Jump to content

Fronting Hate: Tennessee's Troubling White-Supremacist Gathering


Recommended Posts

Posted

image.png

 

As the autumn sun filtered through the colorful canopy of Montgomery Bell State Park, located 40 miles west of Nashville, the peace was broken by a chant echoing through the trees: "Whose park? Our park! Whose park? Our park!" A small group of anti-fascist protesters gathered in opposition to the American Renaissance Conference, an annual event linked to white supremacist ideology that has called the park home since 2012.

 

image.png

 

“No Nazis. No KKK. No fascist USA,” the protesters shouted. Directed to a designated protest area behind the lodge, they peered through a locked gate at attendees of the controversial event, who mingled on a nearby balcony.

 

“Follow your leader,” one protest organizer taunted with a bullhorn, prompting the group to repeat the chant. “Shoot yourself like Adolf Hitler,” came the biting refrain. Many of the protesters, clad in black and wearing masks to obscure their identities, carried symbols like the Antifa flag as they voiced their outrage.

 

One protester, who identified himself as “X” from Columbia, Tennessee, summarized their perspective: “Basically, they invite some of the worst neo-Nazi hate groups into this park every single year to rally. There is no difference between this and a KKK rally—they’re the same people.”

 

Inside the lodge, the conference was already underway. Jared Taylor, the 73-year-old Yale-educated founder of the event and the New Century Foundation, greeted reporters with a request: no video of attendees’ faces. “These people can lose their jobs. Their girlfriends could jilt them. That’s the kind of society we live in,” he explained in his refined, almost aristocratic tone.

 

Critics like the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) describe the conference as a breeding ground for racist ideologies, attracting a mix of white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and Klansmen. Cars from across the U.S. filled the lodge’s parking lot, some bearing offensive decals.

 

When asked to describe the attendees, Taylor said, “These are smart, observant, thoughtful Americans who see that our country is going in the wrong direction.” Confronted with allegations of intellectualizing racism, he retorted, “What is racism, for heaven’s sake? Nobody can really define it in any sensible, consistent way.”

 

Inside, speeches blended pseudo-intellectualism with radical ideology. Kevin DeAnna, using his pseudonym Gregory Hood, told attendees their mission was “presenting arguments that people with power can use. They don’t need to admit that they got it from us.”

 

The conference featured controversial figures like Austrian Martin Sellner, who advocated for “remigration,” or forced deportation of nonwhite immigrants. Sellner’s rhetoric, described as “ethnic cleansing” by critics, included a mockery of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous speech: “I have a dream—it involves planes, ships, and buses.”

 

Guido Taietti, a leader in Italy’s neo-fascist CasaPound movement, also addressed the gathering, alongside other figures linked to global hate movements. Taylor dismissed concerns about his connections to extremist groups like the Patriot Front, whose leader, Thomas Rousseau, was captured on video attending the event.

 

Protesters like “Big Z” were determined to counter these ideologies. “We are here to let the public know that this will not stand in our state of Tennessee,” he declared, attempting to push closer to the lodge despite resistance from park rangers.

 

As the protests raged, Taylor remained resolute. “We are going to be back here—whether they like it or not,” he said confidently. Yet, for opponents of American Renaissance, the battle wasn’t about changing Taylor’s mind. It was about ensuring that Tennessee’s public spaces did not become a haven for hate. “We’re not going to change Jared Taylor’s mind, and he’s not going to change ours,” said Big Z. “But we’re not here for him—we’re here for the people.”

 

In the heart of Tennessee, the ideological clash continues, each side resolute in its mission, the park a contested space between voices of resistance and proponents of division.

 

 

Based on a report by News Channel 5, 2024-12-04

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

 

news-footer-4.png

 

image.png

  • Sad 2
  • Haha 1
Posted

Many of the Yanks I know are anti-Trump supremacists. Really, they actually think they are more intelligent than half the  US voters! 

  • Sad 1
  • Haha 2
Posted
9 hours ago, jori123 said:

Segregation is the only way

Absolutely, let the states decide just like healthcare. Then we can return to the good ole days of segregated schools, rest rooms, lunch counters,  bus/train waiting rooms, literacy test for voting and Jim Crow Laws … (for those who are not aware, retired Professor of History so … said tongue in cheek).

  • Like 1
Posted
6 hours ago, impulse said:

Why is it that you can have Black Teachers organizations, the NAACP, NABJ, and hundreds of other organizations that exclude whites, and that's all good. 

 

But if the white folks do it, it's fomenting hate?  Maybe it's not about hating Blacks.  It's about being left out. White folks wanting their own safe space...

 

My local attorney served some years ago as elected President of the local NAACP. He certainly was not the only white member..

  • Like 2
Posted
40 minutes ago, wwest5829 said:

Absolutely, let the states decide just like healthcare. Then we can return to the good ole days of segregated schools, rest rooms, lunch counters,  bus/train waiting rooms, literacy test for voting and Jim Crow Laws … (for those who are not aware, retired Professor of History so … said tongue in cheek).

Basically what Leafy Suburb Liberals have now.

  • Sad 1
Posted
1 hour ago, wwest5829 said:

My local attorney served some years ago as elected President of the local NAACP. He certainly was not the only white member..

 

What do you figure would happen if we formed the NAAWP?  There would be rioting in the streets.  Again.

 

 

  • Confused 1
  • Agree 1
Posted
13 hours ago, Social Media said:

image.png

 

As the autumn sun filtered through the colorful canopy of Montgomery Bell State Park, located 40 miles west of Nashville, the peace was broken by a chant echoing through the trees: "Whose park? Our park! Whose park? Our park!" A small group of anti-fascist protesters gathered in opposition to the American Renaissance Conference, an annual event linked to white supremacist ideology that has called the park home since 2012.

 

image.png

 

“No Nazis. No KKK. No fascist USA,” the protesters shouted. Directed to a designated protest area behind the lodge, they peered through a locked gate at attendees of the controversial event, who mingled on a nearby balcony.

 

“Follow your leader,” one protest organizer taunted with a bullhorn, prompting the group to repeat the chant. “Shoot yourself like Adolf Hitler,” came the biting refrain. Many of the protesters, clad in black and wearing masks to obscure their identities, carried symbols like the Antifa flag as they voiced their outrage.

 

One protester, who identified himself as “X” from Columbia, Tennessee, summarized their perspective: “Basically, they invite some of the worst neo-Nazi hate groups into this park every single year to rally. There is no difference between this and a KKK rally—they’re the same people.”

 

Inside the lodge, the conference was already underway. Jared Taylor, the 73-year-old Yale-educated founder of the event and the New Century Foundation, greeted reporters with a request: no video of attendees’ faces. “These people can lose their jobs. Their girlfriends could jilt them. That’s the kind of society we live in,” he explained in his refined, almost aristocratic tone.

 

Critics like the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) describe the conference as a breeding ground for racist ideologies, attracting a mix of white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and Klansmen. Cars from across the U.S. filled the lodge’s parking lot, some bearing offensive decals.

 

When asked to describe the attendees, Taylor said, “These are smart, observant, thoughtful Americans who see that our country is going in the wrong direction.” Confronted with allegations of intellectualizing racism, he retorted, “What is racism, for heaven’s sake? Nobody can really define it in any sensible, consistent way.”

 

Inside, speeches blended pseudo-intellectualism with radical ideology. Kevin DeAnna, using his pseudonym Gregory Hood, told attendees their mission was “presenting arguments that people with power can use. They don’t need to admit that they got it from us.”

 

The conference featured controversial figures like Austrian Martin Sellner, who advocated for “remigration,” or forced deportation of nonwhite immigrants. Sellner’s rhetoric, described as “ethnic cleansing” by critics, included a mockery of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous speech: “I have a dream—it involves planes, ships, and buses.”

 

Guido Taietti, a leader in Italy’s neo-fascist CasaPound movement, also addressed the gathering, alongside other figures linked to global hate movements. Taylor dismissed concerns about his connections to extremist groups like the Patriot Front, whose leader, Thomas Rousseau, was captured on video attending the event.

 

Protesters like “Big Z” were determined to counter these ideologies. “We are here to let the public know that this will not stand in our state of Tennessee,” he declared, attempting to push closer to the lodge despite resistance from park rangers.

 

As the protests raged, Taylor remained resolute. “We are going to be back here—whether they like it or not,” he said confidently. Yet, for opponents of American Renaissance, the battle wasn’t about changing Taylor’s mind. It was about ensuring that Tennessee’s public spaces did not become a haven for hate. “We’re not going to change Jared Taylor’s mind, and he’s not going to change ours,” said Big Z. “But we’re not here for him—we’re here for the people.”

 

In the heart of Tennessee, the ideological clash continues, each side resolute in its mission, the park a contested space between voices of resistance and proponents of division.

 

 

Based on a report by News Channel 5, 2024-12-04

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

 

news-footer-4.png

 

image.png

The KKK will never buy a Jaguar.

  • Haha 1
Posted
6 hours ago, wwest5829 said:

Given that the average reading level in the USA is at the 7th-8th grade level? Don’t know about the more intelligent but certainly many are more generally knowledgeable.

The reason their education is bad is because woke has infiltrated the schools and they are learning nothing. 95% of teachers are democrat I would guess - that has to tell you something of the reason for children's lack of intelligence. 

  • Haha 1
  • Agree 1
Posted
55 minutes ago, RichardColeman said:

The reason their education is bad is because woke has infiltrated the schools and they are learning nothing. 95% of teachers are democrat I would guess - that has to tell you something of the reason for children's lack of intelligence. 

So is Tennessee in the grip of this woke infiltration you speak of, or is something else going on?:

 

https://tntribune.com/gop-continues-its-attack-on-education-while-tennessee-ranks-48-out-of-50/

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


  • Topics

  • Latest posts...

    1. 2

      France Faces Unprecedented Crisis as Le Pen Targets Macron

    2. 0

      Deputy School Director Found Dead in Forest Near Prachantakham Waterfall

    3. 4

      Trump orders Hostages released

    4. 0

      Frozen state pension from UK

    5. 58

      Russia’s economy is doomed

    6. 6

      Thailand Live Thursday 5 December 2024

    7. 4

      Trump orders Hostages released

    8. 0

      Chinese Call Center Gang Busted Operating from Resort in Chiang Mai

  • Popular in The Pub


×
×
  • Create New...