Chapter 2
Main Argument:
Intro:
Chapter 2: Building the Underground
- Louis Beam in 1977 purchased 50 acres of swampland using the Texas Veterans Land Board Grant
- He created a training facility which transformed Klansmen into Soldiers
- Curating a paramilitary that was unified by a white power movement, would implement various methods to target undocumented immigrants such as a Klan border watch
- Southern Poverty Law Center banned paramilitary training, further fueled this movement
- Shared acts of violence, such as the harassment of Vietnamese refugees tied members together to share a common purpose
Beams Creation of His Own Group
- In 1968, he joined the United Klans of America, but left due to the governments interference
- He searched for other opportunities, exploring five options, but they each had a problem that made them not desirable to join according to Beam
- Instead he created his own group
- The Vietnam war was utilized as the basis of his actions and narrative
- He believed the war wasn't over when he returned home in America, which he used as a excuse for his violent actions
- In 1975 he affiliated his independent Klan with the Knights of the Klu Klux Klan
- Managed by David Duke, claiming they did not advocate for the denial of minority rights but the rights to only associate with white people
- Beam felt he had the right to defend his race against immigration, which he viewed as a threat
- Although they put up a soft public front, they had several violent underground activities and violence was the basis of their ties; Beam even had kill zones throughout the US
The Klans
- The Klan Paramilitary camps sought to copy army training-one surge of violence was to carry out the past excitement of "army scenes"
- Veterans made up a large majority of the third Klan resurgence
- Klansmen asserted they were doing the workings of the state by participating in the Klan border watch
- They sought to intimidate immigrants to an extent in which they would be worried to cross because of the Klans Border Watch
- A reporter went undercover as an undocumented immigrant, and heard several violent stories about the Klan border watch that induced fear in these immigrants
Expansion
- Beam advanced as Klan leader and sought to expand his camp, Camp Puller
- Expansion was dependent on two factors, social and financial investment, which came from a close group of Klan supporters
- In the fall of 1980 however Camp Puller had several parental complaints and undercover reports which drew attraction to it
- They were teaching high-schoolers horrific violent acts such as decapitation, hijacking airplanes etc.
Klan Continuation
- The camps were also preparing for antigovernment combat, and prepared to rage a race war
- Due to economic crisis, the refugee's were seen as potential economic competitors
T*here were tensions arising given that refugees were receiving support from the government, whereas veterans were seeing a lack thereof
- This narrative was used by Klan members to fuel their racism
- The Klan further promoted violence against the Vietnamese refugees by putting forth racist tropes
- Claiming they carried several diseases-increase harassment toward Vietnamese fishermen
- In Santa Fe on February 14 roughly 300-400 people attended a Klan rally
- During this Rally the Klan gave the government a deadline to remove the Vietnamese fisherman out of the golf, if not the Klan would then step in and take action
- The deadline was May 15
- Robed Klansmen went on bay patrol, there was sympathy for white fishermen
- During the patrol they had a lynched Vietnamese refugee hung
- The threats intensified
- Due to this the Vietnamese community gathered and filed a harassment suit
- Many Vietnamese refugees tired of dealing with this harassment, in March of 1981 offered to leave on the condition that the White people buy the boats back
- Since they were overcharged, few white boatsmen could afford to buy back
- As depositions began the Klan employed intimidation tactics to make the Vietnamese refugees fearful
- Beam responded by using the Vietnamese war as basis for his actions
- The court ruled in favor of the Vietnamese, claiming the Klan did pose as a threat
- As a result they prohibited many of their actions, including boat burning, wearing Klan robes in a group larger than two people, etc
- McDonald, the judge, received threats posts ruling
- Mark White, Texas District Attorney in June shifted the focus from Vietnamese fisherman to the larger issue at hand, the paramilitary camps
- White claimed they were in violation of the law by doing such
- These were not the only problem, there were several similar sites participating in the same sort of combat training
- On June 4, 1982 McDonald ruled they must stop paramilitary training, rallying in public with their guns, etc in Texas
- The white power movement had already been fueled across the nation in different states by the time this decision was made
- Beam resigned as Grand Dragon of Texas KKKK but hinted the movement was continuing in the Northwest
- His ten month sentence was appealed
- The FBI decided the Texas KKKK was not worthy of further investigation and moved to focusing on the Northwest
- Beam continued his mission to kill communists as he did in Vietnam