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homegrown terror
3rd June 2012, 14:19
http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2012/05/30/longtime-white-supremacist-to-serve-on-penn-county-gop-committee/


Steve Smith, a longtime racist activist with a history of violence and top-level ties to numerous white nationalist hate groups, has been elected to a 4-year term on the Republican Party’s county committee for Luzerne County, Penn., One People’s Project reports.
Recruited into the neo-Nazi movement while he was stationed at Fort Bragg in the 1990s, Smith, of Pittston, Penn., has been active in an extraordinary array of white nationalist, skinhead, and neo-Nazi groups, including American Third Position (http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-files/groups/american-third-position), Keystone United (http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-files/groups/keystone-state-skinheads) (formerly Keystone State Skinheads), and the Council of Conservative Citizens (http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-files/groups/council-of-conservative-citizens). He is a former Aryan Nations (http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-files/groups/aryan-nations) member and former leader of the Philadelphia chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of White People, which was created by former Klan leader David Duke (http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-files/profiles/david-duke) but is no longer associated with him. Smith also belongs to a Pennsylvania-based group called the European American Action Coalition (EAAC), which according to its website was formed in fall 2011 “by a few well known White activists in the great and historic state of Pennsylvania.”
http://cdna.splcenter.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/SteveSmith.jpgIn a January letter published in the Wilkes-Barr Times Leader, Smith wrote, “Many experts predict that, if current trends continue, whites will be a minority in the United States by 2050; some predict it can happen sooner. If this prediction comes true, it will be catastrophic to our country and well-being. The European American Action Coalition is committed to reversing this anti-white trend. The coalition is an organization dedicated to educating, advancing and defending our culture, rights and heritage.”
Smith’s ties to the racist right stretch far beyond the political. In 2001, he co-founded a racist skinhead group now known as Keystone United (which was until 2009 known as the Keystone State Skinheads, or KSS), one of the largest and most active single-state racist skinhead crews in the country. In March 2003, he and two other KSS members were arrested in Scranton for beating up Antoni Williams, a black man, using stones and chunks of pavement. Smith pleaded guilty to terrorist threats and ethnic intimidation and received a 60-day sentence and probation.
To advance his goals, Smith has distanced himself somewhat from his violent past and focused on political activism. As state chairman for American Third Position (A3P), a white nationalist political party that aims to deport immigrants and return the United States to white rule, he has for several years been working the crowds at local Tea Party gatherings, which he once described as “fertile grounds for our activists.”
In October 2010, he led a delegation of A3P activists in presenting the party’s position to a Scranton Tea Party group. “We explained that the A3P was formed to represent white Americans, who have been denied representation for decades,” he said in a press release on A3P’s website. “We provided them with a true alternative to the typical dead-end conservatism with which so many of these concerned and partially awakened Americans are involved.”
Also in 2010, Smith was the center of a major flap (http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2010/05/20/stung-by-racism-charges-nativist-leader-quits-rallies/) within the anti-immigrant movement, when William Gheen (http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2011/08/23/nativist-leader-calls-for-violent-acts-to-save-white-america/), head of the nativist extremist Americans for Legal Immigration PAC (ALIPAC), pulled out of a series of rallies celebrating Arizona’s then-new anti-immigrant law because their organizer was a friend of Smith’s. At the time, Smith’s Facebook page indicated he was a fan of a Swedish white nationalist singer named Saga, whose ditties have included “Goodbye, David Lane.” Lane, a convicted terrorist who died in 2007 while serving a 190-year prison sentence for conspiracy, racketeering and his role in the assassination of Jewish talk show host Alan Berg, remains one of the most revered figures in the white nationalist movement. He came up with the famous “14 Words” slogan: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for White children.”
Smith announced his election to the Luzerne County GOP committee six days ago on news forum called White News Now. The news was greeted with enthusiasm by members, one of whom commented, “This may seem like just a small step now, but this is how we are taking our nation back and it’s how we will secure a future for our people. Everyone needs to look to Steve’s example. He’s a true patriot!”
As a committee member, he will have a say in the selection of the Luzerne GOP’s County Chairman and Executive Committee, who, according to the party’s website, “oversee and direct all of the activity of the Republican Party in the County.” Luzerne County GOP officials did not respond to a request for comment on Smith election in time for publication.

TheGodlessUtopian
3rd June 2012, 15:30
Despicable but nothing will come of it since, as leftist, we know that the electoral route is meaningless; every once in a while revolutionary leftist can get into some official power position but that doesn't mean our revolution is right around the corner.

TheGodlessUtopian
3rd June 2012, 15:31
Thread moved

Red Future
3rd June 2012, 23:56
Will just act like another reactionary republican in office with little difference.

A Revolutionary Tool
4th June 2012, 01:31
Will just act like another reactionary republican in office with little difference.
I'll still milk it for what it's worth. Because let's be real, the conservative movement is so damn racist, and shit like this just helps highlight that.

TheAltruist
4th June 2012, 01:41
I'm probably one of the few white people in the United States who looks forward to the day when former minority groups are the majority, or at least equal with the Caucasian population. A lot more diversity would be really nice.

Geiseric
4th June 2012, 01:49
He doesnt' get that "white," as in "european american," isn't a race in the same way that "African American," isn't. Most people aren't even part of a single "Race," biologically, since we're so mixed up as a result of cultural integration and stuff. Any attempt to whatever they mean as "keep the race pure," is meaningless since they themselves aren't "pure," by their own definition. You could mention that Hitler, the messiah of white nationalism, was partially north african if you wanted, so he was according to their definition "defiling the white race."

Astarte
4th June 2012, 01:57
Despicable but nothing will come of it since, as leftist, we know that the electoral route is meaningless; every once in a while revolutionary leftist can get into some official power position but that doesn't mean our revolution is right around the corner.

Just like when Hitler was elected right? Nothing came of that... The difference is that when leftists are elected their agendas are stifled by monied interests. When fascists are elected monied interests use the predicate that it is "the peoples' will" to accelerate fascist interests.

TheAltruist
4th June 2012, 01:58
Yeah, and since we're all (humans) of African decent, and humanity has changed significantly in those 100,000 years or so, does that mean Neo-Nazis want to kill everyone? Or are they aware of that fact?

Bostana
4th June 2012, 01:58
There is still not enough evidence that republicans are white supremacists!
:lol:

Ocean Seal
4th June 2012, 02:14
Will just act like another reactionary republican in office with little difference.
Fascists are generally worse in that they rally people to a racist cause, and having them organized is quite dangerous.

homegrown terror
4th June 2012, 13:56
Fascists are generally worse in that they rally people to a racist cause, and having them organized is quite dangerous.

but they're also very polarising, and when they are elected there's great potential for moderates to be brought into our camp.

DasFapital
4th June 2012, 16:39
Out in Rathdrum, Idaho an imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan is running for county sheriff. I guess its just the hip new thing.

DasFapital
4th June 2012, 16:43
Yeah, and since we're all (humans) of African decent, and humanity has changed significantly in those 100,000 years or so, does that mean Neo-Nazis want to kill everyone? Or are they aware of that fact?
They are but they just use pseudo science to try to discredit it. Hell they even claim the Europeans settled the Americas before the Amerindians and that the Amerindians committed genocide against them! So as they view it colonialism was actually just taking what was theirs to begin with.

ed miliband
4th June 2012, 17:01
"Fascism steals from the proletariat its secret: organisation. ... Liberalism is all ideology with no organisation; fascism is all organisation with no ideology."-- bordiga

point is, a single individual being elected to a particular (isolated) position in the absence of an organised mass movement means very little. if he uses his position to rally his troops, so to speak, then we can be concerned. but i can't really see the pennsylvania republicans becoming a fascist fifth column and overthrowing the government or whatever.

Misanthrope
4th June 2012, 17:20
This is a bit off topic but why does Pennsylvania have such a skin head problem?

MEGAMANTROTSKY
4th June 2012, 18:03
Just like when Hitler was elected right? Nothing came of that...
I respectfully disagree. Hitler was never actually elected, although the manner in which he seized power appears entirely legal by Weimar standards. President Paul von Hindenburg appointed him as chancellor in 1933, with Hitler then using the Reichstag fire to suppress whatever political opposition was left from participating in the state. The bourgeois state then (nearly in full) united to pass the "Enabling Act", which gave Hitler full legislative powers for a four year period. The trade unions were then suppressed and finally all other political parties except for the NSDAP were intimidated into dispersing or banned.

Whatever other information you need you can probably find very easily. But the point is that Hitler was never elected to power.

Salyut
4th June 2012, 19:44
I'll still milk it for what it's worth. Because let's be real, the conservative movement is so damn racist, and shit like this just helps highlight that.

Yep. (http://www.amazon.com/White-Flight-Conservatism-Politics-Twentieth-Century/dp/0691133867/ref=sr_1_sc_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1338835476&sr=8-1-spell)

#FF0000
4th June 2012, 20:54
lol this dude's a fixture in the Scranton Tea Party, too.

homegrown terror
5th June 2012, 02:48
This is a bit off topic but why does Pennsylvania have such a skin head problem?

because the entire east coast is one big interconnected hardcore scene, and anywhere with that many HC bands is gonna attract skins, of the racist, non-racist AND anti-racist persuasion.

Ocean Seal
5th June 2012, 03:15
This is a bit off topic but why does Pennsylvania have such a skin head problem?
A friend of mine used to live in rural Pennsylvania. Apparently she lived about 20 minutes from the head of the Klan (Grand Wizard?). Point is she told me that there was a lot of unemployment, and a lot of factory jobs were lost in that area. Apparently Jesse Jackson went down there in solidarity with some striking workers and that changed things around in the town where she lived, but it still remains a clan stronghold.

Comrade Samuel
5th June 2012, 03:29
There is still not enough evidence that republicans are white supremacists!
:lol:

*sigh* I'll get my trench coat, you stand on my shoulders and we can go to the republican national convention and get video of Mitt Romney talking about how much he hates minorities...

Also is there really one person here who is even remotely suprised by this? To be perfectly frank I'm surprised they aren't already pushing their way into congress (openly).

RedZezz
5th June 2012, 03:49
Apparently, he was elected by one vote (himself) as no one participated or voted in the election.

http://wnep.com/2012/06/04/white-activist-elected-to-luzerne-g-o-p-committee/#ooid=NteHl4NDprMhydnxPhJnWUkHoV4nlelS

I find this video to be remarkably funny. Saying he is not a racist while wearing a "European Pride" shirt and saying that he doesnt understand why people think skinheads are a bunch of violent people soon after admitting he was involved in a hate crime.

#FF0000
5th June 2012, 04:01
A friend of mine used to live in rural Pennsylvania. Apparently she lived about 20 minutes from the head of the Klan (Grand Wizard?). Point is she told me that there was a lot of unemployment, and a lot of factory jobs were lost in that area. Apparently Jesse Jackson went down there in solidarity with some striking workers and that changed things around in the town where she lived, but it still remains a clan stronghold.

'rural pennsylvania' means basically 'not philly or pittsburgh'.

but yeah it's a shitty area. NEPA had a lot of people coming in from NJ and NY, so tons of new people (who just so happen to look different) coming into an area that's set to become the next Flint, Michigan is bound to attract trouble.

Welshy
5th June 2012, 04:02
but they're also very polarising, and when they are elected there's great potential for moderates to be brought into our camp.

Unlikely since it would most likely be used by democrats to push their "lesser of two evils" campaign tactic.