‘Extremely offensive’: Neo-Nazi group distributes propaganda in Davenport again{The NA has never identified itself as a "Neo-Nazi group"}
Posted
{a very offensive opinion disguised as news} on Jul 26, 2021 by Paul Brennan
White supremacist propaganda
{pro-White literature, actually} is being
{legally distributed} tossed onto people’s front lawns in Davenport again, a Davenport resident
{a cranky one, as you will see} told Little Village on Monday. And once again, the propaganda
{literature} from the neo-Nazi
{pro-White advocacy group} National Alliance is in the former of large sticker that are wrapped around old copies of Little Village, placed in clear plastic bags and thrown onto lawns and driveways in the early hours of the morning when there are no witnesses present.
{My sources say there were people around that could have easily witnessed this as it was done openly}
“I’ve just found them on doorsteps,” the person who phoned Little Village early Monday morning said. He called the “very racist messaging” of the oversized stickers “extremely offensive.”
{Oh. My Gawd. Someone gave us literature we don't like!}
It should go without saying that Little Village has no connection with the National Alliance, beyond reporting
{spewing invective is more like it} on the hate
{in their opinion, see picture later in article} group. This isn’t the first time the National Alliance used copies of Little Village or other magazines that are distributed for free to add heft to their fliers and stickers so that they can be tossed onto lawns and driveways. It’s been happening since January 2018.
{Recipients can compare and contrast the healthy, pro-White messages of the National Alliance with the disgustingly degenerate PROPAGANDA spewed by the Little Village Idiots.}
- For Whites only, of course
- Extremely Effective fliers generously distributed everywhere.png (339.11 KiB) Viewed 2679 times
The last time this sort of incident was reported was in January. It was also in Davenport, but instead of stickers, racist flyers were wrapped around old copies of Little Village. The flyers were the same type used the first time the National Alliance distributed in Iowa City’s Wetherby Park neighborhood in January 2018. On that occasion, the flyers were wrapped around copies of the Davenport-based River City Reader, a free monthly newspaper.
{Another useless rag put to better use}
Two weeks after the Wetherby Park incident in 2018, a man was arrested in Davenport as he was putting those same flyers on cars at a high school sports facility. James Lee Mathias, a resident of Davenport in his 50s, wasn’t arrested for distributing the flyers — the National Alliance’s message is repulsive, but isn’t illegal — but because he was carrying a gun on school property.
{More false information here, and Brennan still will not correct the record.}
There have been at least 16 other incidents of the National Alliance using free newspapers and magazines to distribute their
{pro-White literature} racist propaganda in eastern Iowa since the first time they
{distributed} littered the Wetherby Park neighborhood with it. Last year, there was even an attempt to
{impart truthful information the Jewed media doesn't want you to know} disguise some of the racist messages as COVID-19 prevention advice.
Whoever is distributing the National Alliance material in eastern Iowa always chooses publications that can be picked up for free from public locations. It’s an indication of
{repurposing otherwise useless paper trash before recycling} the threadbare
{eco-friendly} status of the National Alliance.
The
{pro-White advocacy} white supremacist group was founded in West Virginia in 1970. Explicitly racist and anti-Semitic, it has repeatedly
{but we don't have proof} called for the elimination of both Jews and racial minorities in America, and the establishment of an all-white homeland.
The National Alliance has lost most of its members since its founder died in 2002. Further disputes over the group’s finances and leadership fights have rendered
{in Brennan's opinion} the NA “almost irrelevant” among far-right
{another mischaracterization} organizations. In September 2019, when National Alliance members helped organize a pro-Trump rally in Dahlonega, Georgia, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
{another Jewed rag} called it “a mostly defunct white supremacist group with deeply anti-Semitic and anti-immigrant beliefs.” {Yawn.}
The NA is now largely a mail-order and online retailer selling
{pro-White, historically accurate, and generally informative/useful} white supremacist books and related paraphernalia — including stickers — to the adherents
{and many, many more responsible, concerned Whites in the general public} it still has.
- Little Village's Brennan objects to us existing
- Only anti-White presstitutes object to Whites loving their own race.png (496.44 KiB) Viewed 2679 times
Although the NA itself is increasingly inconsequential
{then why pay any attention to us?}, others are also distributing white supremacist propaganda around the country. According to the Center on Extremism of the Anti-Defamation League, there was “a near-doubling of white supremacist propaganda efforts in 2020” compared to 2019.
“The 2020 data shows a huge increase of incidents from the previous year, with a total of 5,125 cases reported (averaging more than 14 incidents per day), compared to 2,724 in 2019,” according to the Center. “This is the highest number of white supremacist propaganda incidents ADL has ever recorded.”
The ADL found at least 30 groups were involved in spreading the white supremacist propaganda it documented in 2020, and three of those groups were responsible for 92 percent of the incidents. The National Alliance was not one of those three. The most active distributor of the racist propaganda was the Texas-based Patriot Front.