Archive/File: orgs/american/ihr PAC.ihr
From oneb!cs.ubc.ca!destroyer!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!cleveland.Freenet.Edu!bz965 Mon Jan 25 08:38:29 PST 1993
Article: 9664 of alt.conspiracy
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From: bz965@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Richard Hatch)
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
Subject: Gritz, Populists, and Nationalists
Date: 25 Jan 1993 02:51:55 GMT
Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio (USA)
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monaghan@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk (N.O. Monaghan) writes concerning the
book _Beyond the Pale_ by Derrick Knight, CARAF Publications,
1982, and the British National Party (BNP):
>My opinion of the book is based not just on its biased
>political stance but also on its collection of lies, half-
>truths, unwarranted assumptions and general smear tactics that
>it uses - many directed against people that I know personally.
>As to the BNP, I have not examined its policies in detail and
>unable to comment on whether it follows the classical fascist
>corporatism or not.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
>N.O. Monaghan
Gritz, the Populist Action Committee, and John Tyndall
In a previous article, I noted the connection between Lt.
Col. James "Bo" Gritz and the Populist Action Committee. Gritz
wrote of his involvement with the PAC and Willis Carto:
I was asked to allow my name to be placed on the list of
policy board members of Carto's Populist Action Committee. I
saw nothing wrong in this, but I must tell you I have never
received the first communication from them.
[_The Patriot Review_ newsletter, Christian Patriots
Association, November 1992]
In fact, Gritz was listed as a member of the Populist Action
Committee (PAC) in several issues of Carto's (Liberty Lobby)
_Spotlight_ newspaper, prior to this claim of not having
received any communication from the PAC. In itself, Gritz's
willingness to serve on "Carto's Populist Action Committee" is
revealing, given Carto's well-known politics.
The PAC was launched in 1991 by the Liberty Lobby. The
featured speaker at the kick-off meeting was "English populist"
John Tyndall of the British National Party. [_The Spotlight_ June
3, 1991, page 1] The founding national chairman of the PAC,
Robert Weems, was a Mississippi KKK leader [_Blood in the Face_
by James Ridgeway, Thunder's Mouth Press, 1990, page 131] Tyndall
is a British "former" National Socialist who has been quoted as
saying "The Jew is like a maggot feeding on a body in an advanced
state of decay." [_Beyond the Pale: The Christian Political
Fringe_ by Derrick Knight, Caraf Publications, Lancashire, 1982,
page 47] The selection of Tyndall as featured speaker for the
founding meeting is an indication of the politics of the Populist
Action Committee.
The British National Party (BNP) and Its Origins
_The Other Face of Terror_ [by Ray Hill with Andrew Bell,
Grafton Books, 1988] describes several European fascist
organizations in detail. The material of the book was also the
subject of a 75 minute documentary film which aired on British
television Channel 4 and has been shown here in the United
States. Of the BNP it summarizes:
Born in 1960 out of a merger between Colin Jordan's White
Defence League and John Bean's National Labour Party, the
original BNP was led by Jordan and Andrew Fountaine. Pro-
nazi and anti-semitic, it split in 1962, when Jordan left to
form the National Socialist Movement. It was one of the
groups which merged to form the National Front in 1967.
When former NF leader John Tyndall launched a new party in
1982, the BNP name was resurrected. It is now a few hundred
strong, and publishes _British Nationalist_ and _Spearhead_.
The book also includes a photograph of Jordan and Tyndall wearing
stormtrooper-style uniforms with the following caption:
Colin Jordan and John Tyndall at a 1962 (?) camp organized
by 'Spearhead', the paramilitary wing of the British
National Party. Both were later gaoled for their 'Spearhead'
activities.
Tyndall also helped found the National Socialist Movement in
1962. Among his exploits, he was also fined for a 1964 assault on
Kenyan President Jomo Kenyatta; in 1966, he was jailed for
illegal possession of a firearm. [_The National Front_, by Nigel
Fielding, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1981, page 19] He split
from the NSM in 1964 to form the Greater Britain Movement. He
later served as Chairman of the National Front from 1972 to 1980.
Tyndall has tried, much like David Duke, to explain his
openly Nazi period as youthful exuberance. But in 1978, he still
defended the German Nazi social and economic programs, their
_lebensraum_ justification for war, and their race theories,
balking only at defending their dictatorship and extermination
policies. [_The National Front in English Politics_, by Stan
Taylor, The Macmillan Press, Ltd., London, 1982, page 57]
However, Tyndall still promoted the expulsion of non-whites from
England.
In fact, the National Front issued a _Statement of Policy_
which claimed that:
The NF upholds the wish of the majority of the British
people for Britain to remain a White country and for this
reason opposes all coloured immigration into Britain. It
further advocates the repatriation, by the most humane means
possible, of those coloured immigrants already here,
together with their descendants and dependents...
Pending the repatriation of immigrant peoples, their status
should revert to that of any other aliens...Apart from
welfare, housing and education facilities--to which British
citizens should have prior claim--all aliens should have
equal protection by the law as well as equal
responsibilities.
[_The National Front_, by Nigel Fielding, Routledge & Kegan
Paul, London, 1981, page 67-68]
The NF would have deported untold British citizens and residents,
based solely on their race and denied them equal access to
"welfare, housing, and education" while they awaited this fate.
The National Front was opposed in Britain by a variety of
political and civic groups. One of these groups, Christians
Against Racism and Fascism (CARAF) formed as a result of a 1977
meeting of the British Council of Churches. [_The National Front
in English Politics_, by Stan Taylor, The Macmillan Press, Ltd.,
London, 1982, page 138] The National Front eventually suffered
serious electoral decline and Tyndall went on to form the British
National Party in 1982.
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