After anti-LGBTQ+ neo-Nazi leader Christopher Pohlhaus purchased a 10.6-acre property in Springfield, Maine with the hopes of turning it into a Nazi training ground, local residents found out about his plan and made him feel very unwelcome. He eventually sold the property, blaming “militant leftists” for the unwanted attention he earned.

Pohlhaus is founder of the fascist group “Blood Tribe,” a group that protested an Ohio drag brunch last May. His group chanted the words “Blood,” “Under the Aryan Sun,” and “No transgenders on our streets,” while throwing Nazi salutes. He also led a similar protest against a drag queen story hour in Akron, Ohio in mid-March.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I’m with you brotherman. Intolerance isnt a paradox. Those being intolerant have broken the social rules, therefore the agreement and compromise that tolerance is does.not.apply.to.them

    Let the others take the high road. I don’t want a mic anyway. I’ll be around, down with the rest of my working class, guarding the rear on the low road. You see, my dreams were crash after crash made impossible for me and my copium is simply ensuring that those responsible don’t get to live there’s either. The dies been cast, I’ve made my peace with it.

    • @shalafi
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      21 year ago

      the agreement and compromise that tolerance is does.not.apply.to.them

      Can’t clap my hands together hard enough. At some point we have to say, “NO. You’re clearly outside the tribe’s rules and have to go away.” 10 Nazis at dinner, add a non-Nazi, now you got 11 Nazis.

      Right with you. There’s more of us than you hear from on social media like this.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Or that modern proverb about the bartender not serving kicking out the respectful skinhead. In summary, if you let one in, next time he’ll bring his 2 buddies and they’ll behave. Then a week later you turn around and your a nazi bar.

        I have a pretty easy litmus test for people. If you want your personal beliefs to become law and force other people to live your values, it’s simple. I think you’re a monster. End of story. The basic do whatever you want as long as you don’t hurt anyone is really all we need. If you can’t eat pork, don’t live on a pig farm, but if you can’t control yourself then your failings are between you, your conscience and your god and nobody has fuck-all to do with any of that. I have personal beliefs I think would make for terrible policy. I thought everyone had that, or could recognize that but holy shit was I giving some ppl way too much credit. I can’t tell you how many grown ass adults, living on their own for decades, I’ve had to look dead in the eye and say that just bc you thought something doesn’t mean it means shit. Your thoughts aren’t holy, aren’t a revelation from some esoteric being, and they aren’t a conduit or embodiment of the divine. At least a dozen people who’ve never even considered the alternative. It still stuns me, as much as it disgusts me.

        It’s like too many people think that because the boomers got away with acting despicable (and they we’re collectively lead poisoned and essentially stopped emotionally maturing at 14) that that’s the norm and now it’s their turn. And yea, nope. Strike that thought from your brain. Act right or GTFO. Most of Gen X, almost all of Millennials and a larger chunk of GenZ haven’t turned conservative upon getting older. If anything I’ve swung harder left. We outnumber them.