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More on super sleuth - boy what a guy.

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more on militias
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Sun, 07 Jun 1998 21:18:08 -0700
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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Date: Sun, 07 Jun 1998 21:18:08 -0700

To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Subject: more on militias

> Institution: University Of Florida
> Contact: Steve Orlando , News Desk Editor
> E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED], Phone: 352-392-0186
>
> Posted
> 5/8/98
>
> UF Researcher: Militias Are Armed, Dangerous -- And Educated
> Writer: Cathy Keen, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Source: Keith Akins, (352) 373-4721
>
> GAINESVILLE, Fla. --- Militia groups have the weapons, explosives --
and a
> surprising degree of education -- to back up their threats of
increased
> violence as the new millennium approaches, says a University of
Florida
> researcher who infiltrated the movement.
>
> J. Keith Akins said his study defies the common belief that members of
violent
> extremist groups are uneducated and poor. The UF graduate student in
> anthropology said he found that statistically, militia members are
better
> educated than the general population and their membership cuts across
> traditional class boundaries.
>
> Census data show about 27 percent of American adults are high school
dropouts, compared with less than 10 percent of militia members
throughout
Florida, as Akins' study found. "There are faculty members, business
owners,
corporate executives, lawyers and doctors intermingled with rednecks,
the
unemployed and menial labor," he said.
>
> A disabled veteran curious about how decorated war hero Timothy
McVeigh
became involved in the Oklahoma City bombing, Akins joined a
Jacksonville
militia in March 1996 to research the movement for his dissertation. He
spent
three years
organizing the group's rallies and planning meetings and training
sessions
> with other militias throughout Florida, in the process joining a
skinhead'
> militia and a Ku Klux Klan chapter.
>
> "The militia movement is far more heavily armed than most people
realize,
and
> the danger of innocent people being caught in a random bombing is a
lot
higher
> than the general population is aware," said Akins. "As the millennium
> approaches, members of these groups are making more and more threats
that
may lead to violence similar to the bombings in Olympic Park and
Oklahoma
City."
>
> The millennium's significance is based on most militias'
interpretation of
> prophecies in the Bible's book of Revelation about the battle of
Armageddon,
> as well as persistent talk by evangelists such as Pat Robertson about
an
> approaching end to the world, he said.
>
> "They keep talking about when the war starts, but no one makes any
solid
> predictions about how it will start or who is going to start it,"
Akins
said.
> "Among the many individual threats, one member said, Americans had
better
get
> used to World Trade Center bombings and Oklahoma City. People are
fighting
> back. Like in all wars, innocents get killed.' Another warned that
people
> like Janet Reno will end up hanging from telephone poles or trees.'"
>
> An estimated 440 militia groups exist nationwide, with Florida having
one of
> the largest concentrations of them and white supremacy groups, Akins
said.
He
> identified 77 militias in the state, ranging in size from five to 30
members,
> along with 21 Ku Klux Klan and eight Nazi or skinhead' groups.
>
> "I found that nearly everyone in the militia groups owns multiple
firearms,
at
> least one member owns automatic assault weapons and the amount of
explosives
each organization has access to is far beyond what most people could
imagine,"
> Akins said. "They also have a lot more ties to violent groups in
Europe and
> Australia than most people think, using the Internet to exchange
information
> about how to make weapons and manufacture explosives."
>
> Despite their violent rhetoric, Akins said, most members are active in
their
> church, some are local politicians and nearly all are married with
children.
>
> Most militia members came out of New Right movements, gradually
growing
> disillusioned with these organizations as they perceive them failing
at
their
> mission to institute Christian law, Akins said. "They are much more
heavily
> influenced by people like Pat Robertson and Rush Limbaugh than most
people
are comfortable admitting," he said.
>
> Akins, incidentally, told militia members his time with them was for
research,
> which Brian du Toit, the professor supervising his work, said was the
right
> thing to do. Du Toit said he thinks the "ethics of our discipline
require us
> to tell people what we're doing. You do not infiltrate, keep quiet and
then
> spill the beans."
>
> "I hated what these people stood for and were trying to accomplish,"
Akins
> said. "But as I got to know them on a personal level, I found most to
be
> hardworking and decent. They simply got caught up in cultural changes
that
> were beyond their ability to understand, and in a desperate search for
> answers, bought into the movement's conspiracy theories."

--
*****************************************************
"The wealthiest 358 individuals in the world, all of them billionaires,
collectively own as much wealth as 45% of humanity."
 -- The United Nations Development Program Report '96 --
*****************************************************
The world's 477 billionaires have as much wealth as 52
percent of humanity.
 -- According to the Economic Policy Institute, in 1997 --
*****************************************************
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