Political Rabies - left-hand-path nationalism
The Satanists and provocateurs leading young patriots down a deadly blind alley
Atomwaffen - a classic state-directed ‘pseudo-gang’, created to misdirect and besmirch legitimate opposition to liberal tyranny.
Young nationalists are being presented with some very bad role models and some thoroughly evil ideas. What follows is not an account of a handful of isolated cranks. It is a warning that their twisted ideas are alive, current and being spread among young men searching for an alternative to toxic liberalism.
Any nationalist who ignores their political rabies, let alone provides some sort of platform for or defence of it, is part of the problem, and a traitor to the Cause.
This is not another study of the anti-Christian heresy of Dispensationalism, better known today as Christian-Zionism. Especially following the Charlie Kirk murder and Carlson/Fuentes interview, we do not need another rehash of the MAGA vs MIGA controversy.
Political Rabies
What is useful, however, is an examination of the ideas and bad actors currently polluting the fringes of Nationalism. We will start with the neo-Nazi Satanists.
Whenever some autistic incel either murders innocent people or is caught planning to copy one who already has, the same ‘skull mask’ organisations crop up. Atomwaffen, The Base, and Feuerkrieg Division are the most common.
They all emerged from Iron March, a neo-fascist web forum active from 2011 to 2017. Strangely, for a supposedly white racist movement, it was founded by a mixed-race Russian-Uzbek, Alisher Mukhitdinov, whose family had been noted Communists in Uzbekistan.
Under the name ‘Alexander Slavros’, he promoted a far-right form of ‘accelerationism’ – the idea of sparking racial conflict through assassinations, murders and terrorist attacks.
Iron March became a platform for militant neo-Nazi organisations and for individuals later responsible for several acts of terrorism and murder. In February 2015, three people were arrested for planning to commit a Valentine’s Day mass shooting at a shopping mall in Halifax, Nova Scotia. One of the suspects, 23-year-old Lindsay Souvannarath of Illinois, was an active member of the Iron March forum and the ex-girlfriend of its founder.
Devon Arthurs, an Iron March user and member of the Atomwaffen Division (AWD), killed his two roommates, also members of AWD, in 2017. Arthurs’ remaining roommate and fellow Iron March user Brandon Russell was arrested in Florida, for stockpiling of illegal weapons and bomb-making materials. Russell had been among Iron March’s most prolific users, having written around 1,500 posts on the site.
YouTube video from Myatt’s Muslim phase. This, together with his earlier efforts to push neo-nazi ideas in the British nationalist movement, is entirely consistent with the Satanist tactic of joining organisations not to advance their cause, but to use their followers to spread evil and death.
The Iron March forum indoctrinated users with the twisted ideas of the Order of Nine Angles (ONA), a Satanist organisation founded by the British neo-Nazi David Myatt in 1974. While Myatt later converted to Islam, various of his followers developed the ideas which he had taken from Alistair Crowley and shared them on the forum. These included ritualised rape, lynching, random attacks on innocent victims and what they describe as “human culling”.
Interestingly, Myatt was never arrested despite the fact that his violent teachings in a Practical Guide to Aryan Revolution were cited by the perpetrator of the deadly 1999 London Bombings. Myatt now claims to have rejected both Satanism and Islam, but the baneful influence of his writings continues in fringe circles.
Joshua Sutter - one of the key founders of left-hand path Nazism, and a long-term FBI asset.
Also very influential was the ‘Tempel ov Blood’, an O9A-affiliated group headed by Joshua Sutter. Through his wife’s publishing house, Martinet Press, Sutter produced a book, Iron Gates, whose depictions of human sacrifice and child rape became a hit with the new Satanic far right. “Iron Gates, NOW!” became the slogan of the Atomwaffen Division.
During the prosecution of Atomwaffen’s Kaleb Cole, it emerged that Sutter was a paid FBI informant for 16 years, receiving more than $140,000.
Iron March users in Britain were heavily involved in the creation of National Action, now banned after terrorist plots and attacks in which its Satanist-inspired members played key roles. NA member Ryan Fleming had several vampiric/Satanist books published by Martinet Press. He went on to be imprisoned for sexually abusing a mentally-disabled teenage boy. After his release he was arrested and jailed for a further three years for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl whom he had groomed online.
Another offshoot of Iron March was The Base (‘Al Qaeda’ in English). Formed in 2018 by Rinaldo Nazzaro, the group was active in the United States, Canada, Australia and Europe, and designated as a terrorist organization in Canada, the UK, Australia, New Zealand, and the European Union.
Once again, we see the pattern – which duplicates that seen with Islamist terrorism from Al Qaeda to ISIS – of key leaders having been employed by U.S. Deep State security services. It wasn’t just the informer Sutter, Nazzaro was a former employee of the FBI and the Pentagon.
Iron March ideas continue to pollute the ultra right, but are not the only baneful influence. Also prominent is former American Nazi Party theorist James Mason, whose rambling book Siege continues to incite young radicals to form terrorist cells to murder opponents and members of ethnic minorities.
Mason is a long-term follower of the murderous cult leader Charlie Manson, who he describes as “the philosophical and ideological leader” of the so-called ‘leaderless resistance’. Also an admirer of Church of Satan founder Anton LaVey, Mason proudly included in Siege LaVey’s handwritten dedication in the copy of his Satanic Bible which the arch Satanist gave to him.
The Satanist influence on US Deep State-funded extremists does not, however, stop with Americans and Brits. Iron March also helped to form the left-hand path neo-Nazism of the militant Ukrainian Azov Battalion. Its occult Dark Sun symbol, widely used as a logo, battle flag and tattoo, is a visual clue to the ideas which inspire many of the fighters whom the CIA, Defense Department and NATO allies have funded trained and armed.
The anti-Putin Russian Volunteer Corps (RDK) was armed to the teeth with US weapons when it launched its short-lived invasion of Russia’s Belgorod region on the Ukrainian border. Key RDK figure Kirill Kanakhin has stated that the ‘Tempel of the Black Sun’, a Moscow-based group operating within the Satanist Order of Nine Angles “formed my main social circle for several years”.
The RDK’s two main leaders are Alexei Levkin and Denis Kapustin. Armed by NATO, they are promoted by the media of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, an exiled Jewish ‘liberal oligarch’. Both men are also linked to the ONA. The group propagandises the ideas and actions of ‘heroes’ such as the Christchurch Shooter, Timothy McVeigh, and Anders Breivik. It has also inspired and encouraged murders of the homeless and migrants in Russia.
Before going to fight in Ukraine, Kapustin was one of the most notorious neo-Nazis in Germany, to which his family had moved from Russia when he was a boy. He got a visa to move to Germany on account of his Jewish roots. Before his EU visa was revoked in 2014, Kapustin visited a National Action training camp in the UK.
There is a great irony in the development of left-hand Nazism in recent decades. Satanism and theosophist groups had proliferated in Weimar Germany, but were ruthlessly suppressed by the National Socialist regime.
From 1935-36, ‘Aktion Gegen die Sekten’ raids shut down dozens of occult groups. Members were sent to Dachau, where they were imprisoned for ‘re-education’. Satanists were classified as ‘Antisocial’, wearing black triangles on their forced labour camp uniforms.
‘False Fathers’ - Evil Role-Models
Satanists, murderers, rapists, paedophiles, provocateurs, non-whites, FBI informants and employees, CIA-backed mercenaries and monsters who have tortured Russian POWs to death in Ukraine, as well as murdering Russian-speaking civilians in cold blood.
That is the grim roll-call of the men and organisations presented as heroes and role-models to impressionable young nationalists by an increasing number of bad actors on the furthest fringes of the far far right. Our youngsters, and our people, deserve much better.
The problem of unhealthy influence seeping through 21st-century nationalism does not, however, stop with the dangerous crackpots we have seen above. There is another, much more ‘intellectual’ tendency, most commonly termed ‘Neo-Reactionary’, whose theories are gaining currency among supposedly ‘right-wing’ thinkers.
Curtis Yarvin. The face reflects the soul. When a creature like this becomes a guru for men who think they are becoming gods, you know there’s a problem!
Fronted by ‘philosophers’ such as Nick Land and Curtis Yarvin, this tendency is superficially a very long way from the dark, violent fantasies of the individuals and groups we have examined here. But Neo-Reactionary theories are the intellectual window-dressing and ‘justification’ for the transhumanism and ‘gov-tech’ tyranny now being embraced by some of the most powerful men in the world.
While not overtly Satanist, the ‘Homo Deus’ ambitions of the Tech Bros are most definitely Luciferian. Despite the different label, the only real difference between the ideas of Myatt and Slavros, and those of Land and Yarvin, is that the former appeal to alienated and powerless teenagers, while the influence of the latter extends to the Vice President of the United States.
This makes the Neo-Reactionary movement one of the most dangerous strands of political thought of our age. We shall therefore return to it, and the nationalist case against it, in due course.
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