CJ Hunt was at the neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville when he spotted this young man in white supremacist uniform (white polo and khakis) running away from counterdemonstrators, then turning abruptly and stripping off while insisting that he was not really a Nazi and had just shown up for fun.
Continue reading “Charlottesville white supremacist strips off uniform and insists it’s just for lulz”
Tag: nazis
Fox and other conservative sites hastily nuke posts urging vehicular murder of left-wing protesters
Last January, the alt-right website Daily Caller ran a post called “Here’s A Reel Of Cars Plowing Through Protesters Trying To Block The Road,” in which drivers endangered the lives of protesters while Ludacris’s “Move Bitch” played in the background: the post was syndicated to a Fox websites and many other outposts of the right-wing media.
So the Alt-Right is coming to your campus
The Southern Poverty Law Center’s guide, The Alt-Right on Campus: What Students Need to Know basically advises you to network with everyone on your campus who isn’t a closet Nazi, meet with the Young Republicans (or whatever) and remind them that they’re inviting Nazis to come speak, and then to throw a big, fun event far from whatever Nazi is addressing your school and starve them of publicity and attention.
Continue reading “So the Alt-Right is coming to your campus”
Anne Frank Center wants Trump’s in-house avowed Nazi to resign
Sebastian Gorka is one of the Brietbarters that Trump took with him to the White House, where he serves as “counter-terrorism adviser.” He’s also a non-metaphorical Nazi.
Continue reading “Anne Frank Center wants Trump’s in-house avowed Nazi to resign”
Meth, Hitler and the Reich: the true, untold story of the Nazis’ dependence on coke, meth and oxy
Novelist Norman Ohler became fascinated with the Third Reich’s reliance on opiods and methamphetamines when DJ Alexander Kramer mentioned it to him in passing; he set out to write a novel, but in Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich he produced what historian and authority on the Third Reich Ian Kershaw called “a serious piece of scholarship.”
Continue reading “Meth, Hitler and the Reich: the true, untold story of the Nazis’ dependence on coke, meth and oxy”
Book says Daddy Koch built Nazi oil refinery & hired a Nazi nanny for his boys, who blackmailed their gay brother
New Yorker staff writer Jane Mayer has a new book coming out, Dark Money, which chronicles the influence of a small handful of ultra-rich dynastic American families on US politics.
Continue reading “Book says Daddy Koch built Nazi oil refinery & hired a Nazi nanny for his boys, who blackmailed their gay brother”
Nazi rules for jazz performers
Famed Czech radical Josef Skvorecky recently died at 87 in his adopted land of Canada. In the Atlantic, JJ Gould remembers Skvorecky through his memoirs, including a detailed list of the rules for jazz performers during the Nazi occupation. The Reich’s Gauleiter for the Nazi Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia issued a 10-point regulation that Gould calls “the single most remarkable example of 20th-century totalitarian invective against jazz.”
1 Pieces in foxtrot rhythm (so-called swing) are not to exceed 20% of the repertoires of light orchestras and dance bands;
2 in this so-called jazz type repertoire, preference is to be given to compositions in a major key and to lyrics expressing joy in life rather than Jewishly gloomy lyrics;
3 As to tempo, preference is also to be given to brisk compositions over slow ones so-called blues); however, the pace must not exceed a certain degree of allegro, commensurate with the Aryan sense of discipline and moderation. On no account will Negroid excesses in tempo (so-called hot jazz) or in solo performances (so-called breaks) be tolerated;
4 so-called jazz compositions may contain at most 10% syncopation; the remainder must consist of a natural legato movement devoid of the hysterical rhythmic reverses characteristic of the barbarian races and conductive to dark instincts alien to the German people (so-called riffs);
5 strictly prohibited is the use of instruments alien to the German spirit (so-called cowbells, flexatone, brushes, etc.) as well as all mutes which turn the noble sound of wind and brass instruments into a Jewish-Freemasonic yowl (so-called wa-wa, hat, etc.);
Propaganda posters from the war on dino-Nazis
Dino D-Day is a forthcoming video game set in an alternate reality where Nazis team up with dinosaurs to fight WWII. The collateral for the game — propaganda posters, newspapers, newsreels — is really great and funny-weird/funny-ha-ha.
Steam now taking pre-orders for Dino D-Day
(via Super Punch)
- Steve Thomas's Arcade Game Propaganda Posters – Boing Boing
- Space Invaders propaganda poster – Boing Boing
- Comprehensive reviews of jihadi video-games – Boing Boing
- Pro-mining propaganda comic from mid-1960s – Boing Boing
- Old FBI memo: "It's a Wonderful Life" is commie propaganda – Boing …
- 1916 electric utility propaganda – Boing Boing
BITTER SEEDS: Alternate WWII novel pits English warlocks against Nazi X-Men
Ian Tregillis’s stellar debut novel Bitter Seeds hits shelves today. It’s a beautifully written and thoroughly researched alternate WWII history, the twist being that a mad German scientist has discovered a way to endow a group of sociopaths — raised from WWI orphans — with X-Men-like powers that have made the Wehrmacht unstoppable.
To counter this, a desperate Great Britain establishes a secret division composed of a tiny number of British warlocks — shades of Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell — men who use speech in a mystical Ur-language, accompanied by blood sacrifice, to call up vast, brutal elemental forces. These forces, the Eidolons, loathe humanity and tremble in barely restrained rage at the stain we spread on the universe, but they can be bargained with, blood traded for elemental magick.
Tregillis writes and plots beautifully. The characters — twisted German psychics, bitter warlocks, the brutal calculators of the British intelligence apparat — are complex, textured, surprising. The physical descriptions are wonderful. And the plot is relentless, a driving adventure story with intrigue, battle, sacrifice, and betrayal.
I had the extreme pleasure of teaching Ian Tregillis at the Clarion Workshop some years ago, and he was one of my most promising students, a standout in a year of standout writers. So I am unsurprised — but totally delighted — to find myself reading such a tremendous debut from him. This is the first volume of the Milkweed Triptych, and I’m extremely eager to read the rest.