Oh...you need a leader to exist? So, every time someone says “white supremacists” they’re full of shit. Because hey, there’s group called “white supremacists” and the folks being called that don’t belong to the KKK because they’re not wearing the outfit. No website for “white supremacists”. No leader. So, the Charlottesville piece of shit didn’t really exist nor could he have been a white supremacist because hey, no website.
Glad you settled that for us. Next time someone on here talks about “white supremacists” make sure to set them straight on how wrong they are.
https://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/Brent/190/hatelinks.html
Also
White Aryan Nation
There are three main Aryan Nations factions. One was led by Charles John Juba, followed by
August Kreis III.
[9] In 2012, Kreis stepped down as leader and designated Drew Bostwick as his successor.
[22] In 2002, Juba's group was based on a 10-acre (4.0 ha) compound in the rural town of
Ulysses in
Potter County, north central
Pennsylvania; it hosted the 2002 Aryan Nations World Congress.
[23] Juba resigned in March 2005, announcing that Kreis was the group's new leader.
Kreis established a new headquarters in
Lexington,
South Carolina and eventually moved it to near
Union City, Tennessee. In 2005, Kreis received media attention by seeking an Aryan Nations–
al Qaeda alliance.
[24]
In 2005, the Holy Order of the
Phineas Priesthood, formerly in association with the faction operated by Kreis, seceded and formed Aryan Nations Revival,[
citation needed] based in New York City. The Holy Order was created in opposition to Kreis's acceptance of adherents of
Wicca,
Islam, and
Odinism. It considered such groups to be a deviation from the core Christian Identity belief of Aryan Nations. This Revival rapidly became the largest faction.
Aryan Nations Revival leaders were listed in the
Congressional Record as
domestic terrorists. The government concluded that the Holy Order of the Brotherhood of the Phinehas Priesthood was the enforcement/terrorist wing of Aryan Nations. Aryan Nations Revival hosted a weekly radio broadcast titled
The Aryan Nations Broadcast.[
citation needed] Airing from 1979 to 2009, the radio program was authorized by Richard Butler. The program ended when host
Hal Turner was arrested for threatening the lives of federal judges in
Chicago. While incarcerated, Turner announced, through his attorney, that he was a federal informant, and that Aryan Nations was among those organizations which had been informed upon.
In 2009, Aryan Nations Revival, which was then based in
Texas, merged with Pastor Jerald O'Brien's Aryan Nations, which was based in
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. Both parties were ardent Christian Identity adherents.
[8][25][26][27]
WAR
Metzger's first group was known as the White Brotherhood, which he led in the mid-1970s until joining
David Duke's
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in 1975. By 1979 he had risen to
Grand Dragon of the California realm.
From 1980 to late 1982, Metzger headed the California Knights, and during the same period, he also pursued electoral office. In 1982 he left the Klan to found a new group, the White American Political Association, a group which was dedicated to promoting "prowhite" candidates for public office. After losing the
1982 California Senate Democratic primary, Metzger abandoned the electoral route and renamed WAPA White American Resistance in 1983 and then renamed it White Aryan Resistance, to reflect a more "revolutionary" stance.
[3][4]
By the late 1980s, Tom Metzger began broadcasting
Race and Reason, a
public-access cable television show, airing WAR propaganda and interviewing other
neo-Nazis.
[5] The show caused much controversy, and its guests included
anti-abortion speakers,
Holocaust deniers and
pro-segregation lawyers.
[5] WAR members gained attention through appearances on talk shows throughout the late 1980s.
[6][
KKK
New Klan founder
William J. Simmons joined 12 different fraternal organizations and
recruited for the Klan with his chest covered with fraternal badges, consciously modeling the Klan after fraternal organizations.
[121] Klan organizers called "
Kleagles" signed up hundreds of new members, who paid initiation fees and received KKK costumes in return. The organizer kept half the money and sent the rest to state or national officials. When the organizer was done with an area, he organized a rally, often with burning crosses, and perhaps presented a Bible to a local Protestant preacher. He left town with the money collected. The local units operated like many fraternal organizations and occasionally brought in speakers.
American Nazi Party (
ANP)
he American Nazi Party, now under Koehl's command, was subject to ideological disagreements between members in the 1970s and 1980s. "In 1982, Martin Kerr, a leader at the Franklin Road headquarters, announced that the organization was changing its name to the New Order and moving to the Midwest," effective January 1, 1983.
[11] Due to recruitment issues along with financial and legal trouble, Koehl was forced to relocate the group's headquarters from the DC area, eventually finding his way to scattered locations in
Wisconsin and
Michigan. After Koehl's death in 2014, long-time member and officer of the New Order, Martin Kerr assumed leadership and maintains the New Order website and organization.
A former member of the original American Nazi Party,
Rocky Suhayda, founded his own organization using the American Nazi Party name and has been active since at least 2008.
[12] Suhayda claims Rockwell as its founder despite no direct legal or financial link between it and Rockwell's legacy organization.
[13] T
The WUFENS
headquarters was located in a residence on Williamsburg Boulevard in
Arlington, but was moved as the ANP headquarters to a house at 928 North Randolph Street (now a hotel and office building site). After Rockwell's murder, the headquarters was moved again to one side of a duplex brick and concrete storefront at 2507 North Franklin