The Guardian: Wade Michael Page and the rise of violent far-right extremism
Matthew Goodwin, The Guardian, 8/8/12
On Saturday 28 July 2012, Wade Michael Page walked into the Shooters Shop in Wisconsin to buy a 9mm semi-automatic handgun, and ammunition. Eight days later, the 40-year-old military veteran arrived at a Sikh temple in Oak Creek and began shooting at members of the congregation who had gathered to prepare a meal. During the shooting, six members of the Sikh community, one police officer and the attacker were killed.
Within hours of the shootings, the Southern Poverty Law Centre (SPLC) revealed that Page was a known white supremacist. He had links to networks including the Hammerskin Nation and was involved in an underground music scene often referred to as "white power music" or "hate rock". Influenced strongly by earlier bands in England such as Skrewdriver, white power music is seen by those who study extremism as one of the most important recruitment tools for the modern far right. Page's involvement appears to have been deep: in an interview with online music magazine Label56.com in 2005, he claimed to have sold all of his possessions so that he could travel around the country attending white power festivals such as Hammerfest. The next year he formed a band called End Apathy recruiting bandmates from the other groups such as Definite Hate and 13 Knots. Asked in 2005 to elaborate on the meaning of the band's lyrics, Page replied: "The topics vary from sociological issues, religion, and how the value of human life has been degraded by being submissive to tyranny and hypocrisy that we are subjugated to."
Page's body also contained references to white supremacism. A tattoo of the number "14" was a direct reference to the so-called "14 words" that occupy a central role in neo-Nazi vocabulary: "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children." This passage, a reference to a section of Mein Kampf, was popularised by David Lane, a member of white supremacist terror group The Order. Another tattoo of the Odin or Celtic cross represents one of the most popular symbols among neo-Nazis, seen as the international symbol for "white pride". Those who had been close to Page confirmed his ideological affinity to the extreme right. Reflecting a wider belief within the movement, an old army friend of Page claimed that as far back as the 90s he had talked about "racial holy war", and would rant "about mostly any non-white person".
As with the aftermath of the attacks by Anders Breivik in Norway, it was not long until sympathisers surfaced online. "Take your dead and go back to India and dump their ashes in the Ganges, Sikhs," wrote one neo-Nazi. Others praised their "brother": "All I feel is loss and sympathy for a brother that was overwhelmed by pain and frustration. I could (sic) care less though for those injured and wounded other than Wade." Another warned of future attacks: "There are thousands of other angry White men like Page, the vast majority of them unknown ... When will they, like Page, reach their breaking point...?"
full: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/aug/08/wade-michael-page-violent-far-right
RKP5637
(67,104 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)Because they have a plan of what to do after the chaos gets going good. Now I begin to wonder about the militarization of the police, as odious as it is.
It's not hard to find youtube videos of people practicing with military gear. I mean rocket launchers, bazookas, all kinds of artillery. They insist it's their right to protect themselves from the very evil government.
Others merely want to have guns to hunt or protect themselves from violent crime and that is the reason we don't complain that much. But some are revolutionaries who are looking for an opportunity to start something. There were neo-Nazis prowling around Sanford, Florida during the height of the Zimmerman news coverage.
They've got hate radio and FNN pushing the news stories to keep them in a state of fear and outrage, generally over nothing as severe as they is going to happen. The CT folks push an apocalyptic vision of America. The majority of people don't think or live in that reality, we see things working for us and have to reason to destroy it all. Dangerous times.
nightscanner59
(802 posts)USA has turned so largely anti-social, greedy, all-for-me consumerism utterly rampant since RayGun. Mittens is running his whole damn campaign on the platform of greed and inequality. It fosters this kind of crap.
muriel_volestrangler
(101,308 posts)I can't find anything else saying he died.