ltmurnau: (Default)
ltmurnau ([personal profile] ltmurnau) wrote2009-04-16 10:33 am
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More Right-wing Loopiness

And I'm not talking about that stupid "teabag party" thing either (honestly, did no one know about the associations of that word? This is as bad as the time the Conservative Party wanted to call itself the Canadian Conservative Reform Alliance Party, of CCRAP).

From the Department of Homeland Security, a new report on the growth of rightwing extremist organisations and a threat assessment:

http://video1.washingtontimes.com/video/extremismreport.pdf
or here
http://www.fas.org/irp/eprint/rightwing.pdf

Associated Press News (April 16/09) says that "in September 08, the agency highlighted how right-wing extremists over the past five years have used the immigration debate as a recruiting tool. Between September 2008 and Feb. 5/09, the DHS issued at least four reports, obtained by The Associated Press, on individual extremist groups such as the Moors, Vinlanders Social Club, Volksfront and Hammerskin Nation."

There are also hundreds of instances documented by the FBI of veterans joining extremist groups - not in large numbers overall, but in leadership positions (http://file.sunshinepress.org:54445/fbi-military-nazis-2008.pdf : this is from July 08). The Department of Defense also did an internal investigation in 2006 of penetration of the military by racist gangs and skinheads. Though I would think actually one good way to get those stupid ideas about "mud races" knocked out of your head is to train, take orders from, and go on patrol with a few of them - which is how the US Army became, by the early 1960s, one of the most integrated organizations in American society.

[identity profile] r1vethead.livejournal.com 2009-04-17 12:59 am (UTC)(link)
One of the main movements challenging that integration in the US Army are the informal enlisted, but moreso officers, fundamentalist christian clubs/organizations. They are pervasive and align cliques of officers, ncm's and enlisted personnel into informal yet tightly knit organizations built on affinity for fundamentalist christianity - they are almost all quasi-fascist in outlook, and of course the particular brands of christianity they support are mainly "white".