National Alliance
The National Alliance is an American political organization labeled "white separatist" by supporters and "neo-Nazi" by critics. It is believed to be the best-financed and best-organized white separatist organization in the United States."White Nationalist Separatism" is the core political position of the National Alliance. It hopes to secure what it calls "white survival" by recreating an all-white homeland. It claims that whites are the most gifted, kind and spiritually beautiful race which nature has thus far produced and thus worthy of their own homeland. According to some sources, the 'homeland' is to be the continent of Europe and most of North America and Australia. [1]
The group defines its views as constituting "white racial love." In 2004, the National Alliance launched a program of flyering urging all people to "Love your race." [1] (PDF)
The group was founded in 1974 by the late Dr. William Pierce, a former physics professor, rocket scientist and author of the revolutionary white separatist novel The Turner Diaries. Pierce had been an employee and a associate of the American Nazi Party before founding the National Alliance, and the group is often sometimes linked with the militant group called The Order through members that both groups briefly shared, and because of the fact that "The Order" had the same name as that of the group depicted in The Turner Diaries.
The National Alliance is strongly "anti-Jewish. It claims that the world is controlled by Jews, they have a monopolistic hold on most English-language mass media [1] (PDF) and high finance, they maintain a fanatical loyalty only to each other and that current strife worldwide is mostly their doing, in order to destabilize and obliterate all non-Jewish nations, races or ethnic identities via their mutual miscegenation.
After the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack, the National Alliance alleges that these attacks were in fact caused by USA pro-Jewish-Israeli-Zionist policies and that some Israeli Jews were advised not to report to work at the World Trade Center that day. [1] (See also Zionist conspiracy theories regarding the September 11, 2001 Attacks.)
Members of the National Alliance maintain that its program is "white racialist separatism," rather than white supremacism, and also that calling it neo-Nazi is incorrect. The group's own literature, however, does not support these assertions. [1]. For instance, in a 1989 editorial from National Vanguard, celebrating the 100th anniversary of the birth of Adolf Hitler, it says: "April 20 of this year is the 100th anniversary of the birth of the greatest man of our era ... And so the National Socialist philosophy of life corresponds to the innermost will of Nature ... We National Socialists know that with this conception we stand as revolutionaries in the world of today and are branded as such." [1] [1]
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