Editing Belew 2018

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 51: Line 51:
'''Vietnam Veterans'''
'''Vietnam Veterans'''
*Louis Beam returned home from Vietnam, accounting for the killings of twelve to fifty-one "communists" in 1968.
*Louis Beam returned home from Vietnam, accounting for the killings of twelve to fifty-one "communists" in 1968.
*Beam logged more than a thousand hours shooting at the enemy and transporting his fellow soldiers during the eighteen months he spent in Vietnam
**Weaponizing his story from the war allowed him to spark a white power revolution by militarizing the renewed Ku Klux Klan.
**Weaponizing his story from the war allowed him to spark a white power revolution by militarizing the renewed Ku Klux Klan.
*The war served to polarize political groups on both ends of the spectrum as veterans entered critical roles in organizing politics and culture.
*The war served to polarize political groups on both ends of the spectrum as veterans entered critical roles in organizing politics and culture.
*Beam pushed forth a story about government betrayal, soldiers left behind, and a nation that would never value his sacrifice. 
**Veterans within the white power movement thus signify a larger narrative regarding their claims on society and the aftermath of war.
**Veterans within the white power movement thus signify a larger narrative regarding their claims on society and the aftermath of war.


Line 60: Line 58:
*Resurgences for the Ku Klux Klan occur more in tandem with post-war effects than with poverty, anti-immigration sentiment, or populism.
*Resurgences for the Ku Klux Klan occur more in tandem with post-war effects than with poverty, anti-immigration sentiment, or populism.
*The cooperation of veterans and civilian Klan members amounted to an overspill of state violence from the war into the threads of American culture, society, and politics.
*The cooperation of veterans and civilian Klan members amounted to an overspill of state violence from the war into the threads of American culture, society, and politics.
*Veterans who joined the Klan after the war played instrumental roles in leadership, providing military training to other klansmen and carrying out acts of violence.
*War narratives that pushed an understanding of betrayal by the government and suffering laid the foundations of activism for white power.  
*War narratives that pushed an understanding of betrayal by the government and suffering laid the foundations of activism for white power.  
*People felt disenchanted from failures to achieve decisive victories after the extensive use of soldiers, bombs, and money.  
*People felt disenchanted from failures to achieve decisive victories after the extensive use of soldiers, bombs, and money.  
*Vietnam differed from other wars in its normal and frequent engagement with civilian violence, mutilation, sexual violence, and other crimes.  
*Vietnam differed from other wars in its normal and frequent engagement with civilian violence, mutilation, sexual violence, and other crimes.  
*Defeat served to challenge the image of the American soldier, questioned the global political order, and intensified anti-communist sentiment.
*Defeat served to challenge the image of the American soldier, questioned the global political order, and intensified anti-communist sentiment.
*Vietnam Veterans Against the War lead anti-war demonstrations, denounced the war, and moved to provided assistance to those who had suffered physical effects from exposure to chemicals during the war
 
**During this period veteran groups such as prisoners of war/missing in action (POW/MIA) gained major political lobbying power.
**Veterans who formed part of the white power movement used the Vietnam war to anti-government sentiment by telling stories of war soldiers who had met gruesome injury and death, faced hardship, insects, abandonment, rot, and disease.
**Many American soldiers who came home after the war were spat on and called baby killers. Their service was not appreciated and those that were left behind as prisoners of war were abandoned and forgotten. The ones who came home were denied homecoming parades and their place in public memory.
**The Vietnam war story served a vital role in the white power movement although many things that were said regarding the war were contested
'''Reactions on the Home Front'''
'''Reactions on the Home Front'''
*Martha Rosler made the series "House Beautiful: Bringing the War Home," which combined war violence with suburban domestic spaces to highlight the dissonance between warfare and those calling for war from home.
*Martha Rosler made the series "House Beautiful: Bringing the War Home," which combined war violence with suburban domestic spaces to highlight the dissonance between warfare and those calling for war from home.
Line 77: Line 70:
'''Impact on White Power'''
'''Impact on White Power'''
*The war engendered a culture that became symbolically iconic for men to reference as a driving political narrative.
*The war engendered a culture that became symbolically iconic for men to reference as a driving political narrative.
**Many who joined the white power movement but had not been directly involved with military service had gotten close to enlisting or had an intense interest in the military but had not enlisted because of frustration with how the war was unfolding.
*Many activists who came out of it pivoted to racist activities and activism for white power following their perception of betrayals by the government and adherence to a potent political rhetoric.
*Many activists who came out of it pivoted to racist activities and activism for white power following their perception of betrayals by the government and adherence to a potent political rhetoric.
*Over a thousand occurrences of racial violence were recorded by 1970 both abroad and in the United States.  
*Over a thousand occurrences of racial violence were recorded by 1970 both abroad and in the United States.  
Line 87: Line 79:
*Beam consistently called for violent infliction on civilians at home as a response to the government's abandonment of soldiers in Vietnam.
*Beam consistently called for violent infliction on civilians at home as a response to the government's abandonment of soldiers in Vietnam.
*His writing reflects a tension between a man wrestling with the violence of war and a leader of the white power revolution inciting further violence.  
*His writing reflects a tension between a man wrestling with the violence of war and a leader of the white power revolution inciting further violence.  
*He claimed the war continued on long after its end, even as the rules and political landscape had evolved. He called for the violent murder of everyone that had sent soldiers to Vietnam, which appealed to greater audiences of the white power movement.
*He claimed the war continued on long after its end, even as the rules and political landscape had evolved. He called for the violent murder of everyone that had sent soldiers to Vietnam, which appealed to greater audiences of the white power movement.  
 


==Chapter 2: "Building the Underground"==
==Chapter 2: "Building the Underground"==
Line 157: Line 150:


==Chapter 7: "Race War and White Women"==
==Chapter 7: "Race War and White Women"==




Line 163: Line 155:


Women were central to the white power movement. White women played a crucial symbolic and practical role in the white power movement of the 1980s. This was exemplified during the 1988 Fort Smith sedition trial of movement leaders.     
Women were central to the white power movement. White women played a crucial symbolic and practical role in the white power movement of the 1980s. This was exemplified during the 1988 Fort Smith sedition trial of movement leaders.     


'''Background'''
'''Background'''
Line 170: Line 161:
*Symbolically, the white power movement invoked the purity and vulnerability of white women to justify its ideology and violence. Leaders portrayed the movement as necessary for the defense of white women from the threats of interracial relationships, non-white birth rates, and government/Zionist betrayals.
*Symbolically, the white power movement invoked the purity and vulnerability of white women to justify its ideology and violence. Leaders portrayed the movement as necessary for the defense of white women from the threats of interracial relationships, non-white birth rates, and government/Zionist betrayals.
*White women were instrumental to the movement's operation and growth. They created important social ties through marriage, supported paramilitary activities, and spread propaganda. They framed their roles as wives and mothers of the white race. Mothers of future Aryan warriors.  
*White women were instrumental to the movement's operation and growth. They created important social ties through marriage, supported paramilitary activities, and spread propaganda. They framed their roles as wives and mothers of the white race. Mothers of future Aryan warriors.  


'''White Women as Symbols'''
'''White Women as Symbols'''
Line 192: Line 182:
*Some women produced propaganda aimed at other women in the movement.  
*Some women produced propaganda aimed at other women in the movement.  
*During the 1988 sedition trial of white power leaders, the presence of supportive wives and sisters in the courtroom helped create sympathy for the male defendants and made the movement seem less threatening to the American public.  
*During the 1988 sedition trial of white power leaders, the presence of supportive wives and sisters in the courtroom helped create sympathy for the male defendants and made the movement seem less threatening to the American public.  


'''The Fort Smith Trial and Sheila Beam'''
'''The Fort Smith Trial and Sheila Beam'''
Line 203: Line 192:
*American  mainstream media coverage portrayed Sheila and the movement sympathetically.
*American  mainstream media coverage portrayed Sheila and the movement sympathetically.
*After the trial, the white power movement used the Beams' story as vindication. Their story was used to mobilize new recruits. Sheila's experience fit neatly into the central narrative of white women as victims in need of protection from the tyrannical government.
*After the trial, the white power movement used the Beams' story as vindication. Their story was used to mobilize new recruits. Sheila's experience fit neatly into the central narrative of white women as victims in need of protection from the tyrannical government.


'''Summary'''
'''Summary'''
Line 213: Line 201:
*To appeal to broader anti-government sentiments of the time, Beam invoked his duty to defend the Constitution and popular sovereignty over the federal government.
*To appeal to broader anti-government sentiments of the time, Beam invoked his duty to defend the Constitution and popular sovereignty over the federal government.
*The prosecution faced major challenges:
*The prosecution faced major challenges:
** Jury selection was rushed by a sympathetic judge which resulted in a jury that was also sympathetic to the defendants.
** Jury selection was rushed by a sympathetic judge which resulted in a jury lthat was also sympathetic to the defendants.
**The prosecution's case was weakened by the exclusion of evidence by the judge.
**The prosecution's case was weakened by the exclusion of evidence by the judge and by the defendants' charismatic testimony.
**Two jurors became romantically involved with defendants after the trial which suggested bias in the jury’s decision.
**Two Jurors' became romantically involved with defendants after the trial which suggested bias in the jury’s decision.
*The white power movement used the victory to mobilize recruits and push its message further into the mainstream.
**The white power movement used the victory to mobilize and mainstream its message.
**Leaders of the movement pushed the verdict as a triumph of popular will over government persecution.
***Leaders of the movement pushed the verdict as a triumph of popular will over government persecution.
**The movement united with new neo-Nazi skinheads and militia members in the early 1990s.
***The movement united with new neo-Nazi skinheads and militia members in the early 1990s.
**Activists made use of stories of victimized white women like Sheila Beam to justify violence against the government.
***Activists made use of stories of victimized white women like Sheila Beam to justify violence against the government.
Please note that all contributions to Projecting Power may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see Projecting Power:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)