Question for PhuBai68: I tried twice to post the following long comment to Stormfront user Haman's Advance Scout section: https://www.stormfront.org/forum/t11907 ... st15147551
The first time it disappeared <poof!> because I couldn't get on SF unless I swore I'm not a robot and then had to identify a bunch of photos of umbrellas and bicycles. I identified them but still couldn't get on -- and even if I could have I'd already lost this long comment.
So, being stubborn, I retyped the entire long comment from scratch, from memory, this time copying it to my email drafts just in case it disappeared again. Then I had to go through the whole routine of hoop jumping again -- declaring myself human, then identifying photos of bicycles and umbrellas, but to no avail. Lost the long comment again so couldn't put it up. What's below is my lost comment.
As a Stormfront moderator, can you put this up in that 14-year-old topic thread, "Do You Know Your PLE Principles?"? Haman is not going to like my comment and may have influence at SF to block my comments? Who knows why I can't put up my comment, defending the National Alliance from one who hates us and claims we are a "cult"?
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Haman, I just saw your five Star Amazon review of Kelvin Pierce's forgettable book,
The Sins of My Father:
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Mimereader2 (aka Haman)
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Rare Look At The Private Side of America's Most Significant Cult Leader.
Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2020
Verified Purchase
I am a former supporter of Dr. Pierce's cult, the main subject examined in this book. And because I still consider myself to be a pro-White person; I highly recommend this book to anyone who would like to see major corrections occur in White Nationalism, such as those advocated on the Advanced Scout sub-forum of Stormfront.
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Amazon likes positive reviews like yours of this book, Haman. Amazon hates negative reviews of this book and of other books that the SPLC tells them to block, Like this one below, submitted by me back in March. It never appeared; it was blocked by Amazon't thought police:
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Will Williams
1.0 of 5 stars Sins of My Father
Verified Purchaser
I Hate My Daddy
The title of Kelvin Pierce’s book is taken from Hebrew biblical references, like the proverb in Jeremiah’s Book: “The fathers have eaten sour grapes, And the children’s teeth are set on edge.” After reading
Sins it’s clear that it is Kelvin’s teeth that are set on edge from eating sour grapes, not his father’s.
One question I would ask Kelvin Pierce after reading his rather poorly edited book: Which Jewish watchdog group commissioned this book: Was it the Southern Poverty Law Center or was it the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith? After all, the final sentence in the blurb on the back cover is, “He [William Pierce] was labeled as the most dangerous and influential Neo-Nazi/White Nationalist in North America by the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League, over a 30-year period.” Why would a son quote these haters’ hateful opinions of his father who died 18 years ago?
William Pierce was no Christian. Like most Americans of his generation that were raised Christian he was raised a Presbyterian. Being highly intelligent, a scientist with a doctorate in physics, he “put aside childish things” (like belief in imaginary spooks up in the sky) when he became an adult. Kelvin Pierce apparently is a devout Christian, however (he prays a lot), and is into other eastern creeds from what I gather, reading this “tell all” book about his “evil” father.
Kelvin will never grasp the extraordinary religion his father founded, Cosmotheism, nor the National Alliance, that he says is a “hate group,” parroting the buzz term of “hate” watchdogs. Kelvin is eaten up with irrational guilt, denies his own race, freely admits to near terminal depression, self-doubt, low self-esteem, and has subjected himself to years of therapy to deal with these issues. The only chapters in
Sins that seemed to me to be wholly Kelvin’s personal recollections were of the hang gliding hobby he and his father shared, and about his admirable humanitarian work: rebuilding a decrepit orphanage in Georgia, the former Soviet Socialist Republic, years after his dad’s death. The rest of the book, even pre-teen memories from 55 years ago of discipline and corporal punishment for the author’s frequent mischief and for lying to his father seem to this reader to be embellished or edited to fit the “evil hater” profile by an anti-White ghost writer.
Readers who are interested in learning about the founder of Cosmotheism — arguably the greatest man of the second half of the 20th Century — and of his supposedly “most dangerous” National Alliance, or about the SPLC or ADL for that matter, can gain a more balanced, more honest perspective of William Pierce’s life’s work and achievements by searching for those subjects, starting here:
https://nationalvanguard.org/2017/10/th ... our-cause/ rather than by reading this “dump on Daddy” purgation.
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More about Amazon's censorship policy of banning those that the SPLC Jews tell them to blacklist and block:
https://nationalvanguard.org/2020/02/am ... l-content/
More about Jews and other enemies of the National Alliance who call NA a "cult" (from the August 2019 issue of the
National Alliance BULLETIN).
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Who you calling a cult, Jewboy?
Our William L. Pierce Memorial Library doesn't house only books that reinforce our racial nationalist, preservationist viewpoint. We also have a good number of books written by our racial enemies. One such volume is Jeffrey Kaplan's 1997,
Radical Religion in America: Millenarian Movements from the Far Right to the Children of Noah. Kaplan lumps our Cosmotheism religion in with Christian Identists, Odinists, Christian Ku Kluxers, Odinists, the anti-Christian Church of the Creator, and some obscure philo-Semitic outfit calling itself B'nai Noah. However, in Kaplan's 200+ page book about what he calls White racist millennial religions the Cosmotheist Church is mentioned but once -- and that is footnoted to the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith as the source for this single sentence: "After 1978, [William Pierce's] National Alliance was joined with a new Pierce creation, The Cosmotheist Church, whose primary tenet of faith appears to be 'Thou shalt not deny Dr. Pierce tax exempt status' as had the Internal Revenue Service in that year."
That's it, coming from a Jew professor of Sociology who styles himself an expert in White racism and White supremacy. In this same book the Jew Sociology professor devotes a full page to quoting word-for-word the well-documented enemy of the National Alliance and other legitimate groups, Harold Covington (see:
https://nationalvanguard.org/2018/07/dr ... covington/) In Covington's 1993 disgusting obituary of the honorable Ben Klassen, founder of the Church of the Creator, Kaplan quotes him: "Benny Klassen is dead...the founder of the "Church of the Creator" sodomy cult, the man whose deviant lifestyle was so notorious that American Skinheads nicknamed him "old Benny Buttfuck"... most probably a rabbi's son from Vilna... Enough. The already depleted remnants of his cult are collapsing like a house of cards even as I write. Let it perish along with he who gave it life."
Jeffrey Kaplan likes to repeat this idea that any religion for Whites that is not Semitic must be a "cult." After releasing his 624 page hardback textbook
Encyclopedia of White Power in 2000, which also prominently featured many of Covington's smears of good men, Kaplan co-edited
The Cultic Milieu: Oppositional Subcultures in an Age of Globalization with another Jewish expert in "Nazism," another textbook writer, Heléne Lööw. A blurb on that textbook reads: "Chapters look at phenomena such as US white supremacism through the lens of the cultic milieu, and help introduce the term to a new audience, especially those concerned with the history and dynamics of the extreme right."
So, a new audience of impressionable university students studying Sociology, learn this in The Cultic Milieu: William Pierce, founder of the National Alliance and doyen of American neo-Nazism from the 1970s to the early 2000s, developed an alternate faith he called Cosmotheism,.. Part of the lived experience of being a committed white supremacist, for Pierce, was to develop a more profound understanding of one’s place within the cosmos, while rejecting the worldview of Judeo-Christianity.
Kaplan got that last part right, at least, but how many of those young students of his can get past the buzz terms "neo-Nazism" and "white supremacism," or "extreme right" for that matter? How many wide-eyed pupils of Sociology will actually be able to get beyond the smears to grasp that Dr. Pierce's supplanting the ancient, truly cultish, otherworldly Judeo-Christian worldview that is grounded in superstition, with a reality and science-based worldview that gives "a more profound understanding of one's place within the universe," is perfectly reasonable? Will these impressionable university students be willing to agree with Dr. Pierce and disagree with Jeffrey Kaplan and the other influential Jewish experts in "White supremacy and White racist cults?" Kaplan and his kinsmen blaspheme Cosmotheists and associate and marginalize us along with nutty cults like Heaven's Gate, Scientology, the Unification Church and Jim Jones' People's Temple.
What our Alliance is not is neo-Nazi, White Supremacist (akin to racial segregation, apartheid, "separate but equal Jim Crow"), or even extreme right, We're right, all right, and these extreme left Jews are dead wrong when branding the National Alliance a cult. Our goal is strict geographical separation, our own exclusive homeland, free of aliens and their influence. Period. We will work out details later. Preserving our kind is not an "extreme" goal. This cult rap was run past respected Alliance ally Martin Kerr, who worked closely with Dr. Pierce for years. Martin responded on our WhiteBiocentrism forum:
Accusations that the National Alliance or Cosmotheism are cults or cult-like are off base. True cults are inward-look groups that are based on charismatic leadership, esoteric teachings and revelation. None of these descriptors accurately fit the NA or the Cosmotheist Church (CC). The fact that the NA spends so much of its energy in public outreach is uncult-like.
Will Williams and Kevin Strom, both of whom I know personally, are nice enough folks, but neither holds the NA/CC membership in thrall by the force of charismatic leadership. Nor are there esoteric teachings or revelations. Rather, the entire belief system of Cosmotheism is available to anyone who is interested in it: there are no secret teachings which are held back for an inner circle that can only be attained through selective initiation. The doctrines of the CC are not based on supernatural epiphany, but rather on the rational and diligent search for Nature's laws as revealed by the latest scientific data. Of course, some people who throw the word "cult" around are using it in a more general sense, rather than adhering to a strict technical definition [and some are just nasty anti-White Jews].
I remind these critics that Christianity began as a cult. It was a secretive and subversive sect for the first 300 years or so of its existence. Its believers were persecuted, tortured and killed by the Roman state, and its sacred texts were banned and burned. Then in AD 313 it was legalized, and 10 years later it became the official religion of the Roman Empire. From there it became the dominant religion of the entire White world for 1500 years...[and is still cultish].