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originally posted by: fotsyfots
originally posted by: Kryties
a reply to: CthruU
There is plenty of right-wing extremist nutjobs here in Australia mate. Anyone with a Southern Cross tattoo for example. Have you heard of the "Australian Defense League" (I think that's their name) - they are just one of the many right wing extremist groups fouling our country with their utter crap.
Look up what that maggot Fraser Anning said about the shooting.
It was only a matter of time before one or more of them decided to take their collective nonsense to "the next level".
Your posts are confusing me. Why are you hell bent on labelling people & categorizing them by beliefs ( your opinions of their beliefs ) & especially by race & yet seem to lament that their isn't this utopian one people world ? I've read I think 4 or 5 of your posts apologizing for the fact this muppet's mother just happened to give birth to it in Australia & I'm sorry it just sounds so fake & kiss arse stupid ! I'm saddened to hear of the news of course but being an Aussie myself I can say the idea of being sorry to the victims & loved ones because of shared homeland with this prick is friggin ludicrous. It's not like it's World Cup Finals where all the football ignorant jump aboard the Socceroo team in some misplaced national pride. Stop spouting on that he was born here because you should be well aware it only has to fester in the mind of another fu**tard to suddenly lash out seeking revenge on all aussies. Same as if you kept harping on about him having blond hair, so all blond hair people should be apologizing to the victims & loved ones. You can see that right ?
originally posted by: XAnarchistX
Man charged with NZ mosque attacks gave cash to Austrian far-right
originally posted by: XAnarchistX
Man charged with NZ mosque attacks gave cash to Austrian far-right
It was the first thing I noticed as news of the Christchurch shooting came in — the patch on the back of the shooter's rucksack, something that was also emblazoned on the cover of the rambling manifesto.
It was far from the first time I'd seen it.
I'd seen it on t-shirts sold by far-right fashion brands in France. I'd seen it in photos of shields held by white supremacists at the violent "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville in 2017. And, here in Ukraine, I'd seen it on the paraphernalia of the far-right Azov movement.
It's a sonnenrad (sunwheel) or black sun: a symbol commonly used by the far-right, including outright neo-Nazis, originally adapted from a mosaic on the floor on the SS Generals' Hall.
Seeing it in the context of Christchurch reminded me of just how interconnected the global far-right has become.
A manifesto was sent to police believed to be sent from the Christchurch shooter.
A wade through the swamp that is the manifesto shows a peculiar imagined version of Eastern Europe.
And it is clear the shooter matters to some in that region's far-right.