Exactly WHAT in the water in Colorado is producing so many racists and mass 
killers??? Try the party that has run the state of Colorado and its 
subdivisions in association (or in competition) with the Republic Party, i.e., 
the Democratic Party.  While Republican Tom Tancredo is an unabashed 
immigrant-basher, etc., there is ex-CO governor Lamb (a Democrat!) whose 
immigrant-bashing is done in the name of Zero Population Growth (a group which 
has since re-named itself) and as a Board member of the (supposed 
"non-political") Sierra Club.


--- On Tue, 8/7/12, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [occupylageneralstrike] Wisconsin Killer Fed and Was Fueled by 
Hate-Driven Music
To: [email protected], [email protected], 
[email protected]
Date: Tuesday, August 7, 2012, 5:27 PM

Another Colorado connection!!! Exactly WHAT in the water in Colorado is 
producing so many racists and mass killers??? --- K.N.










-----Original Message-----


From: Michael Novick <[email protected]>


To: laamn <[email protected]>; occupylageneralstrike 
<[email protected]>


Sent: Tue, Aug 7, 2012 4:23 pm


Subject: [occupylageneralstrike] Wisconsin Killer Fed and Was Fueled by 
Hate-Driven Music















August 6, 2012
Wisconsin Killer Fed and Was Fueled by Hate-Driven Music
By ERICA GOODE and SERGE F. KOVALESKI

His music, Wade M. Page once said, was about how 
the value of human life has been degraded by tyranny.

But on Sunday, Mr. Page, an Army veteran and a 
rock singer whose bands specialized in the lyrics 
of hate, coldly took the lives of six people and 
wounded three others when he opened fire with a 
9-millimeter semiautomatic handgun in a Sikh 
temple in Oak Creek, Wis., the police said, before officers shot him to death.

To some who track the movements of white 
supremacist groups, the violence was not a total 
surprise. Mr. Page, 40, had long been among the 
hundreds of names on the radar of organizations 
monitored by the Southern Poverty Law Center 
because of his ties to the white supremacist 
movement and his role as the leader of a 
white-power band called End Apathy. The 
authorities have said they are treating the 
shooting as an act of domestic terrorism.

In Oak Creek and in the nearby leafy neighborhood 
of Cudahy, Wis., south of Milwaukee, where Mr. 
Page lived in the days before the attack, the 
magnitude and the nature of what had happened 
were only beginning to sink in, grief competing 
with outrage. A company flew its flag at 
half-staff. A Christian minister offered his 
parishioners help to a Sikh gathering at the Salvation Army.

At a news conference on Monday, Teresa Carlson, a 
special agent for the F.B.I., which is leading 
the investigation, said, We dont have any 
reason to believe that there was anyone else 
involved in the crime. Law enforcement officials 
said earlier on Monday they wanted to speak with 
a person of interest who was at the temple on 
Sunday, but by late afternoon they had ruled out 
any connection between him and the shooting.

Oak Creeks police chief, John Edwards, speaking 
at the news conference, identified the five men 
and one woman who died at the Sikh Temple of 
Wisconsin: Sita Singh, 41; Ranjit Singh, 49; 
Prakash Singh, 39; Paramjit Kaur, 41; Suveg 
Singh, 84; and Satwant Singh Kaleka, 65, who was the centers president.

Peter Hoyt, 53, a neighbor of Mr. Pages in 
Cudahy who often stopped to chat with him during 
morning walks, said he was stunned that the man 
he had known could have done something so 
violent. Mr. Page, he said, told him that he had 
broken up with a girlfriend in early June.

He didnt seem like he was visibly upset, Mr. 
Hoyt said about the breakup. He didnt seem 
angry. He seemed more emotionally upset. He wasnt mad. He was hurt.

Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern 
Poverty Law Center, said Mr. Page had come to the 
centers attention a decade ago because of his 
affiliation with rock bands known for lyrics that 
push far past the boundaries of tolerance.

The music that comes from these bands is 
incredibly violent, and it talks about murdering 
Jews, black people, gay people and a whole host 
of other enemies, Mr. Potok said. He added that 
in 2000, Mr. Page tried to buy unspecified goods 
from the National Alliance, which Mr. Potok 
described as a neo-Nazi organization and one of 
the countrys best organized and best financed hate groups.

But Mr. Potok said the center had not passed any 
information about Mr. Page to law enforcement.

We were not looking at this guy as anything 
special until today, he said. He was one of 
thousands. We were just keeping an eye on him.

Although little known among music fans, a steady 
subculture of racist and anti-Semitic rock bands 
has existed on the margins of punk and heavy 
metal in Europe and the United States since at 
least the 1970s. Hate groups sometimes use some 
of the bands and their record labels for 
fund-raising and recruiting, according to the law 
center and the Anti-Defamation League.

In an interview posted on the Web site of the 
record company Label56, Mr. Page mentioned going 
to Hammerfest, a white-supremacist festival in 
Georgia well known to civil rights advocates. He 
also said he played in various neo-Nazi bands, 
including Blue Eyed Devils, whose song White 
Victory includes the lines: Now Ill fight for 
my race and nation/Sieg Heil! The company 
removed the interview from its site on Monday.

Analysts for the F.B.I. and the Department of 
Homeland Security routinely monitor violent 
extremist Web sites of all kinds, including those 
attracting white supremacists, according to 
former officials of both agencies. But the 
departments work on the topic has been 
criticized. In 2009, conservatives in Congress 
strongly objected to a department report titled 
Rightwing Extremism, which speculated that the 
economic recession and the election of a black 
president could increase the threat from white supremacists.

Janet Napolitano, the homeland security 
secretary, withdrew the report and apologized for 
what she called its flaws. Daryl Johnson, the 
homeland security analyst who was the primary 
author of the report, said last year that after 
the flap, the number of analysts assigned to 
track non-Islamic militancy had been reduced 
sharply. Homeland Security Department officials 
denied his assertion and said the department 
monitored violent extremism of every kind, 
without regard to its religious or political bent.

J. M. Berger, an author and analyst on 
counterterrorism who runs the Intelwire Web site, 
said Mr. Page clearly had a history with the 
white supremacist movement. A song called 
Welcome to the South by Definite Hate, another 
band that Mr. Page played in and that Mr. Berger 
found online, refers to our race war and asks, 
What has happened to America/That was once so 
white and free? Mr. Berger said the lyrics and 
album art of Definite Hate echo the views and 
vocabulary of the Hammerskins, or Hammerskin 
Nation, a white supremacist group founded in Dallas in 1988.

According to the SITE Monitoring Service, which 
follows white supremacist trends, Mr. Page had an 
extensive presence on Hammerskin and other white 
nationalist Web sites, including Stormfront, 
where he favored the names of his bands as user 
names and frequently included white supremacist 
symbolism in his postings. He concluded one 
posting with 88, a number frequently used by 
neo-Nazis and skinheads to mean Heil, Hitler, 
according to SITE. (H is the eighth letter of the 
alphabet.) He also used 14, the number of words 
in the rallying slogan of the white supremacist movement.

Although Mr. Hoyt, his neighbor, said Mr. Page 
had claimed that he enlisted in the Army after 
Sept. 11, Army records show that he separated 
from the military in 1998, completing his basic 
training at Fort Sill in Oklahoma and serving at 
Fort Bliss in El Paso and Fort Bragg in North 
Carolina. Listed as a psychological operations 
specialist, he was never deployed overseas, 
according to the records, although Mr. Hoyt said he had talked about combat.

He said, You go there, and one minute youre 
with your buddies and the next minute youre dead,  Mr. Hoyt recalled.

A source familiar with Mr. Pages military 
history, who had not been authorized to speak 
about the case, said Mr. Page had received an 
other than honorable discharge from the Army, 
suggesting that he had been pushed out of 
military service. Pentagon officials said Mr. 
Page had also been demoted, from sergeant to 
specialist, before leaving the service, another indication of problems.

In June 1994, while at Fort Bliss, the El Paso 
police arrested Mr. Page and charged him with 
criminal mischief for kicking holes in a wall at 
a bar called the Attic. He pleaded guilty to the 
charge, a misdemeanor, on Aug. 12 and was 
sentence to 90 days in jail, but instead paid a 
$645 fine and completed 24 hours of community 
service. He remained on probation for 180 days.

After leaving the Army, Mr. Page, a native of 
Colorado, lived for several years in North 
Carolina, where he owned a property that Wells 
Fargo foreclosed on in January. In a statement, 
the bank said that it had no dealings with Mr. 
Page other than routine notifications, and that 
the property was vacant when the foreclosure process began last August.

Mr. Pages stepmother, Laura Page, 67, who 
divorced his father more than a decade ago, 
described Mr. Page as a precious little boy, a 
very mellow and soft-spoken person.

In an interview in Denver, where she lives, Ms. 
Page said she had known her stepson since he was 
10. As a child, she said, he worshiped the 
guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan. His aspirations and dreams all centered on music.

Wade, his father and me would go camping and 
fishing in Colorado and have just a wonderful 
time, and we would play games at home, like cards 
and Monopoly, Ms. Page said. We just did the 
normal things that a family does.

For most of his childhood, Ms. Page said, Mr. 
Page lived with his mother, a dog groomer, but 
she died when he was 13 or 14, and he took it 
very hard. He was not close to his father, she 
said, and after his mothers death he moved in 
with a grandmother and an aunt in Colorado. He 
enlisted in the military after graduating from high school.

I cant imagine, I cant imagine what made him do this, Ms. Page said.

While residents in Oak Creek struggled to 
understand, the three victims wounded in the 
shooting were struggling simply to survive. Among 
them was Lt. Brian Murphy, the first officer to 
arrive at the temple after 911 calls began 
flooding the Oak Creek Police Department at 10:25 on Sunday morning.

Lieutenant Murphy, 51, took in the scene and then 
stopped to tend to a wounded victim in the 
parking lot. When he looked up, a man with a gun 
was standing over him. Mr. Page fired eight or 
nine shots at close range, striking Lieutenant 
Murphy in the neck, Chief Edwards said. But when 
other officers rushed to help him, he waved them 
on  the victims in the temple came first.

Reporting was contributed by James Dao, Dirk 
Johnson, Jennifer Preston, John Schwartz, Scott 
Shane, Thom Shanker, Ben Sisario and Steven Yaccino.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: August 6, 2012

An earlier version of this article referred to 
Wade M. Page in multiple references as Mr. Wade.




 







[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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