Vanguard News Network

Aryan Alternative arrives in Harlotsville--to mixed reviews

Best place...: For white supremacists?

Charlottesville is a favorite of best-place-to-live list makers. It also seems to have become a favorite of white supremacists, who continue to target the area for distribution of bigoted publications. The latest arrived on local doorsteps the weekend before the June 14 state primaries.

North downtown resident Ron Bailey got a copy. When the Second Street resident scanned the tabloid with its "Open Season on Whites" cover headline, "I got a visceral feeling of picking up filth," he says. "It was hideous, egregious, disgusting."

His neighbor, Fred Schneider, got one too. "I'm upset by it," says Schneider.
"I'm upset that anyone thinks that kind of material passes as news and should be dist
ributed in any neighborhood. It's hateful and divisive."

Schneider says his wife was particularly offended by the content, which included the "N-word" and other derogatory racial terms that might be seen by children. "Totally inappropriate," says Schneider.

Despite its liberal leanings, Charlottesville is no stranger to forays by those with opposing viewpoints. Last year, a West Virginia group called the National Alliance took responsibility for distributing racist fliers here on Martin Luther King Day and anti-Semitic leaflets around Thanksgiving.

Based in Hillsboro, West Virginia, the Alliance was started by The Turner Diaries author William Pierce, whose magnum opus inspired Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh.

Tamar Kipper, spokeswoman for the Anti-Defamation League, which tracks extremist groups, says the National Alliance has been in de
cline since Pierce died in 2002. A leadership shake-up put Charlottesville on the white supremacist map courtesy of loc
al resident Kevin Strom, who used to do a radio show for the National Alliance.

"He was fired for gross insubordination," says National Alliance chairman Shaun Walker. "He decided to form a splinter group."

Strom did not respond to a request for an interview about his faction, the National Vanguard. And, anyway, the latest round of racist journalism comes not from Strom but from another former Alliance member, Alex Linder, in Kirksville, Missouri.

"I have no more problem using the word 'nigger' than your paper would using 'white trash,'" says Linder.

"Even the National Alliance shies from the N-word. "We would not use that," says Alliance boss Walker, calling it "so antagonistic."

He says he's never
seen a copy of Linder's publication, the Aryan Alternative. "At one time, we had a link with his website," Walker says, "but we unlinked because the quality was unprofessional, and he didn't have the
same message we have."
"

Has N-word-using Linder received any response from Charlottesville? "I know there was a TV reaction that portrayed us as haters," says Linder. "It was the typical biased, bigoted news reporting.

"Invariably," he continues, "reporters claim people are aghast at this material."

Linder argues that whites prefer to live around whites and move away when other races move in. He acknowledges fallouts with both the National Alliance and Kevin Strom, and says he doesn't have a group. But with his website, radio and paper, he hopes to attract 20 to 40-year-olds to his cause. "We're looking for young, intelligent white males," he says.

The latest Aryan Alternative, the group's second issue, had a print run of 20,000, according to Linder. "We have a low price, and people buy them and distribute them, likely a few hundred."

He declines to say who distributed the paper in Charlottesville.

NAACP president Rick Turner isn't surp
rised that white supremacists would be attracted to Charlottesville, but he wants some response. "I think there should be an outcry by city officials," he declares.

"I don't know anything about Charlottesville being attractive to white supremacists," says Mayor David Brown. "Charlottesville is the blue dot in a sea of political red. It's not the environment you'd expect to see extremist groups."

"Charlottesville has a reputation as a very tolerant, educated community that's respectful of people's views," notes Vice Mayor Kevin Lynch. "We're bound to attract a few nuts."
news-aryan.jpg

Publications like the Aryan Alternative continue to show up on local doorsteps.
news-strom.jpg

Kevin Strom, formerly associated with the National Alliance, has started his own supremacist group-- the National Vanguard-- headquartered here in Charlottesville.
http://www.vanguardnewsnetwork.com
-------------------------

Some good ink for VNN coming from "a blue dot in a sea of political red". Keep up the good work guys.
 
Newspaper filled with racial slurs found in Valley neighborhood

Newspaper filled with racial slurs found in Valley neighborhood

A newspaper is stirring anger among people in one Valley neighborhood.

It's called the Aryan Alternative and is published in Missouri.

The paper is filled with messages targeting people of color.

The newspaper is circulating across town in predominantly black neighborhoods.

"Keep yourself white and they talk about the white safety zone," reads Reverend R.L. Shanklin.

Just thumbing through the paper, you'll come across one racial slur after another. All targeting people of different races.

4002707_BG3.JPG

[NAACraP president tries to read Human language newspaper]

[im
g]http://waff.images.worldnow.com/images/4002707_BG1.JPG[/img]

4002707_BG2.JPG


"They listen to negative and write negative material against blacks and Jews and people of color. A paper like this has no business in our community," says Shanklin.

Reverend Shanklin is president of the NAACraP in Huntsville. He says the paper's main goal is spreading hatred and division.

"We are a community of togetherness. That's what we want to be about not separatism. It tells me that hate groups are still alive and well. Racism is alive and well in communities. They can say anything they please but spreading hatred is against the law because sooner or later someone is going to get hurt," Shanklin said.


We talked to Alex Linder, the publisher of the Aryan Alternative. He says their message is not to promote hatred but to support their opinion that races don't mix.

---------------------------

VNN strikes again!
:rotfl:
 
34

051021whitepaper.jpg


White Separatist Newspapers Hit Lawns of Belle Meade Homes

The newspapers were delivered to several homes in Belle Meade and were filled with hate toward minorities and Jews.

Police are investigating the delivery of the newspaper called "The Aryan Alternative." It is published by an anti-semitic group out of Missouri.

Belle Meade Police believe dozens of the newspapers were delivered all over the affluent neighborhood. Some residents called police, but there's not much the police department can do. These news letters can be ordered in bulk, so it could be a single individual that just wanted to pass on their viewpoint to the neighborhood.

They did go from house to house and did deposit paperwork th
at the people did not request or didn't ask for. They left it which in Tennessee is littering,� said Tom Sexton of the Belle Meade Police Department.


The detective said the only way to charge anyone with littering is to catch them do it. Littering is a misdemeanor, but it can be multiplied by the number of newspapers discovered. Also the suspects could be charged for trespassing on homeowners' properties.

Metro Police are also investigating.

We want to see if this is part of a larger group who might be looking to not only spread the propaganda, but also victimize people in the community,� said Captain Todd Henry of the Metro Police Department.

Captain Henry said he remembers a scene from four years ago when police arrested a man outside the Jewish Community Center with a rifle on his lap.
They got an illegal weapon out of his car and went to his home and found a lot of the same type of propaganda, newsletters, paramilitary
stuff in his apartment.�


Later in the investigation FBI agents found live hand grenades, pipe bombs and a military rocket launcher.

Metro Police say they don't know of any organized anti-semitic or white separatist groups in Nashville. However, there are individuals who belong to these groups.

************
Belle Meade Police believe dozens of the newspapers were delivered all over the affluent neighborhood. Some residents called police, but there's not much the police department can do. These news letters can be ordered in bulk, so it could be a single individual that just wanted to pass on their viewpoint to the neighborhood.
Algore lives in Belle Meade. Ask him if he's had a change of heart about niggers.

T.N.B.
 
VNN is doing good work.

But if the newspaper contained anti-semetic infromation or pictures, why does the media show the White girl in their reporting? Why not give some examples of the anti-semetic writings?
 
TAA # 3 is now out and the online version can be viewed here:

http://www.vanguardnewsnetwork.com/vnntaa3.pdf


This will be an excellent paper to distribute to counter all of the ZOG and nigger propaganda this society is awash in.

Bulk copies are available at less than cost:
50 copies. . . $8.00
100 copies. . $16.00
200 copies. . $32.00 (And we pay shipping)

Send check, cash, or money order to:

Glenn Miller
POB 3861,
Springfield, MO 65808

Or to:

Alex Linder
POB 101,
Kirksville, MO 63501
 
34

A circulated pro-white newspaper angered and perplexed residents and business owners in a Charlottesville neighborhood Wednesday.

The Aryan Alternative, a 16-page tabloid excoriating blacks and Jews, was distributed early in the day in the racially mixed Rose Hill neighborhood off Preston Avenue.

The paper is published in Missouri by Vanguard News Network, a white supremacy group. The issue distributed features stories alleging that illegal aliens carry diseases, Jews occupy half of all teaching slots at top-ten law schools and the NFL discriminates against white players.

A picture on the back page shows an attractive white woman and the words, ”Keep yourself pure, keep yourself white.”

Jesus Cavanaugh, a black Dale Avenue resident who received a copy of the paper, said he's ”completely appalled.”

He contacted David Toscano, Democratic candidate for delegate, and
o
thers in the community to make them aware of the paper's distribution.

”We're not going to overlook this,” Cavanaugh said Wednesday evening.

Whites and blacks received the papers, which were left on residents' doorsteps, according to Charlottesville police. Some in the neighborhood wondered if the papers were distributed as a recruitment tactic or merely to disturb them.

Most residents were not upset but wanted to report a suspicious occurrence, authorities said.

Last week, one of the papers was spotted in the same neighborhood. No crime was committed in its distribution, police said.

Residents of a Waynesboro neighborhood reported receiving the paper recently, and police are investigating the distribution of the Aryan Alternative in Williamsburg and Newport News, according to news reports.

Publisher Alex Linder said his main aim is to ”wake up” white people, but if the paper ”falls into a black person's hands, who cares? If they don't like the
publication, they can throw it out.”

He also said that mainstream media publications, which he argues are controlled by Jews, do not give the truth about race in America and depict his group negatively.

By writing about black-on-white crime, Linder said, ”we're haters, we're evil.”

A few dozen people have bought copies at a rate of $15 per 100 issues, which they then distribute wherever they wish, Linder said.

He's received no comments about this issue from people in Virginia, but Linder said there are many people who support the paper's stance.

Cavanaugh's no fan, though.

”That's a bull-- philosophy,” he said.

http://www.dailyprogress.com/servlet/Satel...&path=!news

- - -

The above article forgot to drop the link to Alex Linder's site.

http://www.vanguardnewsnetwork.com/
 
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