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Sent: Monday, June 11, 2001 8:01 PM
Subject: In defense of Timothy McVeigh -- DISTRIBUTE WIDELY


In Defense Of Timothy McVeigh

By Terry Mitchell

Let me say first that I never met Timothy McVeigh. The closest I ever got to
him was about ten feet, and then it was by accident. This was three months
before he blew up the Murrah building in Oklahoma City, and he was Jack
Nobody. McVeigh didn't stay in my line of sight very long, but I got a good
look at him, before he disappeared through a space in the curtains behind
the podium.

I remember one thing very clearly about him; the intense, fanatical look in
his eyes. He had the look of intense determination on his face, a look that
was so focused a person would get out of his way. He looked totally focused
on his job, which that night was protecting a guest speaker from the militia
movement.

Three months later, after the bomb went off and he was apprehended, I
decided to read the book he was reported so enthusiastic about, The Turner
Diaries. It took two tries for me to get through it. I locked up the first
time at a place called, "The Day Of The Rope." It was so disturbing, the
widespread lynchings of race-mixers, that I had to put it down. Then a year
later I tried again, and made it through the entire book. What I discovered
was far more revealing about McVeigh's intentions than anything I've ever
heard through the mainstream media.

The Turner Diaries is an incredible little book. What it contains is the
blueprint to exterminate any race or classification of people, globally. The
fictional bombing of the FBI building, so touted by the media as McVeigh's
sole motivational inspiration, was only one tiny part of the book. It is the
rest of the book that is most important-the graphic description of how to
make the ethnic cleansings of Bosnia and Kosovo, look like nothing but
rehearsals for the real thing.

So, exactly then, why did McVeigh do it? First off, McVeigh was inspired to
bomb the Murrah building not so much for the Davidians or Randy Weaver, as
by the first skirmish of the revolutionary war, at the bridge at Lexington
and Concord. The British troops were coming to confiscate the ammunition
owned by private citizens. The Turner Diaries opens with federal police
confiscating the guns of all Americans. It is the Second Amendment that was
his primary focus. McVeigh saw, accurately, the 1994 Assault Rifle ban as
the prelude to gun seizure raids across the United States.

But there was a second reason for the bombing. If McVeigh bought in to the
entire plot of the book, he wanted to start something. He wanted to start
something really big. McVeigh wanted to trigger the all out war between not
only the citizens and the federal government, but all out war between
Caucasians and every other race. This is the main thrust of The Turner
Diaries, ethnic cleansing. McVeigh was not alone in this, as there have been
numerous attempts by individuals over the last few years to start ethnic
cleansing in the USA. Richard Baumhammer's shooting up of the Jewish
community center in Los Angeles ("I was trying to start a race war."), and
the rampaging black man who shot all the white employees in two Philadelphia
fast food restaurants ("I just want to kill as many white people as I
can."), come to mind.

And this brings us to the major point in the book and a major component of
ethnic cleansing in the real world. The ethnic cleansing so heavily featured
in the book could not take place without the removal of guns from the
populace by the federal government. The characters repeatedly give thanks to
"the Cohen bill," which rescinded the Second Amendment, stripped the inner
cities of guns, and left the blacks and other races defenseless against "The
Order's" troops, all armed with modern weapons. The characters in the book
succeed in making Earth an all white planet.

The formulas for racial extermination contained in The Turner Diaries could
be used by any race to wipe out all the others.

As to the children in the daycare center in the Murrah building, why were
they there in the first place? Well, being fifty years old, I remember why
the daycare centers were put in federal buildings. They were put there
during the Cold War when there was widespread fear, some of it justified,
that the Soviet Union had deep cover agents in the US, and that they had
orders to attack federal installations should open warfare between the two
countries begin. The daycare centers were installed so that if Soviet agents
bombed the buildings there would be a reef of bad publicity about it. Of
course, the press releases from the federal government about the daycare
centers stated that they were there to "make it easier on working mothers,"
but he real reason was much different. The US government is literally using
children as human shields, while being quick to condemn any other group or
country doing the very same thing.

The current definition of terrorism goes as follows, "The use of military
force against noncombatants." As you will notice, this excludes everyone
except the military. If you will think about it, this would exclude attacks
on even the most evil civilians. It is impossible for noncombatants to be
every bit as involved in the destruction of the Bill of Rights as a
uniformed soldier breaking the Posse Comitatus act, the legislation which
forbids the use of federal military force against the citizenry? McVeigh saw
the federal employees as cogs in the increasingly oppressive regime,
especially the FBI and the BATF. Buildings containing the offices of federal
soldiers and federal police will always be potential targets. If someone
works in a known military target, it should never be considered a warm fuzzy
safe place, immune to attack.

In conclusion let me say this: Timothy McVeigh did the freedom loving people
of the United States a great service. If you will notice, there have been no
murderous burnouts of religious groups since the bombing of the Murrah
building. Nor have there been any heavy antigun laws passed since the
bombing of the Murrah building. The government, by Timothy McVeigh, was put
on notice that if they pulled this again, there would be a high price to
pay. Sadly, the government will do it again, and it will be up to another
Timothy McVeigh to "water the tree of liberty with the blood of tyrants."

Copyright 2001, all rights reserved. This article may be reprinted or posted
on websites, PROVIDED it is used unedited.


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