November 5, 2024

Idavox Archives

Archived articles originally found on the One People's Project website.

MATT HEIMBACH GOES TO CHARLESTON…AND DECLARES SHOOTER A 'VICTIM'

062115Heimbach1It never ceases to amaze us how corny the White Nationalist crowd can be. Like selfish spoiled children they take every opportunity of every moment to turn it around to give themselves the spotlight and make it about them. And that goes double for our boy Matthew Heimbach, who just HAD to come out to Charleston to get his face time, and give some creedence to the confessed shooter.

One People’s Project

CHARLESTON, SC – Thousands have gathered at the Emanuel AME Church to mourn and pay respects to the nine people murdered by White Nationalist Dylann Roof last week. However on Monday, appearing in the crowd like blood thirsty sharks in the water, were Matthew Heimbach, Scott Terry, and Tom Bulls, who according to the ABC News story on their visit, drove down from Cincinnati to be there, although Heimbach was reported seen almost 400 miles away in Knoxville, Tennessee two days prior, protesting the PrideFest Parade there.

Heimbach, who runs an organization called the Traditional Youth Network, is often seen on television and other media outlets making a name for himself promoting his White Supremacist ideals. In 2013 he went to the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) with his regular associate Scott Terry, who is also an associate of the League of the South (LOS) and made headlines himself there when at a presentation on racism charges put on by Black Conservative K. Carl Smith, of Frederick Douglass Republicans he made an argument for slavery, questioning why Douglass would forgive his former owner “for giving him food and shelter”. Tom Bulls, a recent Indiana State University grad is a self-admitted Klansman spent his years at the university organizing threatening and racist demos with Heimbach and Matt Parrott, also of the Traditional Youth Network.

According to the ABC news program Nightline, Heimbach said they came to the Mother Emanuel to promote a message counter to the one of racial harmony that many who were there called for, that there is a “culture war” against White people. “Dylann Roof is a victim in regards to he was a white man born to a society that actively hates him and hates his people, hates his culture and his identity,” Heimbach told Nightline.

Heimbach said further that while he would not defend the acttions of Roof, he understands why what would lead him to act in such a manner. “The left that persecutes and hates white culture, white identity and the Christian faith, they are the ones that are responsible because you will push individuals only so long before they react,” he said. “You cannot step on an individual forever before they decide that they are going to bite back and that’s what we see.”

In a Facebook post last weekend, Scott Terry, explained in response to April Gaede, the mother of the former White Nationalist singing twins Prussian Blue, that the idea to place a wreath at the church, while, per her query, not doing that when Blacks kill Whites, is their way to offset what he believes is a way to put a bad light on White Nationalists. “I pay homage to the myriad of victims whenever possible, he wrote. “But in this case, I suspect the government has set up a shooting scenario as a way to make white “racists” look bad and justify anti-white stereotyping by government agencies. If we show up, while the national camera is here in Charleston, and show how we repudiate indiscriminate acts of violence, we might serve to counter-act the force of this attempted false flag operation.”

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In recent days, the Council of Conservative Citizens, a White Supremacist group that Roof noted in his manifesto as an inspriration, has been under fire by people outraged at the shooting. Most notably, Kyle Rogers, the webmaster of the organization says that he has been under siege by media camped outside his home in Summervile, SC, a suburb of Charleston. In another Facebook post last weekend, Terry came to the defense of Rogers, saying, “Anyone who wants a piece of him has to come through me first.”

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