
Reich Wing Watch
22 hours ago
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In the annals of American far-right activism, George Lincoln Rockwell and Charlie Kirk stand as pivotal figures who radicalized generations through charisma, controversy, and calculated outreach. Rockwell, founder of the American Nazi Party in 1959, and Kirk, co-founder of Turning Point USA in 2012, shared similarities in tactics and rhetoric, molding young minds while fueling division. Rockwell was assassinated on August 25, 1967, prompting polarized reactions, including pockets of celebration from his detractors.
Both men targeted college campuses as fertile ground for ideological recruitment, viewing impressionable students as the key to longevity. Rockwell’s stormtroopers disrupted civil rights events, marching in uniforms emblazoned with swastikas to provoke outrage and draw media attention, ensnaring curious youth into his neo-Nazi fold. Kirk, dubbed the architect of Trump’s youth movement, launched Turning Point’s “Professor Watchlist” to expose “liberal bias” and hosted high-energy campus tours like the “American Comeback,” where he debated students and distributed anti-woke materials. These efforts hooked early adherents: Rockwell’s rallies birthed white supremacists, while Kirk’s events mobilized thousands for MAGA causes.
Their ideologies converged on vilifying “outsiders” as societal scourges. Rockwell spewed virulent antisemitism, calling Jews a “parasitic race” and blaming Black Americans for crime and communism during the civil rights era. Kirk echoed this by decrying immigrants as “invaders” eroding American culture, tweeting that “illegals” steal jobs and fuel fentanyl deaths, while labeling diversity initiatives “anti-white racism.” Both framed minorities as existential threats.
Rockwell’s 1967 killing by a disgruntled follower sparked quiet toasts in Jewish and civil rights circles, with NAACP leaders hailing it as removing a “cancer.”
Rockwell and Kirk weren’t mere provocateurs; they were mirrors of an enduring far-right playbook—youth indoctrination, minority-blaming, and martyrdom in death. Their legacies warn of extremism’s cyclical pull, where cheers for one man’s end sow seeds for the next.
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In the annals of American far-right activism, George Lincoln Rockwell and Charlie Kirk stand as pivotal figures who radicalized generations through charisma, controversy, and calculated outreach. Rockwell, founder of the American Nazi Party in 1959, and Kirk, co-founder of Turning Point USA in 2012, shared similarities in tactics and rhetoric, molding young minds while fueling division. Rockwell was assassinated on August 25, 1967, prompting polarized reactions, including pockets of celebration from his detractors.
Both men targeted college campuses as fertile ground for ideological recruitment, viewing impressionable students as the key to longevity. Rockwell’s stormtroopers disrupted civil rights events, marching in uniforms emblazoned with swastikas to provoke outrage and draw media attention, ensnaring curious youth into his neo-Nazi fold. Kirk, dubbed the architect of Trump’s youth movement, launched Turning Point’s “Professor Watchlist” to expose “liberal bias” and hosted high-energy campus tours like the “American Comeback,” where he debated students and distributed anti-woke materials. These efforts hooked early adherents: Rockwell’s rallies birthed white supremacists, while Kirk’s events mobilized thousands for MAGA causes.
Their ideologies converged on vilifying “outsiders” as societal scourges. Rockwell spewed virulent antisemitism, calling Jews a “parasitic race” and blaming Black Americans for crime and communism during the civil rights era. Kirk echoed this by decrying immigrants as “invaders” eroding American culture, tweeting that “illegals” steal jobs and fuel fentanyl deaths, while labeling diversity initiatives “anti-white racism.” Both framed minorities as existential threats.
Rockwell’s 1967 killing by a disgruntled follower sparked quiet toasts in Jewish and civil rights circles, with NAACP leaders hailing it as removing a “cancer.”
Rockwell and Kirk weren’t mere provocateurs; they were mirrors of an enduring far-right playbook—youth indoctrination, minority-blaming, and martyrdom in death. Their legacies warn of extremism’s cyclical pull, where cheers for one man’s end sow seeds for the next.
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CAN832 ROCKWELL AND THE AMERICAN NAZI PARTY
AP Archive
Jul 30, 2015
(7 Sep 1966) The American Nazi Party is shown protesting and its leader and founder George Lincoln Rockwell goes before a New York commission and gives a speech at a rally.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WyFoB7TCfc