-Caveat Lector-

Apocalypse Now! The Realized Eschatology
of the "Christian Identity" Movement
Patrick Minges
American Academy of Religion Conference
1994



"While Criminals Run Loose...Undeclared War Against Christian
America" [1]

"There is a direct connection between [the above story], the Waco
massacre and the assassination of Vicki and Samuel Weaver in
Naples, Idaho...Since Clinton's backing comes from Israel and
International Zionism, that means that Christian Fundamentalists,
and particularly those who tend to be independent and patriotic,
could be targeted for repression, physical attack, or incarceration
without cause at the behest of the Clinton backers. In fact, you or
a group that you belong to may have already been targeted. [2]

The election of Bill Clinton to the presidency of the United States
may have been a welcome change to those in the American public
sphere who have been out of power in the Reagan/Bush era, but it
set forth a collective shudder from the consciousness of
evangelical and conservative America. With the election of Clinton
to the presidency, the social and political power base of the
religious right has been undermined and a new generation of leaders
and "social engineers" has assumed the reigns of responsibility.
When viewed through the ideological framework of the extreme
religious right, Clinton's election is a critical element in an
apocalyptic struggle for the soul of a nation and the destiny of a
people.

When Patrick Buchanan appeared at the 1992 Republican National
Convention in Houston, he warned America of the change that would
occur with the election of the Democrats to office. The change he
described was a radical change, and as he put it, "not the kind of
change we can abide in a nation that we still call God's country."
[3] At a later point in his speech, he stated "There is a religious
war going on in this country for the soul of America. It is a
cultural war as critical to the kind of nation we shall be as the
cold war itself, for this war is for the soul of America." [4]

Though Buchanan's statement may have seemed like the rhetorical
excess of a failed presidential candidate, he was articulating the
deepest fears of a generation of disenfranchised Americans who
perceive their way of life being challenged by the changing
demographics of the American population. The radical religious
right views these changes within an apocalyptic framework rooted in
a century of prophetic thought and propelled by a theological
perspective that views every event as leading to a final dramatic
confrontation between good and evil. Though it is not entirely
accurate to refer to Buchanan as the "thinking man's David Duke,"
his eloquence gives an air of credibility to a much darker vision
in American religion and politics.

Two recent events crystallize this vision. The April 19, 1993,
F.B.I. assault upon David Koresh's compound in Waco, Texas is
perceived by members of the far religious right as being an
"American holocaust" in which "Americans were being pressured,
intimidated, and coerced into believing that Gestapo and KGB
tactics are par for the course and are thus to be accepted as every
day occurrences in our once Christian nation." [5] A second
critical event for the far religious right was the F.B.I. assault
and capture of survivalist Randy Weaver, in which his wife and son
were killed by federal agents. Pastor Carl Franklin of Church of
Jesus Christ Christian-Aryan Nations viewed this assault upon
Weaver's family as the "government coming four-square against a
Christian, American white family. When the feds blew the head off
of Vicki Weaver, I think symbolically that was their war against
the American woman, the American mother, the American white wife.
This is the opening shot of the second American Revolution." [6]

A common denominator in each of these incidents is a religious
movement of the far right, the "Christian Identity" movement. This
movement, which came to public attention in the Reagan/Bush era,
has spread in a global climate of accelerating right wing
extremism. The "Christian Identity" movement, referred to as a
"theology of hate" by the B'nai B'rith, [7] is a theological system
centered on a racist/anti-Semitic weltanschauung and a sense of
prophetic destiny. Though it lacks a cohesive ecclesiastical
structure, it is coordinated through a loosely affiliated
collection of churches/compounds throughout the United States which
serve as recrutiment and organizational centers. Its theology is a
unique cultural system that provides the ideological unity and
theoretical framework for as many as 30,000 of the disparate
elements of the far right, the Ku Klux Klan, neo-nazis, skinhead
racists, and the "Aryan" resistance movement. [8] "Identity"
theology, in its current form, has its ideological origins in two
nineteenth century movements: nativism and an obscure historical
theology known as Anglo-Israelism.

The Development of Identity Theology

>From the very beginnings of the colonial enterprise, American
Protestants have considered themselves to be a chosen nation. They
see themselves set above the rest of humanity with a special
responsibility for the fulfillment of biblical prophecy. Millennial
expectations shaped a view of Protestant America as the culmination
of God's unfolding plan for the destiny of the nations. The English
Reformation, the settlement of North America , the establishment of
the "city on the hill," the wars against the French and the
Indians, the American Revolution, and even the Civil War
established that God was powerfully at work in our midst.

Nativist thought arising out of the economic and social crises of
the nineteenth century increasingly defined this evil as those who
were non-white, non-Protestant, and non-native born. Nativism, as a
movement, defined itself in opposition to that empirical other
which more and more began to populate the American landscape. In
this view of America, evil did not exist as an abstract force, but
in a "very this-worldly personification." [9]

In the early nineteenth century, the nativist movement focused upon
the massive influx of Catholic immigrants, especially the Irish, as
a threat to America's internal security. Anti-Catholic sentiments
viewed the Catholic church as the "Whore of Babylon" and
sensationalist literature such as Maria Monk's The Awful
Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu Nunnery of Montreal whipped nativist
sentiments into a flurry of violent activity. An Ursuline Monastery
in Massachusetts was burned in 1834, anti-Catholic riots erupted in
New York and Philadelphia (where a seminary and two churches were
set ablaze), and an anti-Catholic party, the American Party, swept
large numbers into political office on the eve of the Civil War.
Following the Civil War, the American Protective Association was
founded in 1887 to curb the dangers of "Romanism," limit
immigration, and protect the public school system from the
challenge of the parochial system.

Following the Civil War, especially in the South in the latter
years of the nineteenth century, the nativist movement began to
reframe evil from religious into distinctly racial terms. [10]
Charles Carroll The Negro a Beast, published by the American Book
and Bible House, in the early 1890's exemplified this movement. It
built upon the racist mythology of the Curse of Ham that had played
a significant role in the enslavement of Africans. Caroll further
argued that the African-Americans were subhuman, beastly, and
without a soul. Arising out of such sentiments, and ostensibly to
protect Southern culture from the danger of "miscegenation," the Ku
Klux Klan was founded in Pulaski, Tennessee on Christmas Eve, 1865.
The official application for charter membership to the Ku Klux Klan
establishes that one must be "A believer in the tenets of Christian
religion, the maintenance of white supremacy, the practice of
honorable clannishness, and the principles of `pure Americanism.'”
[11] In 1867, Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest,
reorganized the Ku Klux Klan as a paramilitary unit to protect
Southern interests during reconstruction. In so doing, he set the
tone for his modern paramilitary counterparts in the "Identity"
movement. D.W. Griffith's epic 1915 film Birth of a Nation, based
on Thomas Dixon's novel The Clansman, solidified the Ku Klux Klan's
mythos of an apocalyptic racial struggle as an enduring vision in
American ideology.

In the beginning of the twentieth century, nativist thought
combined the religious and racial "other" into a single component
and focused upon the Jew as the locus of evil in American society.
Henry Ford's Dearborn Independent, edited by William J. Cameron,
gained notoriety in the twenties for espousing anti-Semitic
conspiracy theories about the Jews controlling the world economy,
Jewish Bolshevism exploiting the economic crisis, and the Jews as
an evil religious force out to destroy Anglo-Saxon America. [12]
Within the pages of the Dearborn Independent in the twenties was to
be found the first publication of The Protocols of the Learned
Elders of Zion in the United States. The Protocols, which has been
republished many times in the United States, details the strategy
of the High Jewish Council, the Sanhedrin, and the Masonic Order
for total global domination. The Protocols promotes the conspiracy
theory of a secret council of Jewish elders who sought to seize
world power by manipulating the economy through a cabal of bankers,
puppet politicians, and the press. The Protocols are a critical
element in "Identity" literature. [13]

Another influential individual that used the Protocols to promote
anti-Semitism in the early twenties was Father Charles Coughlin. It
was Father Coughlin, in the heart of the Depression, who laid the
blame for the depression upon the international Jewish conspiracy.
He also aligned himself with the neo-Nazi German-American Bund and
spoke up in defense of Nazi persecution of Jews in Germany. [14] In
his radio essay of February 1933 entitled "Banks and Gold,"
Coughlin cites the role of international bankers in the depression
and suggests a larger conspiracy:

Long enough we have been the pawns and chattels of the modern
pagans who have crucified us on the cross of gold. Through
politeness only have we dignified them with the term of
international bankers...I have dared not only to suggest to you but
to implore you to organize legally and peacefully against the
Morgans, the Kuhn-Loebs, the Rothschilds, the Dillon-Reades, the
Federal Reserve banksters, the Mitchells, and the rest of that
undeserving group, who without either the blood of patriotism or of
Christianity flowing in their veins, have shackled the lives of men
and of nations with the ponderous links of their golden chain. [15]


In 1938, Coughlin's followers took his advice and the "Christian
Front" was organized in New York City. The Christian Front was
composed of organizations such as: the Crusaders for Americanism,
The American Nationalists, The American Patriots, the Christian
Mobilizers, and the German American Bund. [16] The Christian
Front's political vehicle was a newspaper entitled Social Justice
that often bore titles such as "Keep America for Americans" and
"The Truth about the Jews." [17] The Christian Front organized
boycotts of Jewish establishments and established The Christian
Index to Christian owned businesses. They advocated hiring
Christians only, and emblazoned "Think Christian! Act Christian!
Buy Christian!" on their materials. The Christian Front encouraged
militancy in the face of increasing alien influences upon the
nation. In so doing, Coughlin and the Christian Front proved to be
the forerunners of the modern "Christian Identity" movement.

However, the most profound influence upon the formulation
"Christian Identity" ideology is a theological movement from the
nineteenth century known as Anglo-Israelism. Anglo-Israelism places
the nations of Europe as descendants of the Ten Lost Tribes of
Israel. In 1871, the "Identity" movement's founder, Edward Hine,
published and sold in England 250,000 copies of a treatise entitled
Identification of the British Nation with Lost Israel. The work, a
best seller in England, was brought to the United States during the
latter years of the nineteenth century by Rev. W.H. Poole of
Detroit. [18] Hine's race-centered work was influenced by the
scientific racism of post-Darwinian writers such as de Comte de
Gobineau who stated in his 1855 Essai sur l'Inegalite des Races
Humaines that, "The racial question dominates all the other
problems of history...the inequality of races suffices to explain
the whole unfolding of the destiny of peoples...History shows that
all civilization flows from the white race, that no civilization
can exist without the cooperation of this race." [19]

Anglo-Israelism, as espoused by Hine, believes that for two
thousand years the world has mistaken the true identity of the
Jews. The true Jews, the descendants of the patriarchs and those
God called his "Chosen People," are the people of Western Europe.
The people known today as Jews are actually an Asian race, the
"Khazars" (Ashkenazim), that descended from the seed of Satan
planted in Eve's belly when she was seduced by Satan in the Garden.
Eve gave birth to two son's: Adam's son, Abel, and Satan's son,
Cain. Cain slew Abel. The descendant's of Cain crucified Jesus.
Throughout the history of humanity, the descendants of Cain have
attempted to eradicate the progeny of Adam. [20] The Bible is a
history of the struggle. The Revelation to John, or Apocalypse, is
the prophecy regarding the end of this struggle. [21]

According to Anglo-Israelism, the white race is biblical Israel.
Isaac's sons (Saxons) crossed the Caucasus Mountains hundreds of
years before the birth of Jesus to settle in the British Isles, the
"British Israel." This migration to the British Isles occurred
around 975 B.C.E., when the ten northern tribes of Israel were
captured and taken into captivity by the Assyrians. Two of the ten
tribes, Ephraim and Manasseh migrated virtually intact through the
Caucasus Mountains into Northwestern Europe. Ephraim was to become
"a company of nations" -- the British Commonwealth. [22]

The second son of Joseph, Manasseh, was to become a "great nation"
-- the United States. The "Identity" church teaches that the
Manasseh tribe crossed the Atlantic aboard the Mayflower to
America. In America, God gave them such sacred documents as the
Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of
Rights. Therefore, the United States is a holy country of the House
of David and the white people who settled it are entitled to the
country through the divine covenant. The documents of the founding
fathers are considered sacred and stand in continuity with the
covenant of Abraham. "Identity" believers respond only to higher
law and morality as defined in the Bible and to the divine will as
expressed in the writings of the founding fathers. [23]

Inherent in "Identity" thought as expressed in Anglo-Israelism is a
dualism. A mythology that posits the white race as the Children of
Israel, the highest expression of good, must also construct an
evil. For "Identity" believers, this evil takes the form of the
"false" children of Israel -- what humanity considers to be
Judaism. As the Assyrians were transporting the Northern tribes of
Israel in the eighth century B.C.E., the Southern tribes of Judah
were conquered by the Babylonians and transported into exile. It is
during this period that the "Identity" movement sees Judaism as
separating itself from its Old Testament background and falling
into heresy.. [24] In Babylonia, the people of Judah fell under the
influence of pagan beliefs and were introduced to the "black" magic
of Satan. The product of this period is the Babylonian Talmud, one
of the central documents of the Jewish religion and the foundation
of Rabbinical Judaism. [25]

In addition, the people of Judea fell into even greater apostasy.
Under the reign of the benevolent king Cyrus and the Persians, the
people of Judea were allowed to return to the Holy Land to rebuild
the Holy Temple of Solomon. During this period, the people of the
Southern Kingdom intermarried with the Edomites (Africans) and
began to take on the "dark" features of the native Africans. All
people not of Northern European extraction are lumped into a
category of soulless subhumans called "mud people." [26] When the
people of the Southern Kingdom intermarried with the "mud people,"
they committed a crime against God:

[the] characteristics of the racial type we recognize as that of
the Jews today were the result of intermarriages in the days of
Ezra and Nehemiah. At that time a mutation of the blood stream
occurred...(which was a) ...defection from the will of God. [27]

Just as with the earlier nativist movement, a shift occurred from a
religious conception of evil to a racial one. It is the
construction of evil in starkly racial terms which reduces the
complexity of our existence to the lowest common denominator and
provides the key to "Identity" theology. When the white person
recognizes their "identity" as the Nation of Israel and the nature
of good and evil in our world, they will be compelled to act in a
manner consistent with this ideology. In an apocalyptic struggle
twixt good and evil, the "Identity" movement offers salvation. It
is a salvation by race alone.

With the identification of evil in a "very this-worldly
personification," "Identity" theorists begin to weave a web of
ideology that traces the hidden hand of evil throughout history
from the crucifixion of Christ to the Trilateral Commission of the
postmodern era. Their ideology developed as nativist impulses
combined with a racist and anti-Semitic "Identity" philosophy of
history to create a panoply of conspiracy theories in which the
common denominator is this face of evil. All complexities are
rendered negligible within this ideology; all historical events
and, indeed, all current events are controlled and manipulated by
this hidden and powerful force. In reducing history to this lowest
common denominator, the "Identity" movement has created a mythology
that even the simplest mind can grasp. That is the appeal of the
"Identity" movement.

Stephen O' Leary, in his recent work Arguing the Apocalypse, notes
the interrelatedness of conspiracy theories and the apocalyptic
mentality. Conspiracy theories are ultimately spatial locating the
source of evil outside of the "true community" and providing the
impetus to locate and neutralize the "other," this locus of evil:
the cabal. Apocalyptic myths offer a temporal or teleological
framework for understanding evil by claiming that evil must grow in
power until its ultimate day of reckoning. Thus, discourses of
conspiracy and apocalypse are linked by a common function: each
develops symbolic resources that enable societies to define and
address the problem of evil. In fact, conspiracy arguments are
often enveloped into the larger theoretical framework of
apocalyptic mythologies in order to find expression within given
communities. [28]

The Modern Movement

One of Coughlin's assistants in the Christian Front, and an
associate of Henry Ford and Huey Long, was Gerald L.K. Smith.
Smith, an ordained minister in the Disciples of Christ Church,
gained notoriety as one of America's most noted anti-Semites by
staging an elaborate Passion Play in Louisiana. When confronted
concerning the profound anti-Semitism of the passion play, Smith
responded that if his play is anti-Semitic, then "the New Testament
is anti-Semitic." [29] Following W.W.II, Smith formed the Christian
Defense League, an early survivalist offshoot of the Ku-Klux Klan.
Smith's tabloid, The Cross and the Flag, was among the first to
specifically use "Identity" theology in the manner that it is used
today, i.e. to provide religious justification for racist and
anti-Semitic violence. [30]

Smith, incorporating Ford's conspiracy theories and the popular
image of the Jews as Shylock, spread the image of the "hidden hand"
of Jewry influencing history. However, following W.W.II and the
Nazi Holocaust, the widespread audience that had previously
accepted this "hidden hand" message began to wane. No longer
finding an audience among the general populace, the movement turned
to a more extremist community.

One of Smith's lieutenants in his organization, the Christian
Anti-Communist Crusade, was an ordained Alabama Methodist minister,
Dr. Wesley Swift. As one of the editors of The Cross and the Flag,
it was Swift who actually incorporated "Identity" theology,
especially Anglo-Israelitism, into Christian Defense League
rhetoric and helped establish Smith as one of the icons of the
"Christian Identity" movement. [31] In 1946 Swift founded the
Church of Jesus Christ-Christian, that is still in operation today
in Hayden Lake, Idaho. It was Dr. Swift, a former Ku Klux Klan
Kleagle, who was the first to spread the teachings of the
"Identity" movement into the world of the Ku Klux Klan and the
neo-Nazis in the early sixties under the auspices of his Church of
Jesus Christ-Christian.

Dr. Wesley Swift rapidly became the foremost proponent of the
"Christian Identity" movement in its modern formulation. He was
also among the first in the "Identity" movement to assert the need
for paramilitary organizations to defend the movement and to help
accomplish its goals through means other than the organizational
and rhetorical. Swift formed the racist paramilitary California
Rangers in the early sixties; the Rangers formed the core of the
late sixties right wing revolutionaries, the Minutemen. The
Minutemen were arrested in 1968 after blowing up a police station
and attempting to rob several banks. Keith Gilbert, one of the
Minutemen and a member of Swift's church, was arrested for stealing
1,400 lbs. of TNT in a plot to blow up Martin Luther King at the
Hollywood palladium. [32]

One of Swift's associates in the Church of Jesus Christ- Christian,
Colonel William Gale, began his own "Identity" operation in
Mariposa, California. Colonel Gale had formerly been an officer
with Gen. Douglas MacArthur and a candidate for Governor of
California on an anti-desegregation ticket in 1958. [33] In
Mariposa, Gale began to produce the newsletter Identity that helped
to solidify the ideology of the "Identity" movement. Early in the
seventies, Col. Gale left Mariposa and settled in the foothills of
the Sierra Nevada Mountains where he formed his own "Identity"
congregation, the Ministry of Christ Church. During this period
Gale and his associates organized an early branch of the Posse
Comitatus, a violent survivalist paramilitary organization. Members
of the Posse Comitatus have been involved in numerous violent
episodes, including the taking a grade school hostage in Wyoming
and slaying two federal marshalls in North Dakota. In 1983, Gale
described the goals of the "Identity" movement:

Yes, we're going to cleanse the Land. We're going to do it with a
sword. And we're going to do it with violence. "Oh," they say,
"Reverend Gale, you're teaching violence." You're damn right I 'm
teaching violence! God said you're going to do it that way, and
it's about time somebody is telling you to get violent, whitey.
[34]

In 1963, Gale and Swift recruited Richard G. Butler, an
aeronautical engineer from Lancaster, California. to the Church of
Jesus Christ-Christian. Butler, a long time white supremacist, had
been associated with William Dudley Pelley's Silver Shirt Legion as
early as the 1930s. Under Swift's guidance and direction, Butler
became the lightning rod of the white supremacist "Identity
Movement." Rev. Butler, a Presbyterian who received his
"ordination" through the mail, assumed the leadership of the Church
of Jesus Christ-Christian following the death of Wesley Swift in
1970. In 1974, Butler and a handful of his congregation moved to
southern Idaho near Hayden Lake to establish a survivalist
"Identity" encampment. In this idyllic setting, Butler seeks to
establish a "Promised Land "-- a white-only, martially run,
eugenically ordered, and self-enclosed enclave. As a follower of
Butler puts it, "You have Detroit for your niggers, and we'll have
the Northwest for our Aryans." [35] From this central church and
compound at Hayden Lake, the gospel of "Christian Identity" would
be used to consolidate the splinter groups of the hate movement
into an army of God against the enemy ZOG -- the Zionist Occupation
Government.

Under Butler's leadership, the "Identity" movement has been
propelled into a millenialist sect whose members not only have
visions of the impending Apocalypse, but also seem bent upon
ushering in the proposed conflagration through acts of
insurrectionary violence. Butler has taken the "Identity" theology,
with its roots in nativism and Anglo-Israelitism, and paired it
with an active program of group violence. Thus a critical element
in the "Christian Identity" movement is a militant apocalypticism
rooted in the dispensational premillennialism of the Christian
right and its fundamentalist counterparts. In "Identity" theology
the modern era is the "last dispensation," perceived to be a time
of particular depravity, reaching its climax in a seven year
tribulation entitled the "Rahowa" -- the racial holy war. [36]
However, a distinct difference between the "Identity" Christians
and the dispensational premillennialists is that the "Identity"
movement possesses no theory of the Rapture. According to
"Identity" theology, the "Rapture Hoax" is sponsored by state
supported (i.e., those churches receiving tax-free status from the
government) "Ba'al churches" to lull "marshmallow Christianity"
into a false sense of security. It prevents their active concern
about the immediacy and even the necessity of the impending
apocalypse.. [37] It is this sense of necessity that pushes the
"Identity" movement into confrontations such as the one in Los
Angeles in which four Fourth Reich skinheads were arrested for
plotting to murder prominent African-Americans and to bomb the
First A.M.E. Church to precipitate a race war.

In this "present as future" centered theology, every action reveals
the immediacy of the struggle between good and evil. As there is no
rapture, "Identity" believers see prophecy being fulfilled in their
midst--apocalypticism's birthpangs/tribulations are evident.
Recognition of one's "identity" is an act of salvation. One
realizes that eschatology is a direct and personal story. The
"Identity" believers understand themselves as "soldier saints" who
are the fulfillment of Christ's kingdom. It is through their divine
agency that the Lord expresses the divine will. It is they who will
"rule and reign" in the “Kingdom.” [38]

These are the end times, according to the "Identity" movement
gospel, and the signs are everywhere apparent to those who have the
power to see. A tract from the Covenant, Sword, and Arm (C.S.A.) of
the Lord decries witches "sexually mutilating people," "sodomite
homosexuals waiting in their lusts to rape," "negro beasts who eat
the flesh of men," and "seed of Satan Jews sacrificing people in
darkness." [39] The greatest threat, however, is from "city-living
white Christians and 'do-gooders' who've fought for the rights of
these groups." [40] These who have succumbed to
"Judeo-Christianity" are being led by “Jewish trained theologians”
into a blindness to the threat that is posed by a Satanic
conspiracy to end the white race.

The mythology of the "Christian Identity" movement comes to its
most interesting expression in its Christology, even though the
Christology is a later development in relationship to most Identity
beliefs. In the Greatest Love Story Never Told, Pastor Pete Peters
asserts that it is through the blood of Jesus Christ that God has
brought the Israelite people who recognize their identity back into
the divine covenant:

It was a bloody death so that her sins would be washed away, and a
New Covenant be established with `those who have been called.'...It
is through baptism that we are able to contact the blood of Christ.
It is a three step process. The first step was that Jesus Christ
had to shed his blood to acquit us legally, or justify us. But,
remission requires two steps on our part to accomplish the
cleansing and complete the process. The second step is our death,
or repentance, to our old way of life. The third step is our burial
in baptism which permits us to seize the status of the acquitted
through His blood -- we become free of the old debt of sin. [41]

The Jesus of the Identity churches is a member of the House of
David and of the true Nation of Israel, but we are to remember that
this means that he is distinctly white. Jesus was also fully God, a
militant, an extremist, a paramilitarist, a racist, and a Jew-hater
whose only mission was to find the lost sheep...the true nation of
Israel. (Matthew 15:24) [42]

The responsibility for the salvation of the race lies with those
who recognize their "identity" and struggle to endure and
"overcome" the tribulations. "Identity" gospel teaches that the
"overcomers" who will overcome evil and survive Rahowa (the racial
holy war) will be the "Elect" of the new kingdom. The "Elect" are
the "soldier saviors," those who have prepared for the tribulations
by paramilitary training, building fortifications, stockpiling
weapons and supplies, and educating themselves regarding their
"identity" and its ensuing responsibility. As Identity Pastor
Richard Butler preaches from his pulpit in Hayden Lake:

The white youth of this nation shall utilize every method and
option available to them

to neutralize and, quite possibly, engage in the wholesale
extermination of subhuman

non-Aryan peoples from the face of the North-American continent.
Men, women, and

children, without appeal, who are of non-Aryan blood shall be
terminated or expelled. [43]

Not being one to tarry with idle rhetoric, Butler in the early
1980's established the political/military arm of his Church of
Jesus Christ-Christian: the Aryan Nations. In cooperation with
other "Identity " ministers such as Rev. John Harrell , Rev. Gordon
Mohr, "Bishop" Daniel Gayman, and Rev. Jim Ellison, the "Identity"
movement began setting up paramilitary training centers throughout
the country. Gathering forces for the final battle of Armageddon to
take place in the heartland of the United States, places such as
the Church of Israel and Our Heritage Academy in Missouri and the
"Endtime Overcomer Survival Training School" in Arkansas help train
the Elect:

We believe that God is raising up a remnant out of the nations,
giving them the spirit

of the Sonship, to groom them into perfection, to be manifested as
mature sons of God,

who walk upon this earth, and who will rule and reign upon earth as
his elect. [44]

In Pastor Butler's Church of Jesus Christ - Christian Aryan Nations
(symbolizing the fusion of religion and politics), the Church and
the military compound stand side by side. To accentuate the
austerity of the current situation, Butler often ends his sermon
with "As long as this alien tyranny evil occupies our land, hate is
our law and revenge is our duty" and requires new members to the
Church take an oath "never to betray my Aryan brothers, never to
rest on this earth until there is created a national state for my
Aryan brothers, one God, one Nation, one Race.” [45] A letter from
Sheldon Emry to the Christian Patriot's Defense League in 1979
articulates the apocalyptic fervor:

The Kingdom Identity Truth does not just tell you that you will
remain on earth during this

last battle, it gives you instruction, hope and strength as you
join in and are used as the hand

of God in the battle...The attaining of the Kingdom is called a
`battle,' `warfare,' we are told

to `oppose,' and we are called `God's battle ax and weapons of
war'...We must prepare ourselves

for the journey and the war for the Kingdom... That will mean
spiritual preparation and

physical preparation all the way from survival supplies, weapons,
and training, to contingency plans. [46]

In 1978, the Mein Kampf of a new generation was published under the
auspices of the National Alliance, a fusion of Klan and Nazi
organizations that evolved out of George Wallace's presidential
campaign of 1972. The Turner Diaries, written by William Pierce (a
George Lincoln Rockwell associate and director of the National
Alliance), is an apocalyptic manifesto that not only details the
coming race war but also lays out the strategy and mechanisms for
accomplishing it.

The Turner Diaries describes the struggle of Earl Turner against
the "Jewish-liberal-democratic plague" [47] that has turned America
into "a swarming horde of indifferent, mulatto, zombies." [48] The
American public has been disarmed as a result of gun control
legislation entitled the "Cohen act." They are controlled by bands
of armed (often Black) police known as Human Rights Councils, rape
laws have been ruled "discriminatory," and "sexual debauchery" has
"reached a level that would have been unimaginable only two or
three years ago. The queers, the fetishists, the mixed-race
couples, and the exhibitionists are parading their perversions in
public." [49] In this violently racist novel, Turner and his
cohorts in the "Organization" (and the even more elite secret
society, the "Order") wage war against the government of the United
States. In The Turner Diaries, the stakes of the war are quite
clear:

If the Organization fails in its task now, everything will be lost
- our history, our heritage,

all the blood and sacrifices and upward striving of countless
thousands of years. The Enemy

we are fighting fully intends to destroy the racial basis of our
existence...If we fail, God's

great Experiment will come to and end, and this planet will once
again, as it did millions of

years ago, move through the ether devoid of higher man. [50]

The Turner Diaries, set in the waning years of the twentieth
centuries, meticulously details a series of terrorist bombings,
counterfeiting rings, political assassinations, armed car and bank
robberies, and wholesale military assaults upon "the System." In a
final cataclysmic struggle, chemical and nuclear weapons assaults
are launched upon a number of metropolitan areas so as to secure
control of the United States for the "Organization," establish a
political order based on the ethnic cleansing of the population. In
the end, the "Great Revolution" is accomplished: "...it was the
year 1999, according to the chronology of the Old Era -- just 110
years after the birth of the Great One [Hitler] -- that the dream
of a White world finally became a certainty." [51]

Though The Turner Diaries was a fictionalized account of a
right-wing revolutionary overthrow of the United States, it became
the blueprint for a series of paramilitary strikes originating out
of "Identity" encampments throughout the United States in the
middle of the 1980's. The Order, an organization directly inspired
by The Turner Diaries and originating at Butler's Aryan Nations
Church in Idaho, engaged in a series of bombings, robberies and
attacks on federal officers in the early 80's. The Order was led by
Robert Jay Matthews who died in a 1984 fire started by FBI flares
after a 35 hour standoff near Seattle. Also arising out of the
"Identity" paramilitary encampments and influenced by The Turner
Diaries was Gordon Kahl's survivalist tax-resistor organization,
the Posse Comitatus. Kahl, a North Dakota farmer and "Identity"
follower, and his son killed two federal marshals in a gunfight in
1983 following an attempted arrest after a Posse Comitatus meeting
in Medina, North Dakota. Kahl fled to an "Identity" encampment in
Smithville, Arkansas, which was then surrounded by marshals and FBI
agents. The elder Kahl was immolated in a fire ignited when a smoke
grenade thrown by police landed in one of the 100,000 rounds of
ammunition stored at the fortified encampment. In his account of
the slaying of the two federal officers, Kahl noted that:

We are a conquered and occupied nation, conquered and occupied by
the Jews and their

hundreds or maybe thousands of front organizations doing their
Un-Godly work, They have their objectives in ruling the world.
Destroy Christianity and the white race. Neither can be
accomplished by itself. They stand or fall together. [52]

In the late eighties, many of the "Identity" movement's leaders
were arrested, and violent confrontations with federal authorities
led to a great decrease in the strength of the movement as an
organized paramilitary operation. However, the movement has neither
ceased to function as an ideological apparatus nor has it decreased
in its appeal to numbers of dispossessed and disenchanted young
people seeking an outlet for their frustrated ambitions. In a
movement that thrives on martyrs, the death or imprisonment of a
leader only serves to proliferate a message among an audience who
already feels besieged and can easily explain political repression
within the contexts of conspiracy theory. In addition, the
"Identity" movement flourishes in prison where race is often the
lowest common denominator and where "Identity" ideology serves as a
link between the prisoners and those who run the prisons. As a
black prisoner from Lucasville Prison in Ohio recently described
the situation following a riot in the prison, "Everything there is
straight-up politics on the white side, the Aryans control
everything drugs, prostitution, and getting the best jobs." [53]
What was seen as a punishment for sedition is producing a whole new
generation of insurrectionaries.

Apocalypse Now

The "Identity" movement in the nineties has no shortage of martyrs.
In Randy Weaver of Northern Idaho, the "Identity" movement has
found a celebrated figure in the lineage of martyrs Gordon Kahl and
Robert Matthews. Weaver (an associate of Richard Butler) and Kevin
Harris (a friend of Gordon Kahl since high school) were recently
acquitted of federal charges of murder of a federal officer
following a shoot-out with federal authorities in Naples, Idaho
(near Hayden Lake). Weaver, whose wife and son were killed by
federal authorities, was under federal indictment for selling
illegal weapons to an undercover officer.

During the eleven day stand-off of August 1992, a number of
"Identity" followers surrounded the encampment carrying signs that
said "30.06 Go Through Your Vest Easy Fed Dogs," and "Zionist
Murder." A group of skinhead "Identity" followers tried to break
through the federal lines to assist Weaver. One of Weaver's
supporters voiced his anger, "I'm ready to get my gun and my clips
and take off my safety and pull my trigger with my finger. I don't
care anymore. This is the beginning of a revolution, a war." [54]

To the followers of the "Christian Identity" movement, Weaver was
not arrested for violation of federal firearm regulations, he was
singled out for persecution solely because of his "Identity"
beliefs. A May 1993 article in Criminal Politics magazine by
"Identity" minister Dr. Gordon Ginn detailed this allegation:

The fact is the government has no evidence against Randy Weaver,
his wife, his family, or

for that matter Kevin Harris. The Weaver family was put upon for
the same reason the

Davidians were put upon in Waco, Texas...That is: their religious
beliefs are not in accord

with the limits of what is acceptable to the International Zionist
Government secretly

running the United States...Obviously, you have here religious
persecution of any person

or organization that does not agree with the "established
religions”...Obviously, it's time for

sleepy Americans to wake up and take a stand [55]

The Spotlight, another newspaper of the far right frequently
associated with the "Identity" movement, focused upon the case as
an issue relating to "thought crimes:"

Because federal prosecutors have asked to move the date back, some
speculate the federal government will try to bring the defendant's
religious beliefs and opinions on race into question. A lawyer not
involved with the case told The Spotlight that prosecutors will put
the defendants on trial for thought crimes. Prosecutors will make
Harris and Weaver's religious beliefs relevant, then cross examine
them on their views...Prosecutors will try to tie these guys into
every `evil' organization in the last ten years. Doesn't that
amount to persecuting these people because they have particular
beliefs. [56]

The "Identity" movement, which felt beleaguered under the
Republicans during the eighties, feels besieged in the nineties by
Clinton: "Clinton, as the front man for a Satanic conspiracy--with
his hand on our collective throat--must be expelled along with his
mentally sick backers who are part of the deathly Zionist cabal."
[57] The "Identity" movement believes that 55% of the Clinton
cabinet is made up of Jewish Americans. [58] In addition, they
believe that Clinton seeks to establish a "police state" to enforce
"religious persecution" of "Identity" churches and to "make
possible the expansion of the wanton brutality leveled against the
Weaver family in Naples." [59] The article that discusses this
police state features a prominent picture of a black police officer
at the head of the article.

The May 1993 issue of Criminal Politics, a magazine that has become
a key voice in the "Identity" community, portrays a country in the
throngs of a compelling moral crisis. It notes that "You will be
paying for abortions with your tax dollars," and that an
"atmosphere of debauchery was evident at the 1993 Gay and Lesbian
March on Washington" at a time when the "Tailhook investigation was
being used to twist this country's morality." [60] In addition,
Pastor Peters' America the Conquered offers a detailed description
of the forces that are perceived to be in control of the country.
With numerous clippings from the country's newspapers, Peters
decries everything from gun control, witches, baby killers and
child stealers, Ba'al preachers, sodomites, crime, drugs, and
interracial marriage. Behind it all is the international conspiracy
of bankers who use these forces to undermine the morality and
quality of life for decent God-fearing Americans. It begins with
gun-control and ends in an enslaved society. Peter's outrageous
assertions even accuse "the cabal" of such plots as using margarine
and fluoridated water to demasculinize the country's men. [61]
Within the literature of hate, it is as though the Turner Diaries
have become a virtual reality; the Diaries have become the defining
point of a worldview rooted in the apocalyptic of hate.

Nowhere is the apocalyptic rhetoric more explicit than within the
depiction of the assault upon David Kouresh's Branch Davidian
"Identity" movement compound in Waco, Texas. In discussing the
"Waco Holocaust," the "Identity" press believes that the entire
event was precipitated by the Anti-Defamation League of the B'nai
B'rith against the Anglo-Israelite Davidians because of their
"Identity" beliefs. The descriptions of the burning of the Waco
compound are framed within the contexts of the assaults upon Robert
Matthews, Gordon Kahl, and Randy Weaver. An article in The
Spotlight describes the assault as part of an even larger exercise
to "further the agenda of the one world government...They are
helping the ban-Christianity movement." [62]

Criminal Politics places great significance on the fact that the CS
gas used against the Davidians was developed by the Israeli
military and has been used by the Israelis against Palestinian
"refugees." Criminal Politics consistently runs photographs of the
children killed in the Waco assault and advertises "Seventeen
Little Children (the story of the Waco Holocaust)." [63] An
editorial in the August 1993 Criminal Politics speaks of "the
seventeen children who died at the hands of the Clinton Government
in Waco...and the atrocities committed by the government in Naples,
Idaho. These constitute our own holocaust...a uniquely American
holocaust." The article concludes by saying "in reality we did not
join God's Christian army and we are not part of a volunteer
force...but rather we have been chosen -- (or drafted)--we have
been drafted into God's army. As a warrior your steps--are ordered
by the Lord. " [64]

The Icemen Cometh

It is important to note the growth of the "Identity" movement among
different segments of the population, especially among women. In
the early "Identity" movement, women played little or no role,
especially in the leadership. Even though their role in leadership
has changed little, women are now becoming a meaningful presence in
the "Identity" movement. Women make up as much as one-third of the
total membership. In spite of the rigid patriarchy of white
supremacist ideology, the women are also beginning to assert
themselves. White supremacist organizations such as the Aryan
Women's League, an offshoot of the White Aryan Resistance, have
attracted as many as 400 women in a dozen states and several
countries. Contrary to the stereotype, says Danny Welch, director
of the Southern Poverty Leadership Center's watchdog group
Klanwatch, "identity" racist skinhead groups include women
activists. "Women were in leadership roles from the beginning," he
says. "They've been out there with their Doc Martens from the
start, stomping people." [65]

It is David Duke, Populist candidate for the U.S. Senate, who is
credited with opening up the movement to women in the late
seventies. According to Duke, "Women have a vital role to play."
[66] Jim Redden, a reporter who has researched women in the
movement, agrees with Duke, "The women are more committed to racial
purity, more ferocious than the men. Perhaps they felt threatened
by minorities as street kids. They definitely buy into the idea of
racism." [67]

However, the most explosive growth of the "Christian Identity"
movement has occurred among the disenchanted and angry youth who
make up the racist skinhead groups that have sprung up in largely
urban areas. "Identity" churches such as the Neo-Nazi Church of the
Creator of Niceville, Florida, and Butler's Church of Jesus
Christ-Christian/Aryan Nations have attempted to spread "Identity"
ideology among this lost generation. They have been most successful
in their recruitment of new members from the skinhead movement.
Because of their volatility and preference for confrontation, the
skinheads have become the front-line troops for the white
supremacists. David Mazella, former skinhead, sees the skinheads as
the forefront of the "Identity" movement, "The old guys, they were
a bunch of bench sitters. The skinheads took it to the streets. It
was a new resource to rejuvenate these organizations." [68]

A skinhead "identity" group from Hurricane, Utah that calls itself
the "Army of Israel" has made plans to establish a whites-only
homeland on the border of Zion National Park. A Georgia skinhead
group, SS of America, published a notification in the "skinzine"
War Axe that stated simply, "We are everywhere, and we are nowhere.
You fail to see us, but we are here...We are the predators in your
urban jungles. And our time to strike is fast approaching.” [69]
And strike they will:

- A series of four racially motivated bombings occurred in
Sacramento, CA. over

a ten week period in the late summer of 1993. A Chinese-American
City Councilman's

house was bombed, the offices of the Japanese American's Citizen's
League

was firebombed, the NAACP headquarters was firebombed, and B'nai
Israel

Temple suffered attempted arson. A caller from the Aryan Liberation
Front

claimed responsibility.

- On July 19, 1993 six white youths were arrested in Los Angeles
who called

themselves the Fourth Reich and planned to attack the congregation
of Los

Angeles' most prominent African-American church and assassinate
Rodney

King, Louis Farrakhan, Al Sharpton, and Public Enemy. The youth
said that

they hoped the attacks would initiate a race war.

- The three white supremacists were brought into federal court in
San

Francisco and accused of bombing a NAACP office in Tacoma, Wash.,
on July

20, 1993 as part of an aborted series of commando raids planned by
the neo-Nazi

group Church of the Creator. The next target the trio had planned
were rap

music figures Ice-T and Ice Cube.

- On Aug. 6, 1993 a plastic surgeon Dr. Martin Sullivan was
assassinated by

"identity" follower Jonathan Haynes. Haynes, an adherent of William
Pierce,

was influenced by The Turner Diaries. Haynes believed that surgeons
such as

Sullivan helped destroy the Aryan race by giving non-Aryans Nordic
features.

- This spring , (1994) convicted pipe bomber Randall Anderson
admitted that

he bombed a roller-skating rink in Zion because its customers were
minority

youths. Anderson painted graffiti on the rink's wall reading, ". .
. Now We Will

Do What is Necessary to Ensure the Race and Make a Better World For
our

Children." [70]

Hate crimes are on the rise in the country. In the past year,
statistics indicate that hate crimes have increased nearly 17%. In
New York, hate crimes have increased by nearly 20%. In New Jersey,
which has the highest number of reported hate crimes, they have
increased by nearly 33%. Chicago has seen the highest rate of
increase in hate crimes. Anti-Semitic incidents have risen to a
record high: incidents on college campuses alone rose 36 %.
Anti-gay violence climbed 42% percent according to a survey of
eight major cities. Though these figures may be the result of an
increased willingness to report hate crimes, that there is a rise
in bias attacks is something that few people challenge.

Skinheads are frequent actors in hate crimes. Between 1987 and
1990, skinheads were responsible for six murders nationwide. In the
three years since, skinheads were responsible for twenty-two
killings. In 1992, skinheads were responsible for seven deaths,
almost a quarter of all bias-related deaths in the country. When
one skinhead in Sacramento tried to leave his group, six of his
friends crucified him on a board with nails, slashed his throat and
left him for dead. [71] These children of discontent form a new
generation of racists. "Hell, the Klan is a bunch of old farts who
ride around shooting and cursing, burn a cross and go home," said
Officer W.D. McNally of Birmingham, Alabama, "These little kids
will get worked up and go out and kill somebody." [72]

The millenialist rhetoric of the "Christian Identity" movement has
emerged from within the ideological corpus that developed out the
nativist and Anglo-Israelite movements of the nineteenth century.
It centers upon the chosenness of the white race, particularly
"White America," and its destiny within the framework of the divine
plan for salvation of humanity. It pits the special "identity" of
the chosen race against the dark forces of the conspiracy that
seeks to destroy "White America" by "polluting" the "white seed"
and by introducing alien political and religious beliefs into the
American consciousness. This struggle is framed within an
apocalyptic vision, in which "salvation by grace alone" is replaced
by "salvation by race alone" and the millennial clash is reduced to
the simplest and most base form of racist ideology.

It is easy to trivialize the rhetorical excess of a movement such
as the "Christian Identity" movement and to marginalize them as a
fringe element in the American religious identity. However, it is
important to note that in the seven years since the "Christian
Identity" movement first gained national attention, its numbers
have grown from between 2,000-5,000 in 1986 to currently more than
30,000. From a handful of churches in 1986, the "Christian
Identity" churches now number more than one hundred churches in at
least 20 states. Apart from the regular membership in the churches,
it is estimated that there are nearly a quarter of a million people
which are followers of the "Identity" movement. [73] The "Identity"
movement is spreading its message of hate through the use of the
use of computer networks, public access television programs such as
"Race and Reason" and "Airlink," and radio programs such as "Radio
Free America" and "Scriptures for America." Pastor Pete Peters, the
new doyen of the "Identity" movement, even uplinks a weekly program
via satellite disks into millions of American homes.

The "Christian Identity" movement is the link that ties young to
old; it is the bond that coalesces the various forces of the white
supremacist movement into a coherent ideological force. Propelled
by an apocalyptic vision of a racial holy war, guided by a destiny
in which God's purpose is fulfilled through their actions, and
understanding themselves as part of a historical tradition, the
members of the "Christian Identity" movement gather their numbers.
In acts of organized violence or in random acts under the terms of
the new "leaderless resistance" movement, they seek to initiate a
"new age" by responding to a prophecy guided by a "theology of
hate."

It is this new “leaderless” resistance that poses the greatest
threat. Whereas, the “militia” movement seeks to engage in a
strategic military struggle and prepares itself for such, the
“leaderless movement” believes in the acts of individuals and the
power of such dedicated individuals to engage in cataclysmic acts
of violence. The “Turner Diaries” is the bible of the “militia”
movement, but a new work by the same author guides the actions of
this new group of God-inspired terrorists. Andrew McDonald's newest
work is entitled Hunter and details the work of the solitary
soldier:

Oscar Yeager, a former combat pilot in Vietnam, now a comfortable
yuppie working as a defense department consultant in the Virginia
suburbs of the nation's capital, faces this question. He surveys
the race mixing, the open homosexuality, the growing influence of
drugs, the darkening complexion of the population as the tide of
non-white immigration swells. He finds that for him, there is no
choice at all: he is compelled to fight the evil which afflicts
America in the 1990's: his conscience will not let him ignore it
and joining it is inconceivable.

In “The Turner Diaries” author Andrew McDonald showed the outcome
of what is going on right in society right now. Now, in “Hunter, ”
he shows us what one man can do before it gets that far. [74]

Recognizing the inevitability of loss in a military confrontation,
this new theory of war has been advanced in recognition of the
tremendous potential of decentralized terrorism and the relative
inability of the government to respond to such a threat.

We can be lulled into a false sense of security in thinking that
the war is over. However, it has really yet only begun. “Christian
Identity” adherents wait patiently and struggle silently. While
choosing to hold on to their "identity," many have chosen to eschew
the traditional racist diatribe in order to become a part of the
"system" and betray it from within. Many more quietly wait for the
moment when they will be called upon in a moment to become a
warrior and strike a blow for their "liberation." A new generation
of "Earl Turners" and “Oscar Yeagers” now quietly waits till God
taps them on the shoulder and tells them it is their time:

We, the older and less active spokesmen for the folk and faith, are
being replaced by the young lions. The dragons of God have no time
for pamphlets, for speeches, for gatherings. They know their role.
They know their duty. They are the armed party which is being born
out of the inability of the white male youths to be heard. They are
the products of the failure of this satanic, anti-white federal
monstrosity to listen to more peaceful voices, such as our own. We
called for the dog federal government to let our people go! We
called for the government in Le Cesspool Grande to let us be apart
from their social experiments and their mongrelism, but to no
avail.

And now, as we had warned, now come the Icemen! Out of the north,
out of the frozen lands, once again the giants gather. [75]



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Footnotes
[1] Headline, The Spotlight, 14 September, 1992.
[2] Rev. Dr. Gordon Ginn, "Clinton's Dirty Tricks for Zionism,"
Criminal Politics: The Magazine of Conspiracy Politics, August
1992.

[3] Patrick Buchanan, "The Election is About Who We Are: Taking
Back our Country," Vital Speeches of the Day, (Vol. LVIII, No. 23,
September 15, 1992), 713.

[4] Buchanon, Vital Speeches of the Day, 714. copyright Patrick
Minges 1994

[5] "The Waco Holocaust," Midnight Messenger, May-June 1993.

[6] David Real, "Divide and Conquer; White Supremacists See Idaho
Cabin Standoff as First Salvo in Race War," The Dallas Morning
News, 2 November, 1992.

[7] Anti-Defamation League of the B'nai B'rith, "The `Identity
Churches' : A Theology of Hate," A.D.L. Facts, Vol. 28, No. 1
(Spring 1983), 3.

[8] Helen Zia, "Special Report: Women in Hate Groups: Who Are They?
Why Are They There?” Ms., v.1 no.5, (Mar-Apr 1991), 22.

[9] Peter Williams, America's Religions: Traditions and Cultures
(New York: MacMillan & Co., 1990), 190.

[10] This is, of course, establishing a false dichotomy. The
religious and the racial "other" were always perceived in a similar
light. The other was usually distinguished as both "dark" and
"heathen." However, I would argue that during this period racialist
perspectives came to dominate religious perspectives.

[11] Henry P. Fry, The Modern Ku Klux Klan (Boston: Small, Maynard,
& Co., 1921) p. 35

[12] Ronald Bayor, "Klans, Coughlinites and Aryan Nations: Patterns
of American Anti-Semitism in the Twentieth Century." American
Jewish History 76, no. 2 (1986), 182 .

[13] “These Protocols of the Elders of Zion are a program for the
enslavement of the world and the destruction of Christian

religion above all. Ever since their publication "The Protocols"
have been the most controversial writings in the

world. Powerful elements in society have made them controversial so
that few would be courageous enough to use

them. We are well aware that whoever uses the "Protocols" as a
legitimate reference is automatically labeled as a

fool and an "anti-Semite", for they are vehemently condemned by
Jews as the product of either Russian Czar Nicholas

II and his gov't, or as plagiarized material from other sources
such as the "Geneva Dialogues" written by one Maurice

Joly. Many deceived Christian/Patriotic Researchers have stated
that they are a product of the Bavarian Illuminati. "

[ Elizabeth Dilling, Smyrna, (BeWISE, n.d.), 1]

[14] Bayor, 183.

[15] Charles Coughlin, "Banks and Gold" in L.B. Ward, Father
Charles Coughlin (Detroit: Tower Publications, 1933), 170.

[16] Rev. Alson J. Smith, The Christian Front: Coughlin's Storm
Troopers, (New York: American League for Peace and Democracy,
n.d.), 5.

[17] Smith, 9.

[18] James Coates, Armed and Dangerous: The Rise of the Survivalist
Right (New York: Hill and Wang, 1987), 80.

[19] Comte de Gobineau quoted in William Shirer, The Rise and Fall
of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany, (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1960), 103.

[20] Pastor Pete Peters, The Greatest Discovery of Our Age. (La
Porte, CO:Scriptures for America, 1985), 14.

[21] Peters, 32.

[22] John R Fry, "Hate Crime in America," Church and Society Vol
LXXX, No. 5, (May/June, 1990), 18.

[23] Maynard Campbell, Kingdoms at War: The Second North American
Revolution. (n.p. 1990), 6.

[24] Howard B. Rand, Sabotaging the Scriptures (Merrimac, MA:
Destiny Publishers, n.d.), 7.

[25] Coates, 85.

[26] Mary Cooper, "The Growing Danger of Hate Groups, " Editorial
Research Reports 1, no. 18 (May 12, 89), 266.

[27] Destiny, Second Quarter 1969, quoted in Leonard Zeskind,The
`Christian Identity ' Movement (New York: Division of Church and
Society, National Council of Churches, 1986), 18.

[28] Stephen O' Leary, Arguing the Apocalypse: A Theory of
Millennial Rhetoric (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), 6.

29 Arnold Foster and Benjamin Epstein, "Gerald Smith's Road," The
New Anti-Semitism (New York: Anti-Defamation League of the B'nai-
B'rith, 1974)., 19-48.

[30] James Aho. The Politics of Righteousness: Idaho Christian
Patriotism (Seattle: Univ. of Washington Press, 1990), 272.

[31] Coates, 55.

[32] Aho, 57.

[33] Kevin Flynn and Gary Gerhardt, The Silent Brotherhood: Inside
America's Racist Underground (New York: The Free Press, 1989), 49.

[34] Coates, 97.

[35] Simon Winchester and Steven Lerner, "Idaho's Half-Baked
Messiah," Present Tense 14: no. 4 (May/June, 1987), 10.

[36] Aho, 54.

[37] Jack Mohr,To Deceive the Elect-The Rapture Fact or Fiction?
(Bay St. Louis, Miss., n.d.), 26.

[38] Mohr, 7.

[39] Prepare War (Pontiac,Mo: C.S.A. Bookstore,n.d.) 3-5.

[40] ibid.

[41] Pastor Pete Peters, The Greatest Love Story Never Told. (La
Porte, CO: Scriptures for America, 1993), 94-98.

[42] Gil & Gloria Whitehurst, Identity Scriptural Directory: "Or
where is it?" (n.p., n.d.) 28-30.

[43] Richard Butler, quoted in Simon Winchester and Steven Lerner,
"Idaho's Half-Baked Messiah," Present Tense 14: no. 4 (May/June,
1987), 10.

[44] "Statement of Purpose of the Citizen's Emergency Defense
System" quoted in Zeskind, 45.

[45] Kevin Flynn and Gary Gerhardt. The Silent Brotherhood: Inside
America's Racist Underground (New York: The Free Press, 1989), 57.

[46] Sheldon Emry, quoted in Zeskind., 44.

[47] Andrew MacDonald (a.k.a. William Pierce), The Turner Diaries
(Arlington: National Vanguard Books, 1978), 42.

[48] MacDonald, 34.

[49] MacDonald, 58.

[50] ibid.

[51] MacDonald, 210.

[52] Gordon Kahl, handwritten letter received at Aryan Nations
Headquarters quoted in Aho, 246.

[53] K.I. Pedizasi, "Racism Definitely a Factor in Lucasville:
Former Inmates Speak of Klan, Skinheads, Aryan Brotherhood," Call
and Post (Cleveland), April 22, 1993.

[54] Ashley Dunn, "Mountain Standoff Rallies Idaho Cradle of the
Fringe," Los Angeles Times, August 28, 1992.

[55] Rev. Dr. Gordon Ginn, "Weaver's Religious Beliefs on Trial in
Idaho," Criminal Politics: The Magazine of Conspiracy Politics, May
1993.

[56] "Feds Break Rules in Weaver Case" The Spotlight, October 26,
1992.

[57] Lawrence Patterson, Editorial, Criminal Politics: The Magazine
of Conspiracy Politics, March 1993.

[58] Criminal Politics: The Magazine of Conspiracy Politics, August
1993.

[59] "Clinton's Police State is Now Taking Shape in Congress,"
Criminal Politics: The Magazine of Conspiracy Politics, August
1993.

[60] Criminal Politics: The Magazine of Conspiracy Politics, May
1993.

[61] Pastor Pete Peters, America the Conquered (La Porte, CO:
Scriptures for America, 1993), 1-214.

[62] "Lawyer Files Suit Against Government in Texas Massacre," The
Spotlight, August 30, 1993.

[63] Criminal Politics: The Magazine of Conspiracy Politics, August
1993.

[64] ibid.

[65] David Van Biema, "When White Makes Right," Time August 9,
1993, 34.

[66] Zia, 23.

[67] Zia, 25.

[68] Van Biema, 35.

[69] ibid.

[70] Suzanne Espinoza, " Attacks by White Supremacists:New Fears
About Racist Groups," San Francisco Chronicle, August 13, 1993;
James Coates, "Wilmette Slaying Suspect's Words are Familiar to
Students of Hate," Chicago Tribune, August 11, 1993.

[71] David Freed, "Southland is Ripe Turf for White Hate Groups,"
Los Angeles Times, July 25, 1993.

[72] Van Biema, p. 35.

[73] Zia, 22.

[74] Bohica Concepts Catalog #12, text from advertisement for
Hunter, Randleman WA.,January 1994.

[75] Robert Miles, "From the Mountain," (November 1984) quoted in
Flynn, Gerhardt, 11.


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