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November 30, 2006

Another Good Man Dies: Rick Cooper

Filed under: — @ 2:21 am

by Charles Coughlin

The pro-White Movement has been blessed with the most patriotic, the most dedicated and the most sincere political activists. One of these activists was Rick Cooper. He was active in the most far right portion of the pro-White movement from 1970 until his death Sunday evening, Nov. 26th, 2006. He wasn’t a gifted speaker or dynamic leader, but he was a dedicated and tireless worker for a great cause.

Cooper joined the pro-White Movement in 1970 just three years after the death of George Lincoln Rockwell, the most dynamic and dedicated American pro-White leader of the twentieth century. For decades after Rockwell’s death, the pro-White Movement suffered from a scarcity of leaders. Many individuals like Cooper wound up forming their own organizations trying to organize White people in their home areas. Cooper was active in northern Oregon and had a P.O. box in “The Dalles,” Oregon, for decades. Everyone, who met Rick was impressed by his dedication and optimism. (more…)


November 29, 2006

Post Election Ravings of the Neocons

Filed under: — @ 12:47 am

by James Buchanan

Will Rush admit the neocons are bad news?

Believe it or not, some neocons are trying to spin the 2006 election as only a “narrow” loss for the Zionist warmongers. This latest propaganda campaign involves even more dishonesty than what led us into the Iraq War. The neocons are trying to claim that they only “narrowly” lost control of Congress and that one Senate race in Montana was decided by only a thousand votes.

It’s true that the Democrats have only a one seat majority in the Senate (or two if you count Joe “Call me a Democrat” Lieberman) and that Montana with its small population decided its election by a small number of votes. What the neocons leave out is that only one-third of the Senate runs for reelection in any particular election. For the Democrats to gain six seats in the Senate out of 33 contested seats is nothing short of amazing. The Anti-Neocon Revolt is every bit as historically important as the anti-liberal revolt of 1994. If the entire Senate had to run for reelection and if the Democrats did as well with the remaining 67 Senate seats, the Democrats would have gained 12 more seats, giving them a majority of 13 (or 14 if you count Joe). (more…)


November 28, 2006

The Torturer Tries to Save His Own Hide

Filed under: — @ 2:25 am

by Paul Craig Roberts

Bush as War Criminal

President George Bush, betrayed by the neoconservatives whom he elevated to power and by his attorney general, Alberto Gonzales, who gave him wrong legal advice, is locked in a desperate struggle with the Republican Congress to save himself from war crimes charges at the expense of America’s reputation and our soldiers’ fate.

Beguiled by neoconservatives, who told him that the virtuous goals of the American empire justified any means, and misled by an incompetent attorney general, who told him that the president of the U.S. is above the law, Bush was deceived into committing war crimes under Article 3 of the Geneva Convention and the U.S. War Crimes Act of 1996. Bush is now desperately trying to save himself by having the U.S. Congress retroactively repeal both Article 3 and U.S. law.

Under the U.S. Constitution, retroactive law is without force, but desperate men will try anything. (more…)


November 26, 2006

FBI Investigates Cybercrime: Denial of Service

Filed under: — @ 9:59 pm

The following is a reprint of a government statement on cybercrime (including Denial of Service) and what steps are being taken to deal with it. The statement below dates back to February 29th, 2000. It is safe to assume that much more sophisticated means of detecting cybercrime have been put into effect and that catching and prosecuting hackers has been streamlined and is today a matter of routine federal business.

STATEMENT OF
MICHAEL A. VATIS,
DIRECTOR, NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE PROTECTION CENTER
FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
ON
CYBERCRIME
BEFORE THE
SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE, CRIMINAL JUSTICE OVERSIGHT SUBCOMMITTEE
AND HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE, CRIME SUBCOMMITTEE
WASHINGTON, D.C.

February 29, 2000

……

Distributed Denial of Service Attacks.

The recent distributed denial of service(DDOS) attacks have garnered a tremendous amount of interest in the public and in the Congress. Because we are actively investigating these attacks, I cannot provide a detailed briefing on the status of our efforts. However, I can provide an overview of our activities to deal with the DDOS threat beginning last year and of our investigative efforts over the last three weeks. (more…)


Stormfront Website Under Zionist Attack

Filed under: — @ 6:44 am

by James Buchanan

The Evil Works of the Jews

An article in the London Times reports “Israel’s Government has thrown its weight behind efforts by supporters to counter what it believes to be negative bias and a tide of pro-Arab propaganda. The Foreign Ministry has ordered trainee diplomats to track websites and chatrooms so that networks of US and European groups with hundreds of thousands of Jewish activists can place supportive messages.

In the past week nearly 5,000 members of the World Union of Jewish Students (WUJS) have downloaded special ‘megaphone’ software that alerts them to anti-Israeli chatrooms or internet polls to enable them to post contrary viewpoints. A student team in Jerusalem combs the web in a host of different languages to flag the sites so that those who have signed up can influence an opinion survey or the course of a debate.”

While it is noteworthy that Israelis and possibly even other non-American Jews are being paid by the Israeli government to interfere with the political process in America by worming their way onto blogs and message boards, this “Zionist propaganda” campaign appears to coincide with a criminal attack on the popular pro-White website Stormfront. (more…)


November 25, 2006

Boogeymongering

Filed under: — @ 10:33 pm

by Charley Reese

The Excuse for Police State Laws and a Trillion Dollar Military

There are over a half-million foreign students at American colleges and universities; the U.S. borders, for all practical purposes, remain wide open; only 6 percent of the shipping containers are checked; and there is still a generous number of legal immigrants admitted.

I offer this as an antidote to the Bush administration’s boogeyman stories about the threat of terrorism. There is a threat, of course, but it is far less than the administration would have you believe. Americans are much more likely to die in automobile crashes or from falls or at the hands of a 100 percent American criminal than they are from a terrorist attack.

The most active terrorist organizations in America, according to FBI testimony, are the animal-rights activists. For some reason, you never see terrorism “experts” from the network Rolodex files talking about animal-rights activists. (more…)


November 24, 2006

That Old Double Standard

Filed under: — @ 7:56 am

by Jeff Davis

Reverse (Anti-White) Discrimination

One of the things that white people growing up in a Politically Correct society ingest with their mother’s milk is that there are certain things which white kids don’t get any more, certain privileges that now belong exclusively to people with brown or black skin. One of those things is the “scholarship.” It used to be the case that white children who did not have wealthy parents could get some organization to pay for college if they worked hard and performed well in both high school and on their college entrance exams.

Over the last three decades, scholarships for brilliant white young people are fewer and fewer. Added to this is a deliberate tightening of college admissions for white American children. The famous Allan Bakke “reverse discrimination” case involved a white applicant, who out-scored his minority competitors for admission to a UC medical school. After having the door repeatedly slammed in his face because he was the “wrong color,” Bakke sued and the UC system had to be less blatant in their anti-White discrimination. (more…)


November 23, 2006

Bush’s Only Real Victory

Filed under: — @ 7:05 am

He vanquished American liberty

by Paul Craig Roberts

Torture

George Orwell warned us, but what American would have expected that in the opening years of the 21st century the United States would become a country in which lies and deception by the president and vice president were the basis for a foreign policy of war and aggression, and in which indefinite detention without charges, torture, and spying on citizens without warrants have displaced the Bill of Rights and the U.S. Constitution?

If anyone had predicted that the election of George W. Bush to the presidency would result in an American police state and illegal wars of aggression, he would have been dismissed as a lunatic.

What American ever would have thought that any U.S. president and attorney general would defend torture or that a Republican Congress would pass a bill legalizing torture by the executive branch and exempting the executive branch from the Geneva Conventions? (more…)


November 22, 2006

Can You Feel a Draft?

Filed under: — @ 1:43 am

by Jeff Davis

Will there Be a Draft?

The math is simple. If the United States is going to conquer the world, or at least every part of the world containing oil reserves, then it will need millions of soldiers. Right now the US can barely maintain a force of 140,000 troops in Iraq; some of those units are well into their third tour of duty. The Pentagon maintains that they are meeting their recruiting goals, but they have re-defined those goals and cooked their books, and now they’re accepting recruits as old as 42 into the army. In the meantime, almost one thousand soldiers have died in each year of the insurgency. Tens of thousands of soldiers come back every year from Iraq and Afghanistan horribly wounded or too psychologically scarred to ever go back into combat (and often too scarred to function in normal society). The army can’t afford to lose one or two divisions of soldiers each year. We are gradually losing our combat experienced troops and we replace them with trainees straight out of boot camp. The United States military is bleeding to death. The government needs a draft if the occupation of Iraq is to continue.

Congressman Charlie Rangel, soon to be chairman of the House Ways and Means committee, will once again be proposing a law to do just that. According to an article in the Washington Post, “Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., said Sunday he sees his idea as a way to deter politicians from launching wars and to bolster U.S. troop levels insufficient to cover potential future action in Iran, North Korea and Iraq. ‘There’s no question in my mind that this president and this administration would never have invaded Iraq, especially on the flimsy evidence that was presented to the Congress, if indeed we had a draft and members of Congress and the administration thought that their kids from their communities would be placed in harm’s way,’ Rangel said. Rangel, a veteran of the Korean War who has unsuccessfully sponsored legislation on conscription in the past, said he will propose a measure early next year.” (more…)


November 21, 2006

The Looming Immigration Disaster

Filed under: — @ 2:55 am

by Ian Mosley

A large problem with the immigration debate in this country is that it tends to get bogged down in trivia. A fence or no fence? Amnesty or no amnesty, and if so, what kind? Can local towns and counties try to enforce immigration laws? Will the courts overturn their new laws? In the meantime, the demographic death sentence of White America is rushing forward at us with the speed of an oncoming train, and we just talk and talk and talk and do nothing.

The conservative organization FAIR’s website has some chilling data that needs to get all of our minds concentrated. “Our population was just over 200 million in the 1970 Census and the rate of population increase of about one percent per year indicates that with no change we may add another 300 million residents over the next 70 years. A continuation of the current trend means that most of the future U.S. population increase will result from immigration….In 1970, less than one in every twenty residents in our country was foreign born. In 2006, the comparable level is nearly one in every eight residents is foreign born. This is a trend that will continue if immigration policy and immigration law enforcement do not change. Yet, the White House and the Senate are pushing to accelerate the process of change by opening the door wider to both immigrants and to foreigners coming as nonimmigrants to take American jobs.” (more…)


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