Jack Ross:
Interview With Pravda.ru's Bill White
Jack Ross of the American Free Press (http://www.americanfreepress.net)
conducted the following interview with Pravda.ru columnist Bill White
(1) You've been involved in politics since you were 13 -- some very far left,
some very far right. What's your political history been, and what groups and
notable actions have you been involved with?
When I was in junior high school some friends and I started a group called the
Utopian Anarchist Party. I was in a
gifted school and we had been exposed to Marx, Freud and the
Situationists,
and those influences were the core of the "ideology" we espoused, but the
decision to be an "anarchist" was an essentially arbitrary one. Other methods of
extremism -- communism, nazi-ism,
et cetera -- just seemed arbitrarily less "cool", so I can't say a whole lot of
thinking went into my entrance into politics.
However, as I grew personally, I began to develop real ideology. Initally, we
just didn't like the public schools, and our critique was very orthodox
liberal-left. But then I began to understand that the problems with the school
system were part of a larger system of problems with society. Seeing the way
that the police abused people that I knew, and the way that the juevnile
psychiatric system, with the assistance of the schools, came after a lot of
people I knew, opposition to those two institutions became integrated into the
platform. This platform -- opposition to school, cops and psychiatry -- was very
popular with teenage youth, particularly "troubled" teenage youth. Soon our UAP
'zine was developing a huge circulation.
I first made the national-international news in college, in 1996, when I was the
first to use the internet to launch a massive campaign of phone calls and
harassment against this couple that were abusing and torturing their
stepdaughter. It was during this set of incidents that I learned what the nature
of the news media was: the Washington Post covered the story, and they took the
position that, despite the fact this girl was being locked in a closet, starved
and tortured, it was wrong for me to have exposed it because her parents had a
"right to privacy." Really, it was part of the early campaign by the press to
censor the internet, and when the facts didn't fit the story, they just
misrepresented the facts. But at this point I became interested in the news
media and how the news media is used to create a false reality that served the
interests of the ruling class.
My next big, big news event was in 1999
when I published an essay explaining the Columbine killings, and stating my
sympathies with the killers. People were predictable outraged, and let me
be clear that I sympathize with what they did -- I don't support it or think it
was necessarily the "right" thing to do. What I said was that the public school
system is actively involved in hurting youth, that it is psychologically
destructive to them, and that the necessary effect of the evil violence the
public schools do on a massive scale is evil violence directed back at them and
the people and institutions which symbolize them. I have always believed that
the necessary result of evil is evil, and that if evil did not result from evil,
there would be no way for society to regulate itself -- and that a main problem
of society is that we are able to shelter ourselves from and put off into the
future the consequences of the evil we do, so that we can't always see the
connection, and thus our provocative evil behaviors are allowed to persist.
During that controversy, the Simon Weisenthal Center issued a statement to
Reuters saying I was "hateful" because I had "made disturbing statements about
Christians." Here was a Jewish group attacking me, an anti-racist activist at
the time, because I had made statements about Christians that, ironically, would
be typical for a Jewish group like the Weisenthal Center to make. This is when I
started getting interested in the role of the Jewish power structure in American
social life and politics. This interest continued when my friend Michael
Moynihan was attacked by a coalition of "anti-hate" organizations, the Southern
Poverty Law Center, the Center for New Community, and the Coalition for Human
Dignity in particular -- also with the Columbine issue as pretext. This started
a series of research I conducted which radically changed my views both of
anti-racism and of the role that Jews, or at least their "official" community
organizations, play in the world.
Before and since then, I've worked with a number of groups, some successfully,
some not so successfully. I did some collaborative work with the International
Socialist Organization and the Revolutionary Communist Party/Refuse and
Resist!/Oct22nd Coalition Against Police Brutality in 1997 and 1998. Both groups
now thoroughly deny that; now that I'm anti-Communist the RCP actually has a
press statement denying they ever worked with me, and the ISO claims they
"kicked me out". Neither is true, I was never a member of either gorup, but I
did work with both.
I worked with the Communist Party USA
and the Libertarian Party in 1999 -- a faction of the Libertarian Party did, on
the advice of the Revolutionary Community Party and this woman Carol Moore, who
is now running to be their National Secretary, entertain a motion to expel me,
but it failed. They're a group much more comfortable with the likes of Irv
Rubin, I guess. At the beginning of 2000 I joined the Buchanan Reform campaign,
and worked with them until June of that year, when I resigned because of my
concern over their dishonest practices. After leaving there, I worked for a
Constitution Party congressional campaign, which was the most successful
congressional third party campaign in Maryland in 20 years -- and the only 3rd
party congressional campaign to qualify for the ballot in 20 years. Since then
I've left most groups and pursued my website, Overthrow.com, which I revamped in
March 2000 and which is now, as I'm writing, moving to a new home -- our own
independent server -- where we can finally be truly uncensored and not in risk
of being pulled down.
In September of this year I accepted a position as the Washington Correspondent
for the Russian publication Pravda, and just a few weeks ago I offered, and was
accepted, as a contributor to Synthesis, a major publication of the
National-Anarchist movement. I've also got two definite candidates I will be
managing in the local 2002 elections, and probably quite a few more getting
ready to declare.
(2) Your website, Overthrow.com, has become very popular. Your Libertarian
Socialist News emails are widely circulated on the internet, and your news
service is looked upon as a major source of information on extremist groups by
people involved in that scene, regardless of their agreement or disagreement
with you. What is your motivation behind the website and the news service -- are
you pushing a cause, and if so, what is it?
I started Overthrow.com in college in 1995 as the website of the "Bill White
Student Group". I was probably the only student at Maryland who was his own
student group -- I had 117 members when the school shut us down. Part of being a
student group was getting a free website, so I became interested in web
publishing.
The original idea behind the website was to be a web version of the UAP
newsletter. The site became pretty popular pretty quickly, but it was
technically pretty poor until just last year. The idea of the site grew to
embody the idea of the newsletter, which was to provide a venue for free and
censored speech to get out -- whether I agreed with it or not. The newsletter
used to publish all kinds for extremist works, communist, anarchist, fascist --
all sorts of stuff. This angered communists immensely -- the Spartacist League
and the Socialist Worker's Party still won't talk to me because of it, and it
was a major reason I stopped dealing with ISO. The premise that all speech
should not just be "permitted" but should be actually available to the public,
is something that the newspapers and the totalitarian left really haven't gotten
over. One of the problems with our society is that because our ruling class is
so dishonest, control of thought is such a major imperative, that any attempt,
even a Xeroxed newsletter by a high school kid, to expand thinking outside of
this acceptable range, is viewed with extreme hysteria,
Libertarian Socialist News, which I called Anarchist News Service until 1999, is
designed to bring uncensored information about groups whose ideas are outside of
the acceptable pale of thought. We cover far left and far right organizations,
radical religious groups, independent and third party political campaigns --
anything anywhere where anybody is saying anything that the ruling class doesn't
approve of. We don't cover mainstream politics except when it is an issue of
importance to our readers -- we often cover the attempts of mainstream Jewish
groups or various governments to suppress civil liberties, or to start wars, to
demand the extradition of extremists for torture in Israel -- but we limit
coverage of mainstream politics to those points where it touches on the fringe.
From my editorial viewpoint (and as editor and publisher I get to have one), the
only authentic politics are the politics of those groups outside of the ruling
class brainwashing system, and everything inside that system is as nothing to
me.
Overthrow.com exists as a bastion of radical free speech, where anyone can come
on, browse the LSN archives, look through some of the banned books and chemical
information in particular that the government doesn't want you to see, and then
post anything they like to our messageboards. It's becoming a focal point for
communication for people who don't want to be part of the mainstream, but don't
want to buy in to this pre-fabricated mass-market "radicalism" that they sell
you on MTV and Rage Against the Machine videos. I think it's a really important
website and project that I'm involved in.
(3) Your political views are very controversial -- in fact, many groups find
just trying to define your politics to be controversial. Are you "far right",
"far left", "third position"? What do you believe in?
One of the reasons no one understands what I believe in is that I don't really
adhere to any easily definable ideology. Libertarian and socialist is probably
the best way to define it, though you'll see traces of other ideologies creep in
around the sides.
I believe in radical political and economic decentralization. I think we need to
weaken the federal government, and the state governments, and make communities
self-governing. I think we need to stop the centralization and concentration of
capital in the hands of a few, and eliminate the mechanisms that allow for this
imbalance in the distribution of resources to occur. I don't believe in massive
centralized government re-distribution of resources, however, because I think
that government always serves the interests of the class or group of people that
control it, and will always tend to centralize resources in those people's
hands, whether they call themselves Bolsheviks or the Federal Reserve.
I believe in aristocratic individualism and much of the classical enlightenment
views of the Republic. I believe that individuals have a right as individuals to
make the most of themselves that they can, even if it means that some are better
than others. However, I believe that all individuals in society have a social
obligation, and so those that emerge from the masses to lead have an obligation
to those masses to better the entire national unit, as a society. When the
ruling elements become alienated from the people is when the system and the
society collapses -- when we see revolutions emerge, and when we see ideologies
emerge that essentially deny the legitimacy of the ruling class. But I don't
believe that radical democratization and the delegitimization of any sort of
human differentiation is beneficial to society, and I think that kind of
analysis misses the point -- that a society's leaders become illegitimate
because of their nature as leaders, and not because of something inherent in
leadership itself. All societies that have tried to restructure themselves on
radical "Democratic" principles have always ended up with a tyranny much worse
than the decayed aristocracies they've overthrown.
I also believe in the right to cultural self-determination for all authentic
cultures and civilization. By "authentic" I mean that purely intellectual
movements, like Bolshevism, which have no root in history or in the historical
struggle of a people, have no inherent right to exist. But I think that all
groups of people in, say, the United States, have a right to their communities
based on their common history, without domination or exploitation from other
groups. I think that only those individuals that simply can't or won't or refuse
to live without exploiting others need to be dumped overboard.
(4) You used to be a radical anti-racist activist. In the Washington Post on
February 9, 1998, there was a picture of you burning a confederate flag that had
been captured from members of the Ku Klux Klan during a racist/anti-racist
fight. Later, you left the movement and have been very critical of it, and it
has responded by being very critical of you, with groups like Public Eye and the
Southern Poverty Law Center calling you a "neo-fascist". What's gone on with
this?
When I was young I was consumed with what can only be called "Semitic nihilism".
I read Marx, Freud, Marcuse, Goldman, Luxemburg, and more -- idiot after idiot
-- and grew up in this society, which is drenched in Semitic politics, from the
liberalism derived from Marx, Freud, Boas and the Frankfurt school, to the
"neo-conservatism" and Evangelical Christian Zionism you see promoted by groups
like the publications owned by Rupert Murdoch or David Horowitz. These
ideologies sometimes pretend to be opposed, and their sectarian fighters
sometimes fight viciously among themselves, but they are really just minor
variants on the same political program. This all ties in to what I said before
about the media and the limited range of thought that is acceptable in our
society.
One of the many things that all of these tendencies agree on is the just
downright "awfulness" of "racism" -- loosely defined as anything that opposed
their interests. If you dislike blacks, like, say David Horowitz, but use some
subtle language and couch it in terms of what is good for the Jewish community,
for instance, you will be published and the few blacks that protest will be
given no audience by the media. But if you criticize both blacks and Jews
together, you'll be termed a "racist" in the public discourse. Really, it is the
question of how people feel about Jews, and not how they feel about race, that
is the determinant factor in accusations of "racism". Even the radical
communists will generally back off a fight if the person making "racist"
comments is properly philo-Semitic.
I was very caught up in this, but I always dissented. I loved the fighting and
the crashing through the police lines and the trading blows with nazis or
klansmen or whatever, but I would always ask uncomfortable questions like "don't
these people have a right to speak?"
It was really the Michael Moynihan incident that brought this into perspective.
I started to realize that anti-racism, rather than being an anti-statist
movement, was really a radical demagogic movement to support the interests of
the state and the ruling class. From my experience in it, I discovered that all
these supposed left-wing radicals were really being micromanaged by the
Democratic Party and ruling class factions. All of this caused me to ask
questions about what I was really doing, and confirmed for me the idea that one
cannot both oppose the modern state and be acting as a radical para-militant
auxiliary for the state at the same time.
It's really a question of this: Either there are rights and everyone has them,
or there are no rights and only power, and the "radicals" don't have the power.
If you believe in rights, you have to let everyone have them. If you don't
believe in rights, you are simply expanding the rule of the powerful.
As to some of the specific accusations and groups, Public Eye is a group that
recently had an edition of their paper where they criticized Martin Peretz of
the New Republic, John Podhoretz of the New York Post, and then denounced them
as members of the "white Anglo-Saxon Protestant power structure." Ignoring the
fact that it is racist and evidence of religious prejudice, by a fair
application of the modern standard, to label your opponents as "white
anglo-saxons" and "protestants" and to imply that has something to do with their
political beliefs, you'll also notice that none of them are white, Anglo-Saxon,
Protestant -- they are all Jewish. So what we learn is that the "white
Anglo-Saxon Protestant power structure" is really a code-word for the Jewish
power structure, which makes Berlet, by his own terms, a "crypto-fascist."
But the bottom line with these folk is that they are mad because I have given
them a real hard time over the last few years. After the Moynihan incident, some
friends of mine and I shut down a group called the Coalition for Human Dignity
by getting their $600,000 annual grant pulled. These groups that criticize me,
the SPLC-CNC-CHD axis in particular, are part of one of two power structures in
the anti-hate community. The other is the Jewish "defense" organizations -- the
ADL and the two AJC's. The SPLC-CNC-CHUD faction are the "white" -- actually
often secular-Jewish or very extreme "Judeo"-Christian -- liberals. They are a
close network, which is made closer by the fact that many of them are homosexual
or bisexual, one of the reasons they are almost entirely male dominated, and
that they often "date" and conduct relationships both within their scene and
with members of the press and the government that they work with. So when one of
them gets attacked, they all react in a body very hysterically, much like the
organized Jewish community does, and they all turn their targeting sites in the
same direction as if with one movement.
I honestly can't take these groups seriously. Ever since I learned that their
spiritual mentor, Morris Dees, attempted to rape his stepdaughter in 1977 with
an object, that he seduced his son's wife in the 1970s, and that when his wife
discovered this and tried to divorce him he had her kidnapped and beaten into
signing a phony divorce agreement, I can't respect what they say enough to even
really answer it, except to say that I am obviously "anti-fascist" -- an
opponent of corporate socialism -- as obviously as they are literal fascists --
proponents of a monolithic corporate state that micromanages and produces the
lives of its system as a product. Anything else falls below the bottom level to
which I can take my discourse.
(5) Having once been an anarchist, what do you think of the anarchist and
anti-globalist movement?
That's a good question. I think one cannot look at either of those movements as
a monolith, because they aren't, and the differences are not trivial.
The self-proclaimed "leaders" of the anti-globalist movement, the public faces
that you see on TV or in the newspaper trying to articulate their demands, make
me sick. They are basically the Morris Dees' of anti-capitalism. Their demands
are often ridiculous and counterproductive, and I'll give you an example:
Look at the World Bank. During the anti-World-Bank rallies, these groups claimed
that the World Bank makes usurious loans to Third World nations that become so
interest-heavy that the interest alone becomes more than the entire nation's
Gross National Product. The then compared this to slavery, and they are correct
in doing so -- the international capitalist power structure has reinstituted
slavery internationally by creating debt slavery. But the solution the
communists propose is that the United States and its taxpayers bail these
countries out by paying off their debts, instead of demanding that the debts be
canceled all together! Think about that! What the "socialists" are saying is
that the debt itself and the interest -- the claim of the bank and international
finance capital -- is essentially legitimate, and that the "solution" is that
white working people, who have been sensible enough to avoid these kinds of
loans, be forced to buy African and Asian working people out of slavery, so that
the banks can then loan African and Asian naitons more money, buy their people
back into slavery, and then come to the white countries again for a bailout!
These people hate that European and Northern American nations have avoided the
slavery that they have imposed on Asian and African and Latin American workers,
and so they try to turn the anti-globalist movement into a mechanism for
expanding the enslavement of the working class out of the Third World and into
the entire globe!
If these people really cared about working people, in Africa or elsewhere, they
would demand two things: 1) That the international banks be forced to "cancel"
the debts and take a loss on them, hopefully bankrupting those banks in the
process, and 2) that the central capitalist banking system be prohibited from
extending further credit to nations that are run by petty dictators that run up
the credit line, abdicate office, and stick their people with the debt. The only
risk is that, because of the floating nature of the monetary system, a collapse
of the international banking system could destroy international currencies, like
what is happening in Argentina, which is still feeling the effects of matching
their currency to the dollar during a time of American economic recession. And
this ties in to international monetary reform and the international monetary
fund, and the need for international currency valuations to be tied to gold, and
not to floating measures, or to each other. That demand is a serious demand. The
demands that these neo-liberal pawns make, and the cover they are running for
the bankers, is the same crap that the ruling class weaves into the phony
reality that they have governing everything else.
As to anarchists, the most intriguing developments I have seen in the anarchist
movement have been 1) the break of "leftist" anarchists with communism and
communists, and 2) the national anarchist movement which was founded by Troy
Southgate in Britain. In the first case, I'm not sure what my ultimate verdict
will be on "leftist" anarchism -- the anarchism that has come out of leftist
milieus, because it is still carrying a lot of baggage from its origins and is
still carrying a lot of half-wit neo-liberals in its retinue and among its
thinkers. I think it's going to be interesting to see if these kids can grow up
past the point where they are not throwing balloons filled with urine at people
(which actually happened at a recent "anarchist" protest in DC), and develop a
real ideology and nature. As to the second, I think the national-anarchist
movement, coming out of the far right, has the right approach to a lot of
issues, and I think it will be interesting to see if they can overcome the
hurdles of being what is now a small movement within a small movement to
becoming a real political force.
(6) Your Pravda column has reported often on the recent growth of far-right
groups like the National Alliance, particularly in the context of the
post-September 11 world. What is your impression of them?
The National Alliance I think is the most intriguing organization in the
national socialist right. I'm not sure what to make of it as a whole -- it is
certainly over the top in a lot of areas, and seems to be more focused on what
it is going to do to get back at other groups of people than what it is going to
do to improve the lot of its own people. I guess I'm not really sure how much of
the socialist ethic it has versus the nihilistic MTV-ish protrayal of
nationalism it has.
That said, personally I have developed some good relationships with its members
in my course of covering them. They have been growing and they have been
attracting a lot more "normal" people, or at least people who put on a good
public front, to fill their upper ranks. Still, they seem to have a certain
element that seems to be out of control. Overall, I'd say they are a lot like
the communists and the anti-racists that come out to protest them -- a range of
people from the normal and well-adjusted with different political views to the
seriously disturbed people who are using politics as a type of public theater
for the expression of emotional problems.
I think they are important to cover from an honest perspective. I know that my
readers certainly enjoy it -- watching them and the anti-racists go at it is a
bit like watching a soap opera -- every month, after their next demonstration,
we get another installment.
Ideologically, I don't know what to make of them. They tend to be vague about
their program, and while some of what they say sounds good sometimes, they, and
particularly Pierce, will suddenly up and say something that makes you think
they're a bunch of raving loons. I also have a lot of questions about the
practical side of things -- people who have worked around their headquarters are
always making comments to me suggesting that something is not right but that
they "don't want to talk about it" -- and I haven't really figured out if those
complaints are substantial or not.
I can say that I think that genocide against other people is as nihilistic a
"solution" to political issues as the nihilistic nature of capitalism and
corporate socialism, and that has always been a real sticking point for me in
trying to absorb what they believe.
(7) You have at times defined
yourself as "anti-Semitic", but also know and associate with a number of Jewish
activists in various movements, and have published material by Jewish writers.
What's your feeling on this?
Yeah, I am anti-Semitic. I don't like Judaism or it's heretical manifestations,
including Christianity, and I think that Judaism and the cultures it creates
have had a profound and negative effect on American society.
A good way to think about it might be this. Imagine there were no Jews in the
world, and then think about what happened during the past century that wouldn't
have happened. The Bolshevik revolution would never have happened. Hitler would
never have happened -- and thus no World War II. Without Bolshevism, there would
have been no Chinese Revolution, and thus no Korean or Vietnamese wars. The
post-colonial period in Africa would have had a very different character. Just
without the Cold War and World War II America would not be a bureaucratized
centralized imperialist state. Just looking at Jewish culture in relation to
communism and its reaction in national socialism, you can justify the statement
that these attitudes have had a profound negative effect on society.
Even in America today, say there had been no Jews for the past forty years.
There would have been no 1960s -- and the results of that decade, particularly
the break down of the black community and its collapse into drugs, poetry and
crime -- would never have occurred. Given that blacks account for two-thirds of
the crime while being one tenth of the population, think about how the
non-destruction of the black community would have led to the improvement of the
quality of life for all communities, including the white community. Segregation
probably would have gone regardless, but it would have gone without being
replaced by a destructive and nihilistic anti-culture that was promoted by
almost entirely Jewish radicals.
And then ask what we would have lost? Madelaine Albright? William Cohen? The
most prominent Jewish person who actually contributed to society in the past
century was probably Albert Einstein, and I'm not convinced he didn't crib his
theories from earlier physicists and his Serbian wife -- and in any case, we all
know that the immediate application of Einstein's theories was the nuclear bomb.
This is not saying that I want to get rid of Jews, but that there is something
seriously, seriously wrong with the culture and the behavior of Jewish people,
both in Western nations and internationally. The last century has seen a serious
of deliberate acts by the Jewish community as a whole, from its community
organizations to the members those organizations mobilize for its ruling class,
to hurt other groups of people and to provoke wars and chaos for the perceived
gain of the leaders of that community.
The actual number of Jews responsible for this, as a portion of the entire
Jewish population, is probably about as small as the portion of the white
population responsible for our ruling class, but the mobilization of the entire
ethnic community as an ethnic community to hurt other ethnic communities is
almost unprecedented in human history -- not since the time when the early
Christians -- another group of Judaic heretics -- destroyed Rome and sent Europe
into a millenium of darkness has anything like this been seen.
That said, I don't hate individual Jews or think that there is something
biologically or genetically "wrong" with people who happen to be born to Jewish
parents. There are certainly Jews who don't participate in this type of
nihilistic Judaism, and some I think who are honestly searching within their
people and their history to find positive alternatives, but the Jewish
leadership structure, from Ariel Sharon and Mortimer Zuckerman down to the
lowliest newspaper columnist in the trenches, have made themselves a real threat
to the continued prosperity of this nation, and they have to be stopped. What
means can be used, I don't know.
Jewish roots Rockville
(8) Certain left-wing groups have recently made allegations about your
romantic involvement with certain
far-right organizers, and have tried to use that to explain the recent
intense shift in the editorial perspective of your news service, which has
recently had a much stronger focus on Israel and anti-Zionism. Is there any
truth to that?
No. That is the fantasy of the paparazzi segment of the radical-extremist
community. The real reason for my increased focus on Jews and the Jewish
community has been primarily the September 11 attacks.
I grew up in a Jewish neighborhood --
the Horizon Hill neighborhood of Rockville -- a very racist Jewish
neighborhood which my family had to move out of because of ethnic and religious
threats that extremist Jews would make against us for not being one of them --
but I was never really conscious of Jews as a separate group of people until
later in life. I used to wonder things when I was little like why I didn't go to
Hebrew school and why my family didn't celebrate Hanukah, and why I didn't fit
in with all the little Jewish children, and why their parents always looked at
me funny, but I was never really conscious of Jews as being different -- I
always thought it was I that was different or poorly adjusted.
Jewish Schools
It wasn't until I saw the organized Jewish community at work during the events
of 1999 that I began to ask questions about what the nature of Judaism was, and
what the differences between Jews and normal people were. It was about then I
began to reflect back on all the kids I hadn't gotten along with from the
time I entered kindergarten to the time I transferred to a mostly white high
school in 1992, and I realized that almost all of the kids I really,
really didn't get along with were Jewish, and that the thing about the world
that I had always put down to my being different were really the result of me
being immersed in a racist Jewish environment. Still, I was an adult and I would
put that sort of thing down to being in my past. I thought that the issue of the
Jewish community as a relatively minor one until I saw what
their policies had done in provoking the destruction of the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon. At that point, I realized that there is probably no
more important issue for the United States today than stopping Jewish influence
in the government and in the media, and that theme has become very central to a
lot of what I have been writing.
Like the 7th Century English king Aethelferth said when he was fighting the
Christian British, "if these men invoke their God against us, they are at war
with us, even if they have no arms." The disgust that I've felt at seeing mostly
Jewish commentators advocating restraints on civil liberties, torture, and war
for Israel makes me so sick I often feel like I just want to round the lot (of
the commentators) up and machine gun them -- and I think those people that have
done this in the past, that rounded up the Bolsheviks who had been starving and
destroying Russia and the other Soviet Republics, for instance -- I can
certainly understand what they did and why. I can understand why a lot of people
joined the Nazi Party, though, like Strasser, I think Hitler and his movement
were a disaster for Germany. And I'm not saying I agree with them, but on a
purely emotional level, I understand what they were thinking. It's hard not to
want to respond violently to the evil and darkness these people peddle, and its
hard not to associate this evil with these people common Jewish or heavily
Judaized identities.
Thought it hurts me to know that there are a whole lot of Jewish people who are
not part of this and who share nothing in common with these elements of their
community except a happenstance of birth, and who are probably horrified by what
I'm saying, I have to say that those Jews need to speak up and take control of
their community back and change the nature of the culture they've been stuck
with, because this is not an issue that is going to go away. These folk are
being given enough rope to hang themselves, and its not going to be wrong when
they are hung -- even if it is anti-Semitic.
And I should add to this that this is something that I honestly don't know what
to do about. I wouldn't take anything I say as programmatic -- the recognition
of the depth of this problem is something which I have really only recently
really absorbed, and I am really sorta floating around out there looking for the
magic "Aha!" that let's me realize exactly what is going on. I don't like
blaming an entire ethnic group for something, but this problem is more than just
"Zionists" or some politicized minority subsegment of American, and apparently
international, Judaism.
(9) Recently, you've been the target of some harassment and violence. In
early December, you were attacked by members of a radical Christian biker gang.
In later December, a group of people photographed you and tried to run your car
off the road. A number of groups, including the Church of Scientology, have put
up web pages and sent out email obviously trying to harass you. How do you deal
with these kinds of issues?
I'm never surprised by violence against me. I'm generally not very upset by it,
though I do always at least attempt the formalities of complaining about it. The
world is a violent place, and violence is a normal way of handling human social
problems. I am convinced that I am here for a certain purpose, and that no act
of violence against me can do real harm to me until a time that has been
allotted for me to be harmed, in which case that is either part of some greater
good, or it is an act that ends me and states that my time here, and what I am
here to do, is over.
The world is evil and collapsing. I am not part of the world -- I am just
someone who is trying to stand up against it and stop it. The world, of course,
then tries to consume me. Decay doesn't attack mold, it attacks healthy
organisms. And so to stand up and to declare that I am healthy is like putting a
sign on my head saying "mold, do your thing."
I've certainly been involved as both the perpetrator and the victim of a lot of
political violence. I have a blow out fracture to my left eye socket from being
tortured by police who tried to remove my eye with a stick when I was a
teenager, and I have a crushed right hand from fighting with other anarchist
factions when I was in college. I spent much of my youth engaged in petty crime
and thuggery. So while I don't like being targeted by violence, it doesn't send
me into hysteria.
Ultimately, either the good will win or the evil. If the good wins, then evil
will eventually be punished. If evil wins, then it wasn't worth sticking around
to see the end anyway. What's important is to be focused on your goals and not
let people who are beneath your notice distract you.
(10) You have declared yourself an independent candidate for the Maryland
legislature. Twice before you have run for school board in your county. Three
individuals aligned with you have also declared independent candidacies in
Maryland, two for the legislature and one for Montgomery county council. What
are your short and long term goals for political organizing in Maryland and what
would you like to see happen on that score nationally? How have you been
involved nationally?
Yeah, I'm pretty popular here in Montgomery County, particularly in the Up
County regions when you can away from the suburbs of DC. I ran twice for school
board, as you mentioned, both times with major opposition from the Washington
Post and their local newspaper affiliate, the Montgomery Gazette, as well as the
entirety of the power structure -- the NAACP and the Jewish Community Center
have both gone after me in the press. One racist old Jewish lady told me at an
event that I and "all the Germans" (half of my family immigrated from Germany
because of religious persecution in the early 18th Century) should be killed in
a "new Holocaust" -- a statement which remarkably didn't make it into the
Washington Post's news reporting the next day. The Washington Post also ran
several articles and editorials last year calling me an "anarchist and a
communist" and telling people to vote for my opponents, and I have conducted
campaigns in an atmosphere of "media silence", refusing to give mainstream
interviews and outright insulting mainstream reporters.
That said, I still managed to win just under 10,000 votes and placed fifth in a
nine-way race with two winners, despite being 22 and having no real history of
ever having achieved anything in the mainstream world. I took 7% of the vote
overall, but it wasn't an even 7% -- it was 2% and 9th place in Bethesda and 15%
and 3rd place in Laytonsville. The differences between the bourgeois liberal
strongholds and the neighborhoods of working people was like night and day.
Because of that I'm very positive about the prospects of winning a legislative
seat this year. I need to take about 16% of the vote to win one of the three
available in the district, and I've come very close to that in the past. Also,
my name recognition and the amount of funds I have available have increased
dramatically.
Right now I have two confirmed candidates who will be slating with me for other
offices -- John Latham in the Bethesda district (ironically), and James
MacArthur for County Council in Silver Spring and Takoma Park. Given what I
managed to do with the Saunders campaign last year (the Constitution Party
candidate for Congress), I'm very hopeful.
I'd like to see a third party alternative emerge, and I think it will. I think
that the approaches that have been taken in the past -- establishing the party
as a kind of social club and not running candidates -- is wrong. I think a party
emerges from its candidates, so I have been involved in organizing candidates.
What comes from that in the long term we'll have to see.
I have tried working with other groups, the Buchanan campaign being the best
example, but I find that most political organizations are intensely focused on
appealing to some imagined "middle" that lies somewhere within the confines of
the mass-produced debate that the national media enforces, and not on real truth
or the real interests of the people who are out of power. I focus on truth, and
I'm not very interested in biting my tongue. I'm also not afraid of much -- the
Emperor Marcus Aurelius had a very strong influence on me in me early life and I
am a confirmed Stoic. I also know, having weathered it in the past, that every
newspaper and television station in the country can denounce me, and their total
sum ability to have an impact on my life is absolutely nil -- no matter what
they do, my friends aren't going to leave me, I'm not going to lost my job, and
I am much more experienced with political violence than they are, so I'm not
really afraid of that either.
As to them saying nasty things about me, to paraphrase Chairman Mao, if bad
people don't say bad things about you, you are doing something wrong.
(11) In the 2000 election cycle you actively worked on the Buchanan campaign.
Tell us about that experience and about why you left the campaign. what did you
learn from that experience and what do you think is the best way of rebuilding
the independent movement and moving forward from there?
I was an early non-right-wing supporter of Buchanan, having been impressed with
the way he conducted himself during the 1999 Battle in Seattle World Trade
Organization riots. I thought his message of socialism for working people --
what he called "economic nationalism" -- was an excellent one, and one with
broad appeal. What I discovered in working for him is that his organization was
not very interested in the message or in winning votes, but seemed to be focused
more on turning a profit for themselves at the expense of the campaign proper.
Political campaigns are not profitable ventures. They are, and should be, the
opposite --opportunities to spend tons of money trying to make the world a
better place. Buchanan's staff, however, did everything they could to screw
everyone they came into contact with in order to get that $12 million dollar
federal grant, which they immediately embezzled. Bay, for instance, in the 1996
campaign, not only paid herself a $100,000 a year salary every year through 1998
-- paying herself for two years after the campaign had ended out of campaign
funds -- but set up a dummy corporation to do media buys and pocketed, if I
recall, something like $600,000 or $800,000 in the process. The breaking point
for me in 2000 was when the Buchanan campaign cheated the Reform Party primary
-- an event I was witness and privy to, because, being the Maryland coordinator
for the Reform Party's ballot access and membership drives, I had all the
membership records that in theory someone should have requested for the purpose
of sending out ballots. When they weren't requested, I made inquires, and
discovered the Bob Bowes, an aide to Buchanan, had arranged to substitute
Buchanan contributors from 1996 in place of Reform Party members for the primary
vote. That was the real reason that Buchanan won that primary and got that $12
million dollars.
As to the independent movement in general, I don't really think there is much of
a movement. There are a lot of folk who want some militantly mediocre
alternative to the Republicans and Democrats -- the mediocre middle -- but they
aren't going anywhere with that idea because when they start trying to define
themselves, they realize that there is no real ideological difference between
themselves and the mainstream of either party's power structure. They,
ironically, are more opposed to the "extremists", the people who are the actual
"independents" within the two parties, then they are opposed to the bourgeoisie
themselves.
Then there are the extremists, and I like working within that mile. I am hoping
one of them -- any of them -- will break out and become a real organization.
Once there is something, then I think its important to start looking at and
criticizing what it is, but as long as there is nothing, almost anything will
do.
I think it's going to take some more events like September 11 to weaken public
confidence in the government to make real change in the American political
structure. Until then, Americans are going to happily wonder around, not
thinking, assuming everything is okay. September 11 woke up some people, proving
that there is a silver lining to every cloud, but not enough -- yet. The
question is whether those people can establish enough of a sub-culture to
challenge the false reality crafted by the mainstream press and the culture
industries, and to lay a foundation to grab the people that become disillusioned
by the next big event.
There is certainly a lot more death and destruction awaiting America. I don't
know if it will take a nuclear bomb to fix it, or if the nuclear destruction of
an American city will be enough -- the drugs that most Americans slumber under
are so powerful, I'm not sure if anyone more than 100 miles away from a nuclear
blast will care about it any more than I or anyone around here care about the
destruction of New York. The radio will play some pre-fabbed songs, tell
everyone to be unified, the danger won't rear its head for a month, everyone
will go back to sleep, and then a few more thousand more die.
Independent politics can really only be understood in the context of
revolutionary politics. Anything else is really just more of the same crap,
playing into the same spectacle, achieving the same nothing.
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