Are attacks like this simply desperate one-time acts?
Within the white-supremacist movement there is a strong notion of leaderless resistance. The notion is this: look, we can take over the country just by having small cells or lone wolves commit key acts of violence because the rest of the country, at least the whites, will then go along with you. It's called the "propaganda of the deed"—you know who the enemies are, you go out yourself and hopefully people will take notice and act together in resistance.
These ideas were promoted by Louis Beam, a KKK member, and published in The Seditionist, his newsletter, in the early '90s. It came out around 1991, but the idea has been pushed in the white-supremacist movement for a long time since. He has been a big influence on the white-supremacist movement. He's a very scary guy. He was noteworthy because he was also part of the militia movement in the '90s. He's not the inventor of leaderless resistance, but he's remembered for being the most important modern proponent of leaderless resistance in the neo-Nazi world.
So when Bill O'Reilly shrugs the Holocaust Museum shooting off onto the dustbin of that lengthening list of "isolated incidents," you have to ask yourself why. After all, a "lone wolf" just rid him of that meddlesome doctor, didn't he? Funny how conveniently that works out for O'Reilly.
By: dogbutt
In: News
Tags: rightwing, scaremongers,
Marked as: approved
Views: 6694 | Comments: 32 | Votes: 1 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 1 | Times used in channels: 1



No, these are not isolated at all, the right wing dsomestic terror will get worse as time goes on. They are losing it. All one has to do is read their comments here !!
LOL!
These folks are scary paranoid chumps!
Posted Jun-12-2009 ByWillyWillKill (309.72) WillyWillKill Send Message
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sounds like your the one that is scared!
Posted Jun-12-2009 Byomfgitshimagain (84.00) 
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I browsed through the white nationalist websites and many of them don't see James Von Brunn as any hero.
They think he is going to hurt their cause. They are afraid to lose their first and second amendment rights.
The more I read, the more ridiculous these people who paint these guys as left wingers sound. Many of the white nationalists are military veterans and gun owners. They don't live in ghettos and collect welfare.
Posted Jun-12-2009 BySteve677 (409.86) 
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the vast majority of white nationalists are either right-wing or prefer not allying themselves with the government at all. i don't even remember the last time i saw a leftist who was a white nationalist/supremacist
Posted Jun-12-2009 Bylasrever (5338.10) lasrever View Channel Send Message
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This guys a Dixiecrat for sure.
Posted Jun-12-2009 BySimpleSiren (786.74) SimpleSiren View Channel Send Message
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LOL im just fucking around its friday.
Posted Jun-12-2009 BySimpleSiren (786.74) SimpleSiren View Channel Send Message
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http://loveforlife.com.au/files/tob_shebbe_goyim_harog_first6_0.pdf
The above link is 6 chapers out of James Von Brunns book which is 12 chapers. I skimmed it. He doesn't like a left winger to me.
I have tried to get the ones who claim that James Von Brunn is a leftist to respond to it but they would rather get their info from an entertainer with an agenda.
Here is another link.
http://www.stormfront.org/forum/showthread.php?t=608764&highlight=James von Brunn
This is the for More..
Posted Jun-12-2009 BySteve677 (409.86) 
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After eight years of calling all on the left terrorist lovers the far rignt wingnuts are in deep denial.
Nothing you post no matter how clear it is will convince the brainwashed by Fox and neoeocn mamdne on this site. They are a very hopeless bunch of clowns.
Posted Jun-12-2009 ByWillyWillKill (309.72) WillyWillKill Send Message
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Glenn Beck IS pushing a Zionist agenda
and also a corporatist and Republican Party agenda
the three are intermixed and part of the same message Coulter, Hannity, Limbaugh, Savage, and all the other paid right-wing hacks are saying
they're all fundamentally saying the same exact things
Posted Jun-12-2009 Bylasrever (5338.10) lasrever View Channel Send Message
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so how do you feel about the zionist agenda?and what just exactly is on the agenda?
Posted Jun-12-2009 Byomfgitshimagain (84.00) 
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Bingo and what option do people have left if the Repubican pressure release valve is nothing more than a zionist controlled racket?
So they go thier own way, as you noted later by identifying white nationalists as more than often indepenant thinkers in the political realm. That invalidates the entire left right pissing match, but oh what fun it is to see the two teams squabble over the actions of ONE MAN.
Wonder if we can get them to fight it out over what catagory according to a political More..
Posted Jun-13-2009 ByGlasswire (177.56) Glasswire Send Message
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The commentators on Fox usually suffer from some pretty bad bouts of cognitive dissonance, but this is probably the most far-fetched assertion they've made yet.
Posted Jun-12-2009 Bysakb (8362.90) 
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Lies.
All lies.
F*ck O'Reilly
Posted Jun-12-2009 Bydan_man (459.94) 
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By the way Tillers death wasn't murder but the justice of thousands of viable childrens souls getting some justice from a soulless monster.
Posted Jun-12-2009 ByDOWNPLANE (729.92) 
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So if you are killed for being an imbecile, thus saving future generations from your foul and weak genes, the killer should go free or be looked at as a hero because he stopped your defective genes from "competing" in the gene pool?
Posted Jun-12-2009 ByTongueboy (3090.24) Tongueboy View Channel Send Message
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And if you are killed for embracing a monster like Tiller we can all breathe easier? Yours is a weak argument from someone with no moralality.
Posted Jun-14-2009 ByDOWNPLANE (729.92) 
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LOL, Just look at Mark Potok.. based on looks alone, would you guess he is liberal or conservative? LOL
What's fueling the hate?... LOL!
Posted Jun-12-2009 Bydogma600 (101.90) dogma600 Send Message
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Veterans claims approach one million delayed or on appeal
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/6/11/741250/-Veterans-claims-approach-one-million-delayed-or-on-appeal
May these vets quit killing themselves and instead take aim where it might more benefit us all.
Posted Jun-12-2009 Bynotoriouskelly (28.90) 
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LOL @ Neocons trying to make this out to be a isolated incident... they dont want to be blamed for their followers actions... it will get worse i am sure .. maybe then we can outlaw people like o'Rielly , Beck and Hanity... neocons accept it your "fringe" followers are fucking nuts... and many of you on here are racists Bring it on turds... bring it on
Posted Jun-12-2009 Byoskardog (267.44) 
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Even with the 10:1 ratio for most things US vs. Canada I don't think we have near the number of whack jobs predicted comparatively.
Posted Jun-14-2009 Bycanucklehead (180.34) 
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I dont suppose the muslim convert was a right wing terrorist? Any policitcal background he said. This lond wolf strategy could be used by anyone, so the underlying message is, "fear everyone, accept tighter security measures, report your neighbors!"
Posted Jun-15-2009 Bywellybub (348.18) 
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Amazing how the FBI released yesterday yhay yhere is MO repeating NO jump in these types of crimes.
The only change is the media focuses on it in an attempt to weaken the Republican party.
Posted Jun-12-2009 ByDOWNPLANE (729.92) 
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Learn how to fucking spell before you try to berate others you fucking idiot.
Posted Jun-12-2009 ByTongueboy (3090.24) Tongueboy View Channel Send Message
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