Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Just When You Thought You’d Seen Everything…

Nazi websites have had a makeover. They’re still here, but they have recast themselves as positive and creative, rather than negative and destructive. Consider one such site: The Creativity Movement. You have to see this to believe it. Their banner looks A LOT like the Nazi flag. This group claims that it does not openly hate non-white races; instead, they celebrate whiteness. They are still unable, however, to restrict their hatred of Jews, laying the blame for all of society’s evils upon them. They are a church, similar to fundamentalist Christianity but not, as far as I can tell, actually associated with them. Their own website explains the difference between Christianity and the Creativity Movement:

“Christianity teaches love your enemies and hate your own kind, we teach exactly the opposite, namely hate and destroy your enemies and love your own kind…Christianity teaches such destructive advice as ‘love your enemies,’ ‘sell all thou hast and give it to the poor,”…’turn the other cheek.’ Anybody that followed such suicidal advice would soon destroy themselves, their family, their race and their country.” They also make a most interesting observation. They point out that Christianity is hypocritical; it preaches love, but then practices savagery and genocide.

They were founded by Ben Klassen, who was their first (I am not making this up) Pontifex Maximus. (Their current Pontifex Maximus is in prison.) They still sell Klassen’s book, Building a Whiter and Brighter World. I’m not making that one up either.

Their website has a number of images that celebrate white supremacist women. I noted first that all of the images were sketches of young, sexy women with long hair, usually blonde or red. I sort of doubt that any of the women in the movement actually look like that. The backgrounds of the drawings were usually snowy peaks and blue skies. In one case, a woman was standing in front of a marble building with columns that was supposed to be their headquarters. I very much doubt that they have a marble building for their HQ. I’ll bet that their headquarters is an office above a liquor store or something. The drawing that best expresses what white supremacists think about women is one that shows a young blonde in white, sitting by a window, with a view of a white supremacist flag and a mowed lawn. The woman is pregnant. Apparently part of their plan to take over the world is to pop out as many white supremacist babies as possible. See, women do have an important role in the new world order.


This was what I found in my exploration of the weird world of the modern white supremacist movement and its religious underpinnings.

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