Anonymous ID: 8fb88b July 16, 2023, 9:41 a.m. No.19190270   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0302

>>19190225

>every city in the United states has become much worse over the past three years. Drive around, there's not one city that's gotten better in the United States.

 

False Premise

Faulty Comparison

Anonymous ID: 8fb88b July 16, 2023, 9:59 a.m. No.19190349   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0360

>>19190302

>every city in the United states has become much worse over the past three years.

 

Assumes facts not in evidence.

Objection sustained.

Yes, I can sustain my own objections.

Anonymous ID: 8fb88b July 16, 2023, 10:17 a.m. No.19190434   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0468

>>19190379

Is there an official place ONLINE to sign up to be a Jew?

 

I would like my my jew card please?

Where may I apply?

It needs to be an American's w/Disabilities Act compliant on-line application because I can't, uhhh, leave my house.

Anonymous ID: 8fb88b July 16, 2023, 11:17 a.m. No.19190688   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0699

Is there some sort of missing link between the Iranian Aryans (Muslim Brotherhood), and the Catholic Affiliated Aryan Brotherhood that runs all the white supremacist gangs in the US?

 

They both love killing non-traditionalists and such.

Anonymous ID: 8fb88b July 16, 2023, 11:37 a.m. No.19190807   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>Catholic Affiliated Ayan Brotherhood

 

Aryan Nations

American hate group

 

Aryan Nations, also called Church of Jesus Christ Christian, prominent Christian Identity-based hate group founded in the United States in the 1970s. In the 1970s and ’80s the Aryan Nations developed a strong network comprising neo-Nazi, skinhead, Ku Klux Klan (KKK), white supremacist, and militia groups, many of which congregated and networked at the Aryan Nations compound in Hayden Lake, Idaho.

 

The Aryan Nations was rooted in the Christian Identity movement in the United States, which grew in popularity in the mid-20th century. Christian Identity adherents believed that white Aryans were the “chosen people,” that Africans were subhuman, that Jews were descendants of the Devil, and that the world was moving toward race war. In 1970 American Christian religious leader and white supremacist Richard Girnt Butler, newly ordained by the American Institute of Theology (AIT), which reflected Christian Identity beliefs, took over a large Christian Identity congregation in Lancaster, California, after its leader, Wesley Swift, died. In 1973 Butler moved the congregation to a compound in Hayden Lake, Idaho, and created the Church of Jesus Christ Christian. In 1978 Butler founded the church’s political arm, the Aryan Nations.

 

Over the following years, Butler often referred to Hayden Lake as the “international headquarters of the White race.” In 1979 he began holding annual conferences that attracted members of various white supremacist groups, especially neo-Nazis and the KKK. The Aryan Nations even offered courses in guerrilla warfare and urban terrorism. By 1989 Butler had added Aryan Youth festivals as well, held on the weekend nearest to Adolph Hitler’s birthday (April 20).

 

The Aryan Nations gained significant public attention in the 1980s because of the actions of a splinter group called The Order. In a series of dramatic bank robberies, The Order stole more than $4 million to fund the overthrow of the U.S. government and a race war, borrowing ideas from William Pierce’s 1978 novel, The Turner Diaries. The Order collapsed in 1985 when 25 of its members were sent to prison.

 

In 1987, with many of its former members in jail, the Aryan Nations began to publish a prison newsletter called The Way.The newsletter was used to spread Christian Identity beliefs and to connect the Aryan Nations with its prison faction, a prison gang known as the Aryan Brotherhood.It was also used to recruit new members, a growing concern for the organization because its membership had begun to decline. In the early 1990s several key members left the Aryan Nations. At that time the Aryan Nations had only three chapters in the United States.

 

Despite infighting, the Aryan Nations began to actively recruit neo-Nazis and skinheads in an effort to increase membership. By 1994 the hate group had chapters in 15 states, and by 1996 it was active in 27 states. The activity of the Aryan Nations surged in the late 1990s. In 1997 members held rallies in several Ohio cities and distributed antiblack and anti-Semitic fliers throughout northern Kentucky and southwestern Ohio.

 

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Christian-Identity

 

"Taking up the faith," is one of only a few safe havens in Prison because spreading the WORD serves the GANG.