Words That End In St
Graffiti with a swastika and 14/88 on a wall
Graffiti with 1488 and an obscure bulletin on a wall
Fourteen Words (too abbreviated 14 or 14/88) is a reference to ii slogans originating with David Eden Lane,[i] [2] one of 9 founding members of the defunct white separatist insurrectionist group The Order.[3] The slogans take served every bit a rallying cry for militant white nationalists internationally.[4] The main slogan in the Fourteen Words is "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children",[1] [5] [6] [7] followed by the secondary slogan "Because the beauty of the White Aryan woman must non perish from the World".
The two slogans were coined prior to Lane serving a 190-year judgement in federal prison for violating the civil rights of the Jewish talk evidence host Alan Berg, who was murdered by another member of the group in June 1984. They were popularized heavily after Lane'due south imprisonment.[8] [ix] The slogans were publicized through print visitor xiv Word Press, founded in St. Maries, Idaho in 1995 by Lane's wife to disseminate her husband's writings[nine] [10] forth with Ron McVan who later on moved his operation to Butte, Montana after a falling out with David'south widow Katja Maddox.[11] [12]
Lane used the fourteen-88 numerical coding extensively throughout his spiritual, political, religious, esoteric and philosophical tracts and notably in his 88 Precepts. Co-ordinate to the Southern Poverty Police Centre, inspiration for the Fourteen Words "are derived from a passage in Adolf Hitler's autobiographical book Mein Kampf" (a claim Lane never fabricated);[thirteen] the Fourteen Words are prominently used by neo-Nazis, white power skinheads and certain white nationalists and the alt-right.[xiv] [xv]
Lane's credo was anti-American, white separatist and insurrectionist; he considered loyalty to the United states to be "racial treason" and upheld the acronym "Our Race Is Our Nation" ("ORION"),[16] viewing the United States as committing genocide against white people[17] [18] and as having been founded as a New Globe Order to finalize a global Zionist government.
Being bitterly opposed to the connected existence of the U.s. as a political entity, and labeling it the "murderer of the White race",[nine] Lane further advocated domestic terrorism equally a tool to carve out a "white homeland" in the Northern Mountain States. To that end, Lane issued a declaration called "Moral Authority" published through at present-defunct xiv Word Press and shared through the publications of Aryan Nations, World Church of the Creator, and other white separatist groups, referring to the United States as a "Ruby-red, White and Blue traveling mass murder machine", while asserting that "true moral authority belongs to those who resist genocide".[18]
Phrasing [edit]
After Lane's publication of the Fourteen Words, they were adopted by white supremacists[3] and neo-Nazis,[3] white nationalists, identitarians, and members of the far-correct and alt-right. The near widely used variation is "Nosotros must secure the existence of our people and a hereafter for white children";[1] [5] [half dozen] [7] a less commonly used variation is "Because the dazzler of the White Aryan adult female must not perish from the globe".[xix] They are sometimes combined with the number 88 to grade the abbreviations "14/88" or "1488". The 8s represent the eighth letter, H, with "HH" standing for Heil Hitler, according to Neo-Nazis who use the lawmaking.[seven] The number 88 was used by Lane as a reference to his 88 Precepts,[xx] forth with a secondary reference to his "88 Lines and 14 Words". "88", when combined with "14", refers to numerology in Lane'southward white supremacist neo-pagan religion, Wotanism (the absolute value of 14 minus 88 being the number -74).[21]
The slogan has been used in acts of white supremacist terrorism and violence.[iii] Information technology was central to the symbolism of 2008's Barack Obama assassination plot,[22] which intended to kill 88 African Americans, including time to come president Barack Obama (at that time the Autonomous Party nominee), fourteen of whom were to exist beheaded.[23] [24] Skinhead Curtis Allgier notably tattooed the words on to his torso after he murdered corrections officer Stephen Anderson,[25] and Dylann Roof's race war-inspired Charleston church shooting was influenced by the slogan.
Origins [edit]
A potent resemblance of the first definition to a argument in Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf has been pointed out, albeit non by Lane or by Fourteen Word Press. Scholars such as Barry Balleck have stated that Lane was about certainly influenced by Hitler, specifically the following statement in Mein Kampf.[3]
What nosotros must fight for is to safeguard the existence and reproduction of our race and our people, the sustenance of our children and the purity of our blood, the freedom and independence of the fatherland, so that our people may mature for the fulfillment of the mission allotted information technology past the creator of the universe. Every thought and every thought, every doctrine and all knowledge, must serve this purpose. And everything must exist examined from this bespeak of view and used or rejected co-ordinate to its utility.
— Mein Kampf, Vol. I, Affiliate 8[3]
According to scholar Mattias Gardell, David Lane taught something he called the "Pyramid Prophecy 666",[26] which included the concept that a Bible code was inserted by "Aryan adepts" within the Rex James Version of the Christian Bible. Gardell's book Gods of the Claret states "The number 1776 appears in the numeric square of Mars in which is found the Star of David and its 741 formula, 741 also beingness the value of the xiv Words in simple English gematria." Lane claimed both 14 word slogans came to him while comatose, and that the sentences each independent 61 letters, xx syllables, 74 characters and the 741 value. Elaborating, he described himself in the "Pyramid Prophecy" as the "666 Dominicus Man" trying to "save white people" with America existence the "Beast organisation" bent on "destroying white people" – views that were censored past Ron McVan and others who constitute the messianic claims counterproductive by "turning off potential converts".[27]
Advocates [edit]
United Kingdom [edit]
- Nick Griffin, a British politician, former British National Party leader and MEP, has stated his political ideology can be summed up by the 14 Words.[28] He has claimed "everything I practise is related to edifice a nationalist motion through which [...] those 14 words can be carried out."[29]
- Colin Jordan (1923–2009), a leading figure in mail-war neo-Nazism in Slap-up United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland and longtime supporter of the 14 Words; contributed to Lane's book Deceived, Damned & Defiant.[thirty]
- Millennial Woes, a Scottish alt-correct, neoreactionary political activist and YouTube personality, supports the slogan and has stated in 2017 that the "fourteen words used to be more controversial than they are nowadays".[31] Faith Goldy has claimed that he had encouraged her to recite the slogan in an interview.[32]
- John Tyndall (1934–2005) was a British fascist political activist who supported the 14 Words along with his political party, the National Front,[33] which he was chairman of from 1972 to 1974.[34]
United States [edit]
- Andrew Anglin, an American white supremacist and founder of The Daily Stormer website, often uses, references, and supports the slogan,[35] and has claimed, "We care not for our own egos or lives. Nosotros care only virtually the agenda, which is: We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children."[36]
- Broiled Alaska, an American alt-right/far-correct social media personality, supports the words[37] simply not their creator, and has stated that at that place's "nothing wrong" with the slogan. Distancing himself from its creator, he claimed, "Just because others take used them doesn't change the meaning."[38] He has frequently promoted the slogan on social media including with budgetary receipts, polls, questions and memes.[39] [xl] [41] [42]
- Craig Cobb, an American white nationalist and separatist, created the video sharing website Podblanc and started a business named after the xiv Words,[43] likewise as tried to showtime a church named afterward Trump which later burned to the footing.[44]
- Harold Covington (1953–2018), was an American white separatist leader and founder of the Northwest Front organization, based on the 14 Words.[45] [46]
- Nathan Damigo, an American white supremacist, leader of Identity Evropa and former US Marine, supports and promotes the slogan with his organization.[47] [48]
- April Gaede, an American white nationalist and neo-Nazi stage mom, whose daughters (Prussian Blueish) used to sing under Resistance Records; distributed David Lane's cremated remains in "fourteen pyramids" to signify the 14 Words.[49] [50] [51]
- Matthew Heimbach, an American white supremacist of the Traditionalist Workers Party, has based part of his party-platform on the "14 Words" and affirmed them at various speechs including ane before the Council of Conservative Citizens.[52] [53]
- William Daniel Johnson, an American white nationalist, attorney, and chairman of the American Freedom Party, is an advocate of the 14 word slogan. He has stated that he and his arrangement "encompass principles that will secure the existence of our people and a future for our children".[13] [54] [55] He has claimed that Ron Paul withdrew his endorsement of him for a judgeship in California, after media reported that he was an advocate of the 14 Words.[56]
- David Lane (1938–2007), was an American white supremacist leader and key fellow member of the terrorist system The Order. He is credited with creating and popularizing the 14 Words.[57] The ADL accept described Lane's slogan as reflecting "the principal white supremacist worldview in the late 20th and early 21st centuries".[58]
- Stephen McNallen, American neo-heathen leader and founder of the Asatru Folk Assembly, quoted the 14 Words verbatim[59] through National Vanguard magazine declaring: "The mainstream media, the left establishment, and all the usual suspects take declared that this statement is 'racist.' It is not racist, it is not White supremacist, it is non bigoted, it is in no way expressing hostility toward whatever racial group"[60] and based his own personal slogan "The existence of my people is not negotiable" every bit a simplified 14 Words.[61]
- Tom Metzger, an American white separatist leader, founder of White Aryan Resistance and hosted the xiv Give-and-take writings of imprisoned David Lane; accused the U.s. government of murdering Lane at his death in 2007.[62] [63]
- Jack Posobiec, an American alt-correct conspiracy theorist and former naval intelligence officer, has repeatedly published data related to "1488" and has been reported as a supporter of the slogan.[64] [65]
- Baton Roper, an American white supremacist who corresponded with David Lane and founded a White power group called "White Revolution" based on the fourteen Words.[66]
- Richard B. Spencer, an American white supremacist and president of the National Policy Institute, supports the 14-worded slogan.[36]
- Vox Twenty-four hours, an American writer, video game designer, and alt-correct activist, supports the 14 Words,[37] promoting the slogan in his Sixteen points of the Alt-Right,[67] which placed the sentence "nosotros must secure the beingness of white people and a future for white children" as the 14th betoken.[68]
- weev, an American calculator hacker and Internet troll, has shown his back up for the slogan, referencing "1488" numerously in computer transactions,[69] too as more explicitly discussing the topic on social media.[lxx] [71]
Canada [edit]
- Faith Goldy, a Canadian right-fly author and commentator, has recited[72] and supported[73] the 14 Words,[74] [75] saying "I don't run across that every bit controversial... We desire to survive."[31] After beingness banned by Patreon for her advancement of the slogan, Goldy dedicated her views, and gathered petition signatures in public on a document which replaced "white children" with "aboriginal children", to supposedly bear witness the slogan was not hate speech.[32]
Other nations [edit]
- Marian Kotleba, a Slovak politician and leader of the far-right Kotleba – People's Party Our Slovakia political party, has been accused of demonstrating support for the slogan,[76] with reference to the 14 Words by making a €1,488 donation to iii families.[77] [78] The donations were used as an evidence in the court in which he was institute guilty of supporting and propagating sympathies towards movements oppressing primal homo rights and was sentenced to four years and four months in prison.[79] The ruling is non valid yet and may be appealed.[80]
[edit]
The slogans and the numerology of "fourteen" and "88" have been used by many white supremacists, both before and later on they have committed acts of violence (such equally in manifestos), as well as in symbols which have been left at the scenes of criminal acts. These include Order-member David Lane, assassination attempters Paul Schlesselman and Daniel Cowart, and murderers Dylann Roof[82] and Curtis Allgier.[81] Allgier has "xiv" and "88" tattooed on his forehead higher up and to the sides of the words "pare" and "head" above his optics in his mugshot.[81]
Murder of Alan Berg [edit]
The bump-off of Jewish talk show host Alan Berg in June 1984 is considered as The Guild's most infamous human activity of terrorism.[83] [20] Gild fellow member Bruce Pierce served as the gunman in the murder and Lane served as the getaway driver.[84] [85] During Lane'south imprisonment on split convictions (some relating to violating Alan Berg's civil rights) he created the Fourteen Words slogan. The number 14 continues to symbolize allegiance to the Aryan Nations' vision of a white homeland.[86]
Barack Obama assassination plot [edit]
"xiv/88" numerology was symbolically included in the Barack Obama assassination plot in October 2008.[22] Both Neo-Nazis, Schlesselman and Cowart were introduced to each other online by a mutual friend who shared their white supremacist beliefs.[87] Inside a month of meeting, they had planned to impale the Democratic Party nominee by driving at their target and shooting from their vehicle. This was to be followed by a killing spree in which the men planned to kill 88 African Americans, 14 of whom were to be beheaded. They were targeting mostly children at an unidentified, predominantly black school.[23] [88] Shortly later on their abort, their vehicle was discovered to have "14" and "88" written onto it.[20]
Wisconsin Sikh temple shooting [edit]
Mass-shooter Wade Michael Page, who killed six and wounded 4 members of the Sikh community in Baronial 2012, had been a supporter of the Fourteen Words, and was found with "14" onto a Celtic Cross tattooed on his arm,[89] after committing suicide at the scene of the crime.[90] [91] Well-nigh a twelvemonth before the shooting, Page wrote on the Internet regarding the slogan, "Passive submission is indirect back up to the oppressors. Stand upward for yourself and live the 14 words."[92]
Charleston church shooting [edit]
Later on the Charleston mass-murder shooting in June 2015, Dylann Roof'south ideology and credible manifesto emerged in the media with multiple references to "1488";[93] these included several photos of Roof pictured alongside the numbers.[94] He symbolically brought 88 bullets to the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church to carry out the shooting, in which nine African Americans were killed.[95] [96]
Pittsburgh synagogue shooting [edit]
Robert Bowers, the gunman suspected of killing xi people and wounding 6 at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, included the numeric lawmaking "1488" in the header epitome of his Gab social media account.[97] [98] Bowers also expressed Christian Identity rhetoric declaring "the lord jesus christ is come in the flesh" while espousing anti-Semitic views that "jews are children of satan".[99]
Christchurch mosque shootings [edit]
Brenton Harrison Tarrant, the shooter responsible for the attacks, posted images on Twitter of firearms and published his manifesto "The Bully Replacement" which both had the neo-Nazi symbol Black Sun and the slogan (equally "14" or "14 Words") written on the weapons and besides in the manifesto. The firearms were used in the shooting.[100] [101] [102]
See too [edit]
- Fort Smith sedition trial
- Northwest Territorial Imperative
- White ethnostate
- White genocide conspiracy theory
- Zionist Occupation Government conspiracy theory
References [edit]
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Federal regime tried 4 suspects in 1987, and the ii found guilty were convicted of violating Berg's civil rights. Lane, and then 49, was sentenced to 150 years.
- ^ a b c "David Lane". Southern Poverty Police Center . Retrieved xviii November 2019.
In 1987, Lane was additionally accused of violating Berg's civil rights by helping to electrocute him, a federal charge. While Lane did not pull the trigger, prosecutors said he drove the getaway car and played a large role in the planning of Berg's murder. He was sentenced to 150 years in prison house.
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Words That End In St,
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteen_Words
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