The Celibate Rifles : Tick tock

One of my favourite songs from one of my favourite bands. Heap ’em big thanks to nzoz1983. Aussie Aussie Aussie. Oi fucking oi…

Posted in Music, Sex & Sexuality, War on Terror | 1 Comment

Australia First Party makes like a banana…

…and splits, into three factions:

1) Australia First (AF) in New South Wales;
2) Australia First in rural Victoria;
3) The Australian Protectionist Party (APP) in South Australia.

Bad news for AF, great news for rightist trainspotters.

The first grouping, based in Sydney, remains under the leadership of James Saleam; the second, under the leadership of the (nominal) President of the Party (since 1997), Diane Teasdale, and a small number of others (Barry and Jeanette Woods). The third grouping, the APP, is under the leadership of Andrew Phillips, and claims representation in the ACT, New South Wales, Queensland, Victoria and Western Australia.

The South Australian branch of Teasdale’s AF, being under the control of Phillips, has been lost to the APP. In the ACT, the APP has obtained the allegiance of a PO Box — and who knows, perhaps even the person who rents it — also previously belonging to the AF. In NSW, the APP has gained the support of Darrin Hodges / the Anglo-Australian National Community Council — a development which, given Hodges’ energy and enthusiasm for The Cause, will no doubt prove to be a great boon… that is, if Hodges is able to balance his commitment to the APP with that of his commitment to New Right. Best of all, in Queensland, the Party appears to have God on its side, its PO Box address belonging to the Reverend Jon Chandler of the ‘John Knox Presbyterian Church’ in Rockhampton.

Finally, closer to home, in Victoria the Protectionists have obtained a new PO Box, in the same outer-eastern suburb of Croydon as what was once, and may still be, the contact address for AF in Melbourne. Significantly, the APP also appear to have obtained control of (Manifest) Destiny, launched in August as an AF publication.

As for Saleam’s mob, they appear to retain strong influence in NSW, but only scattered support elsewhere. This is reflected in the fact that the Party has finally been registered with the AEC, not as a Federal Party, but in NSW. According to Herr Doktor, “The ‘Australia First (Council Elections) Party’ (to be known as Australia First Party on the ballot) has been registered in New South Wales under the Local Government Act (1993)… The Councils party has named the following officers: [Neil, ex-ONP] Baird, Registered Officer, N. Smith, Deputy Registered Officer, [James] Saleam, Secretary, [Terry, ex-ONP, AAFI] Cooksley, Agent.”

The usual suspects, in other words.

The only significant branch outside of Sydney, it’s unknown at this stage which way the Newcastle branch will jump. Given its close relationship to Stormfront — the moderator of the Down Under section is a member — and given Saleam’s recent apparent rapprochement with his colleagues in the United States, it’s possible the branch will remain loyal to Herr Doktor rather than join the APP.

Finally, after having purged the Party of unruly elements, President Teasdale appears to be left with the rump, and even that appears to have been split between herself and Saleam. On the other hand, word on the virtual street is that Teasdale may decide to put Campbell’s bastard-child out of its misery, and simply join with Pauline’s mob for the upcoming Federal election.

Oh, and in a sad note for trainspotters, the Patriotic Youth League (that is, the fifty-something John Drew) appears to have finally lost the struggle for survival altogether, its final hurrah — a website containing Drew’s thoughts on patriotism, ‘why soccer is not an ethnic sport’, and the importance of eating well, among other matters of significance to ‘nationalists’ — has disappeared into the ether. Obviously, a far cry from the heady days of December 2005, when Melbourne PYL spokesperson Luke Connors stated “Mate, I’m going to get brain cancer from having the mobile phone pressed to me ear all day and all night. Answering membership and media inquiries.”

What a meathead.

Posted in !nataS, Anti-fascism, State / Politics | 42 Comments

All Heil the New Reich*

On September 8, 2007, approximately 15—30 individuals, all white, mostly young, and overwhelmingly male, dressed in black clothing and wearing caps, dark glasses and scarves, gathered in a group outside of Sydney Town Hall as part of a public protest against the APEC summit, scheduled to take place elsewhere in Sydney that weekend. The group carried with them three long banners — with slogans reading ‘Australia: Free Nation – Or Sheep Station?’, ‘Globalisation is Genocide’ and ‘Power to the People, Not Political Parties’ – which were joined together to form a three-sided bloc, within which those gathered assembled to form a ‘black bloc’. The group also distributed a leaflet, and claimed to belong to a group known as the ‘New Right’, one which — as other statements on the banners and on the leaflet stated — consists of ‘National Anarchists’ espousing a ‘Traditional-European Revolutionary’ philosophy. This brief essay examines ‘New Right’ philosophy and its origins in Europe, the emergence of this groupsucule in Australia, and argues that it can best be understood as the latest incarnation in a European-based trend in neo-fascist ideology and practice.

Who or what is the New Right? In Australia, the group was established in late 2005, largely via the efforts of one man, a German-born, Sydney-based businessman named Welf Herfurth. Herfurth has a long history of involvement in the far right, having been a member of the Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands (NPD) prior to his arrival as an immigrant in 1987, and following that a member first of the Democrats, and then of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party (ONP), serving as the vice-president of the New South Wales state branch (under David Oldfield) and as President of ONP’s Riverstone branch. More recently, from its inception in 2001, Herfurth has served as MC, and as one of the principal organisers — along with Dr. James Saleam of the Australia First Party (AF) — of the annual Sydney Forum. In this capacity, in 2007, Herfurth helped to arrange the visit to Australia of Croatian fascist Dr. Tomislav Sunic, a key New Right thinker, and in previous years has attempted, unsuccessfully, to arrange for a number of key members of the NPD (Gerd Finkenwirth and Udo Voigt) to tour Australia and to address the Forum.

Subjected to a liberal, middle-class upbringing in post-war Germany, as a young man in the 1980s Herfurth rejected his parent’s liberal values to embrace those of the neo-Nazi movement, establishing a role for himself as a fascist militant. Since then, his politics have developed into a more sophisticated version of the crude neo-Nazism of his youth, one which retains an overriding commitment to race and nation, but shorn of the naked bigotry and crude political analysis which remains one of neo-Nazism’s hallmarks. In particular, Herfurth is part of a generation of far right activists heavily influenced by the philosophies of figures such as Alain de Benoist (1943–), a French intellectual who, beginning in the mid- to late-1970s especially, and together with a small group of others centred around the ‘ethno-nationalist’ think-tank GRECE (1968–), reinvigorated post-war fascist thinking. Part of this project consisted of popularising and critically re-examining the ideas of earlier thinkers such as Carl Schmitt (1888—1985) and Julius Evola (1898—1974), and thereby attempting to craft a philosophy that would somehow transcend the divide between the political left and right; all in the name of establishing a new political order in Europe – a ‘communitarian’ one consisting of nation-states, but under the domination of neither the then-Soviet Union or the United States. It was this posture which also fed into the (re-)development of ‘Third Position’ politics within the far right, one which even attracted the intellectual support of nominally Marxist thinkers such as Paul Piccone (1940—2004), editor of the US journal Telos.

Such is, necessarily, a much-simplified version of the political etymology of the New Right. Of most importance in relation to Herfurth and the New Right in Australia and Aotearoa (New Zealand), however, is their embrace of the idea of the transcendence of the left-right divide, and their commitment to elaborating a contemporary form of fascist politics; one attuned to the history of ideas, and one which recognises the necessity of building an extra-parliamentary social movement which is capable of responding to contemporary political realities, especially in the realm of popular culture. And it’s in the realm of popular culture that the idea of ‘national anarchism’ has greatest relevance.

Briefly then, ‘national anarchism’, at least as it’s understood by the New Right, is the means by which those grouped around Herfurth in particular, and New Right philosophies generally, seek to intervene in political struggle: “National-Anarchism represents the political embodiment of the European New Right — it is the political wing”. Before examining what this means in practice, however, it’s worth also briefly examining the short history of this rather unlikely doctrine.

In the English-speaking world, the figure most commonly associated with ‘national anarchism’ is the English activist, writer and musician Troy Southgate (1965–). A member of the National Front in the mid-80s, Southgate left it in the late ‘80s to join the ‘International Third Position’; left the ITP to form the ‘English Nationalist Movement’ in the early ‘90s; abandoned this not especially successful group in 1998 to form the ‘National Revolutionary Faction’; and following that declared himself to be a ‘national anarchist’. What this actually means in terms of ideology is a difficult question to answer. However, Graham D. Macklin (‘Co-opting the counter culture: Troy Southgate and the National Revolutionary Faction’, Patterns of Prejudice, Vol. 39, No. 3, 2005 [PDF]), for one at least, has tried to do so. He argues that:

When put into its wider context… ‘national-anarchism’ appears as one of many groupuscular responses to globalization, popular antipathy towards which Southgate sought to harness by aligning the NRF with the resurgence of anarchism whose heroes and slogans it arrogated, and whose sophisticated critiques of global capitalist institutions and state power it absorbed… Central to ‘national-anarchism’, however, is a far older paradigm drawn from conservative revolutionary thought, namely, the Anarch, a sovereign individual whose independence allows him to ‘turn in any direction’…

In practice, what this means, at least in part, is demonstrated by the emergence of the so-called ‘black bloc’ at APEC in September (from which the ‘Anarch’ Herfurth was conspicuously absent). Specifically — in addition in adopting the name of anarchism to advance a far right agenda — fascists seek to appropriate anarchist imagery and rhetoric. Like Herfurth himself, this tactic appears to have been born in Germany, where in the last 5—10 years, the neo-Nazi movement has increasingly sought to use the radical chic associated with ‘anarchism’ and ‘autonomism’ to recruit youth. (For example, in addition to appropriating fashions associated with anarchists and leftist youth, “autonomous nationalists” have for some years now formed ‘black blocs’ at public protests.)

In Sydney, the APEC ‘black bloc’ was the first public protest attended by the ‘national anarchists’ of the New Right, but given its success – in his online account of the protest, one pseudonymous member writes that “We were tremendously pleased, afterwards, that no arrests had occurred and that none of us had been physically assaulted. We had avoided identification, too” – it is unlikely to be the group’s last. Further, while the majority of its members appear to have been drawn from Sydney and Newcastle, a few travelled from Melbourne to attend, and it’s possible that others came from other parts of the country as well. It’s therefore possible that there will be other demonstrations in other cities; certainly, the New Right, on the basis of this success (however meagre), has the potential to draw towards it the many competing factions of the extra-parliamentary far right (including remnants of AF and the Patriotic Youth League (PYL), the more straightforwardly neo-Nazi Blood & Honour and the Hammerskins, as well as others) and in turn help stimulate the growth of a reinvigorated, if still tiny, fascist movement in Australia.

Finally, while the New Right’s adoption of ‘national anarchism’ may be considered bizarre, even comical, it nevertheless retains the potential not only to confuse the broader public with regards the nature of contemporary anarchism, its aims and methods, but also to confuse some who may be approaching anarchism as a serious political philosophy for the first time. As to the question of how to respond to the emergence in Australia of a small group of fascists in anarchist drag, it is beyond the scope of this very short introduction to the New Right to address. At a minimum, it would appear necessary to ensure that this confusion is addressed publicly, in both theory and practice, and the sooner, the better.

    Further reading: Kevin Coogan’s Dreamer of the Day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International, Autonomedia, New York, 1999, provides an exhaustive account of the far right in Europe and North America following the end of the Second World War, and much of the background to the emergence of the New Right and associated ideologies and movements in the last few decades, and is highly recommended.

    * ‘All Hail the New Right’ is a song (1988) by Sydney band The Trilobites. I’m pretty sure that ‘Yes they’ve got a video’, but I can’t find it anywhere on YouTube, unfortunately. Anyway, searching for some further scraps of information, I stumbled upon Wilfully Obscure, a blog dedicated to resurrecting some (other) choice musical cuts. Or, kinda like an online review of all the albums you might find at Dixon’s. As for The Trilobites, “Like The Godfathers and The Jam, whom the Trilobites appear to be heavily deriving their influences from, these Sydney bad boys dispensed taught, no-nonsense rock and roll with all the penetrating hooks and vigorous guitar chops one could ever hope for”. So there. And on a related note, here’s The Rifles:

Posted in Anarchism, Anti-fascism | 48 Comments

Boneheads…

Listening to : The Movement

    “The senior officer had told us that he had received intelligence that the communists… were arranging an ambush for us. So he felt it best to avoid a confrontation which would result in violence, and [asked] for us to leave… We were tremendously pleased, afterwards, that no arrests had occurred and that none of us had been physically assaulted. We had avoided identification, too”. ~ Pseudonymous fascist on the subject of a protest by a neo-Nazi group at the Sydney APEC summit, September 8, 2007

East German police face neo-Nazi inquiry
Madeline Chambers
The Scotsman
September 15, 2007

A PARLIAMENTARY inquiry has been launched in the eastern German state of Saxony-Anhalt into allegations that police failed to deal effectively with neo-Nazi attacks. A spate of crimes, including racially-motivated assaults, has left some politicians worried about their region’s reputation. Last month, a group of Indians were attacked in the small town of Muegeln in the neighbouring state of Saxony and in June, police in Saxony-Anhalt came under fire over their response to an attack on a troupe of actors [because they were dressed like punks]. The inquiry will focus on the police leadership in the city of Dessau-Rosslau. Several newspapers have quoted an officer there as advocating “turning a blind eye” to right-wing crimes. Far-right violence is on the rise in Germany. Last year, it reached its highest level since reunification in 1990. Groups who work with crime victims have long said that the country’s right-wing culture is institutionalised and criticise police and prosecutors for being slow to bring cases to court. “We must follow up every suspicion that civil servants or police officers are not fighting right-wing extremism and crimes properly,” Gudrun Tiedge, a Left Party representative in the Saxony-Anhalt parliament, said yesterday. The investigation, expected to take about 18 months, will look at six cases, including reports of police in one town refusing to record race crimes against asylum seekers from Burkina Faso. It will also examine the attack on the 14 actors in June in Halberstadt. Officers failed to arrest a suspect who returned to the scene while the victims were being questioned.

Meanwhile, in Melbourne, a neo-Nazi venue in Fitzroy, The Birmy, continues to receive the active support of local (fashion) punks. On September 29, three bands — No Idea, Sewer Cider and The Worst — are scheduled to play a free gig for the other (fashion) punks expected to make their way to the hotel on their hands and knees as part of the annual punk pub crawl. Two of the bands — No Idea and The Worst — have been rewarded for scabbing by being selected to support DOA when they play The Arty on October 19. DOA, incidentally, have just released a DVD called ‘Smash the State’. Says Joey Shithead: “I really wanted people to see the original version of D.O.A. performing. You know, the completely raw band that went out and took on the world. So I gathered together some of the best footage I could find and came up with Smash the State. Most of the footage is taken from shows in San Francisco and the East Bay. This makes a lot of sense, as San Francisco became D.O.A.’s home away from home in the late seventies and into the eighties.” Ironically, this afternoon, during the course of a conversation regarding the neo-Nazi presence in Melbourne and the scabs who support it, I discovered that one of my comrades from Melbourne actually played with Joey pre-1978…

On a brighter note, Sydney band Vae Victis has declared its support for the boycott, and soon other bands will be joining them.

Stay tuned!

TALK-ACTION=0

See also :

Boneheads On The Rise In Russia
Sasha Nadezhdina
ABC News
September 13, 2007

Against the bucolic backdrop of this summer’s Russian landscape, a shocking video emerged on the Internet. Under a large banner decorated with a swastika, two men dressed in camouflage are seen performing an apparent execution: First, they bind and gag their two victims, then one is beheaded and the other is shot. One victim was identified as being from the mainly Muslim Dagestan region and the second from ex-Soviet Tajikistan. The purported execution video was posted on the Internet, but removed less than 24 hours later…

Sociologists at the Levada research center say they have not seen such an upsurge of ethnic violence like this since the 1980s. One particular attack grabbed headlines. Two women, one from Azerbaijan and one from Kazakhstan, were attacked on the streets of St. Petersburg in February 2006. Police say the pair were stabbed repeatedly by boneheads as they shouted: “Russia for Russians.” Less than a month later, a 22-year-old Kurd was stabbed to death and his sister was seriously injured, once again by boneheads, according to authorities. These were attacks in a series of violent incidents that have occurred in and around Moscow over the last three years. Sadly, experts say, there’s no sign of the aggression subsiding. According to the latest statistics from the Sova Research Center, a Moscow-based human rights organization, more than 300 people were victims of racist and neo-Nazi crimes in the first six months of 2007; 37 of these resulted in fatalities…

Rise of far right alarms Germans
Tristana Moore
BBC News
September 13, 2007

News that the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) is nudging ahead of the mainstream Social Democratic Party (SPD) in the east German state of Saxony has shocked many Germans. According to a recent opinion poll by the Forsa Institute, support for the neo-Nazi NPD is at 9%. The poll suggests that the SPD would pick up only 8% of the vote if there were regional elections, while the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) would still maintain a clear lead at 39%. The main losers are the Social Democrats, whose support has shifted to the new Left Party, at 27%…

With many far-right gangs, known as Kameradschaften, operating freely in towns and villages, some politicians have once again demanded that the NPD should be banned. SPD leader Kurt Beck said he was going to put together a new legal initiative designed to outlaw the NPD…

Note that the model of the Kameradschaften is precisely the one being utilised by the far right gang that appeared in Sydney at the APEC summit. (Note also that the group’s chief theoretician, Welf Herfurth, is a former member of the NPD.) For further background on the attempted appropriation of youth and dissident culture by neo-Nazis see When Nazis Go Pop:

Stealing the Symbols — Occupying the Radical Left

Into those trend fits the adaption of former left-wing symbols: There are right-wing people nowadays wearing t-shirts with Che Guevara on, the (Palestinian) Kafiya-scarf and unobtrusive clothes popular at antifascists: sneakers, jeans, plain Carhartt jackets and baseball caps. This is a strategy used by the far-right trying to copy the autonomous left scene. They call themselves “autonomous nationalists” and adopt even left paroles like “smash capitalism” from the left. So nationalists use the logo of “Antifaschistische Aktion” (antifascist action); a circle with a red and black flag but calling it “Nationale Sozialisten” (national socialists). Some go even further and take the logo with the words “antifascist action” — pretending they are acting against some imaginary “left fascism”. Of course the intentions are clear: when left-winger are the real “fascists” the fascists aren’t morally bad any more. And also to humiliate their enemys and symbolically taking their power by absorbing their symbols.

That doesn’t mean that these “autonomous nationalists” are pro-left-wing now. One main field of activity is the “Anti-Antifa” – the collecting of addresses and threatening against all kind of left and imaginary left people…

    YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.
Posted in Anti-fascism, Music, State / Politics | 17 Comments

Stormfront Down Under : White Bread & Circuses

Argh! They’re at it again!

For those of you who’ve been following the sordid saga of Stormfront Down Under with as much rapt fascination as I have: a few months ago David Innes and his partner Lilith / Emma Peterson decided to up stumps and depart — according to Innes, because he was sick and tired of having his (not inconsiderable) efforts to popularise David Duke‘s crackpot ideas regarding race and nation Down Under continually denigrated by his fellow White supremacists. As a parting shot, David not only told his Yanqui boss, jack_boot, to take this job and shove it, but also alluded to his willingness to provide information regarding his former comrades on SF to the authorities and/or FDB!: “Jerk us around until we go to the police and anti-fa with all the information we have and become the very thing the extreme right has said we were since [the] day dot. ****, I don’t care either way.”

That, briefly, is the relevant background. Recently, however, a debate has erupted on SF regarding Innes’ kosher status among ‘White Nationalists’, triggered by the sudden emergence of a new member, MrNR, claiming to be working on behalf of the New Reich. Accused of being Der Baron in disguise, MrNR left in a huff. Shortly thereafter, jack_boot emerged to refreshen everyone’s memories regarding the circumstances under which Innes and Peterson were banned from the forum, while adding that the host of the SF Down Under radio show, Dead_Raven, had his toy taken away from him for being a very naughty boy and conducting an interview with the persona non grata in question. In addition, Delos (Alex Fogerty) makes a rare appearance to, among other things, state that “I am under no illusion now that [David Innes] cannot be trusted with any and all information pertaining to where events will be held and especially personal information”. Incidentally, despite being a Kiwi, Fogerty is one of two persons responsible for administering the Australian New Nation forum; he’s also quite careless regarding the consequences for himself of making childish threats towards antifa (though that’s another story).

Another dotty racist called Dottir, despite quite possibly not being a barrister, recommends taking Innes to court over his collecting monies from the more credulous members of SF in order to finance a trip to the Sydney Forum; a trip cancelled following threats made by members of ANN to do harm to Innes should he be unwise enough to do so.

Posted in Anti-fascism | Leave a comment

GO PIES!

THEY KNOW HOW TO PLAY THE GAME!

Yes!

Our first victory against the Eagles in Perth since 1992… but what a victory! Music! Sex & Sexuality! Poetry! COLLINGWOOD!

Mighty COLLINGWOOD Magpies 13.15 (93)
Coke-snorting WEST COAST Weasels 10.14 (74)

Magpies send Eagles crashing in extra-time thriller
Chris Paine
ABC

Collingwood produced a remarkable display of determination under pressure to clinch a thrilling three-goal victory over West Coast in extra-time of their pulsating AFL semi-final clash at Subiaco Oval on Friday evening…

Magpies 93 Eagles 74
SkyNews

The Collingwood Magpies have scored a dramatic 13-15 (93) victory over the West Coast Eagles 10-14 (74) after extra time in the AFL semi final at Subiaco Oval in Perth…

Pies pip Eagles in extra-time thriller
Justin Chadwick at Subiaco Oval
Sportal

Collingwood has booked its place in next week’s preliminary final against Geelong with a heart-stopping 19-point extra-time victory over West Coast in Friday night’s semi-final clash at Subiaco Oval…

Collingwood comeback stuns Eagles
Herald Sun (FOX SPORTS)

COLLINGWOOD staged an amazing comeback to beat West Coast by 19 points in extra time tonight in a pulsating AFL semi-final at Subiaco.

The Magpies kicked 3.3 to two behinds in the two five-minute periods after full-time to win 13.15 (93) to 10.14 (74).

It was the first drawn final since the Kangaroos eventually beat Hawthorn by 23 in their 1994 qualifying final…

Pendlebury stars
realfooty.com.au

ROOKIE star Scott Pendlebury last night kicked the extra-time goal that put Collingwood within one victory of contesting its third grand final in six seasons after an epic contest with West Coast in Perth.

Pendlebury’s goal put Collingwood a goal clear late in extra-time after the match had been locked at 72-all after regulation time. In the final seconds, Dane Swan then kicked another goal to give the Pies a 19-point win.

“That’s the best game I’ve even been involved in,” Collingwood forward Alan Didak said…

Collingwood classic sets up clash with Geelong
Jay Clark
Herald Sun

COLLINGWOOD held its nerve to win an epic semi-final over West Coast last night and book a preliminary final showdown against Geelong.

In one of the club’s most spirited victories, Collingwood kicked three goals in extra time to emerge triumphant by 19 points after scores were tied after four quarters…

Collingwood triumph in west
Greg Baum
realfooty.com.au

COLLINGWOOD’S improbable finals campaign lives on, and so does the renaissance of Victorian football. The Magpies overcame an undermanned, but heroically plucky West Coast and the collective ill-will of a record Subiaco Oval crowd to win 13.15 (93) to 10.14 (74) in extra-time after a classically uncompromising semi-final had finished in a draw…

Magpies refuse to die
Ray Wilson, Perth
realfooty.com.au

WHEN it was time to give when there was nothing left to give, when the bodies and minds of the 44 players were not just exhausted but totally spent, Collingwood found the heart and legs to take the epic semi-final at Subiaco Oval last night.

Rarely has a team had to dig deeper than the Pies after the scores were locked at 10.12 at full-time.

It was extra-time, and then came the extra effort. It came from the Pies, who left Perth last night on a private jet 90 minutes after a game they finally won 13.15 (93) to 10.14 (74). It came from players such as Shane O’Bree, Dane Swan, Tarkyn Lockyer and Scott Pendlebury when the time came to ignore the pain.

And Nathan Buckley, who at times was like a schoolmaster in charge of his pupils on a field trip, was at his best in the clinches of the epic last term, and then in the 10 minutes of time-on.

As is the case in any war of attrition, there were heroes that came and went on a night on which two brave teams battled out a modern-day epic — one for the history books…

But the last word goes to Mick Malthouse:

The sky’s the limit for us: Malthouse
Chris Pike
AFL BigPond Network

COLLINGWOOD coach Mick Malthouse was understandably excited by what he described as a special performance and now believes the sky is the limit for his side ahead of playing Geelong in next Friday night’s preliminary final.

Malthouse has coached in some amazing finals in his 24 years in the box but after playing like that, he’s confident his players can achieve anything.

“I haven’t been part of a game quite like that before,” Malthouse said.

“I have been part of a drawn final before and we had to go back the next week, so I guess this way is the best way to decide it.

“No matter how long they play for, how many games or years they’ve got left in them, they can always drag something back from this game to know they can do something special. It was just an amazing effort by both sides…”

Posted in Collingwood, Music, Poetry, Sex & Sexuality | 2 Comments

Neo-Nazis @ APEC

I’m not sure why my old sparring partner Darrin Hodges (of the august institution known as the ‘Anglo-Australian National Community Council’) bothered wearing a disguise, but anyway. Old habits die hard I guess.

    September 8, 2007: Dazza with his new mates in the New Reich, making home movies
    October 8, 2005: Dazza with his former mates in the Australia First Party (off-camera), rather slouchily making home movies outside Kirribilli House as part of a group of about 15 or so protesting the suspension of Andrew Fraser from Macquarie University following a racist outburst. Note that Fraser was also present at the New Reich demonstration

More photos later.

Posted in Anti-fascism | 16 Comments

APEC : Neo-Nazis

“Coward’s Pride” – FIGHTING CHANCE
(from: Thus Hope Fades CD)

There’s fear in their eyes but you call it pride
I can see through your fucking lies
You talk of a worldwide revolution
Some kind of bullshit final solution
There’s no room for your hateful creed
Your kind are a dying breed
It’s been sixty years since we beat you back
Now it’s time we fucking attack!

You better fucking run
You better fucking hide
Fuck off Nazi scum
Fuck your coward’s pride

Your heroes all preached perverse hate
And they all met their final fate
At the gallows or the knife
They paid for their crimes with their worthless lives
Still you preach their dreams of evil
We won’t let your creed kill any more people

Introduction

While the appearance of a few dozen neo-Nazis in anarchist drag obviously took many by surprise, in truth, the New Reich announced their intention to form a black bloc and to march at the APEC summit many months ago… only their statement, most likely authored by David Innes (‘Baron Von Hund’), idiotically refers to the summit as being a G20 event, and describes its supposed program in a (typically) conspiratorial, paranoid and completely garbled manner.

This fact confirms at least two things: one, Innes is indeed a politically illiterate and grossly ignorant pinhead; two, the exact nature of the summit, let alone its title, was of little importance in relation to its main function, which is — or rather, was — to provide a platform on which the group could pose; both for the cameras but, much more importantly, for their comrades. That their ‘Statement of Intent’ received far less attention than that of another group is unsurprising, given both the relative novelty of the New Reich in Australia, but also, more generally, because of the widespread ignorance, among the Left in particular, regarding the activities of the far right — a situation which has now, possibly, been remedied courtesy of the New Reich’s bold action; action for which I think the meatheads from New Reich deserve at least some credit.

Ironically, in its call for the disruption of the summit, while the other statement of intent was both the subject of much discussion and media profiling — and was completely unrealised — the statement of intent issuing from the New Reich was both ignored and (almost) completely fulfilled.

…The New Right Australia New Zealand and the National Anarchists are calling all politicly [sic] minded people to join us to demonstrate against the [“G20”] meeting. Let us unite to show the world that the people of Australia are against Globalisation and Big Business that is only interested in profit and doesn’t give a damn about our heritage and culture. Let’s show the world that we are prepared to stand up against the system and fight for our rights, our culture, our heritage and for a fair society. Are you game to be part of the “Black Block” [sic]? If so, contact us and help us to organise this demonstration. It doesn’t matter if you are from the political right or left. What we are looking for are people who care about the issues and are not slaves to a political dogma.

In the event, while the neo-Nazis claim 30–35 participants, other estimates place the number of participants at around 15 or so (not including former academic turned professional racist and amateur neo-Nazi ideologue Andrew Fraser and his wife). Seemingly inspired by televised images of the anarchist black bloc at the Seattle protests in 1999 — but also seemingly ignorant, as in so many other domains, of its history outside of this event — the 15 or 20 or 25 or 30 or 35 fascist pipsqueaks dressed in “menacing” black, formed a bloc, and headed off on their awfully big adventure.

And speaking of which, it’s time now to examine Peter Middleclass’ account of their school excursion.

Paint It Black, But It’s Still Brown: Neo-Nazis at APEC

To begin with, a few general observations. First, by their own admission, the neo-Nazis were shit-scared. This was largely because of fears of physical assault. In the event, this possibility was slightly mitigated by the fact that the APEC summit was accompanied by the largest and most expensive police operation in Australian history, involving thousands of uniformed and undercover police, army, intelligence and private security personnel: armed to the teeth; backed by legal immunity from prosecution for any misdemeanour; saturation media coverage; and spoiling for any excuse to employ violence. In other words, such actions, while perhaps worthy, are, in the context of a police state, almost literally suicidal.

Secondly, the appearance, on Saturday morning, September 8, outside the Sydney Town Hall, of the bloc and its banners, with slogans opposing globalisation and promoting ‘people power’, was based upon a quite conscious and ongoing attempt to recuperate nominally ‘anarchist’ imagery and polemics for the purposes of reactionary, right-wing politics. This is not a new trend in other parts of the world, especially Europe (the home of the New Reich), but was only introduced to Australia via the efforts of the leader of the group — a German-born, Sydney-based neo-Nazi by the name of Welf Herfurth — quite recently. Under his direction, the general strategy of this fraction of the local fascist milieu is based upon the successful aping of anarchist and other radical political formations by the far right in Germany — most prominently, the NPD and its various satellites (a grouping of which Herfurth, who moved to Australia in 1987, was once a member of and with which he remains in close collaboration).

As for the actions of the neo-Nazis at the protest itself, on the one hand, they did very little. On the other hand, they didn’t need to. For their purposes — relying as they did on a partial understanding of the importance of providing appropriate images of political dissent to the hungry hungry hippos in the mass media — their mere presence, unbloodied, was of sufficient propaganda value to render their efforts worthwhile. Thus upon arrival, having at first been mis-identified by police as anarchists (and subsequently warned to be on their best fucking behaviour), upon discovery that the group was merely composed of fascists of some description — and the realisation that, in exchange for their protection from the ravenous Communist hordes, the ‘conservative revolutionaries’ were only too happy to obey orders — the police were able to relax, and to transfer their energies from keeping an eye on the zany antics of the crazy anarchists to trying to ensure that none of the other protesters subjected the neo-Nazi ‘black bloc’ to the beating it so richly deserved.

Which, of course, they didn’t.

Shhh! Be vewy, vewy quiet: We’re fucking fascists!

Instead, for the perhaps 20–30 minutes the neo-Nazis, in their shiny new boots, staged their protest, the most savage attack came in the form of rude, cruel words. Having been instructed by their level boss to shut the fuck up and not respond to such ‘provocation’, the group of 15 (or 20 or 25 or 30 or 35) mostly young white males simply stood, in mute testimony to the arrival of neo-Nazism at APEC. Or as Peter Middleclass soberly describes the situation, “we had walked into the lion’s den: we were outnumbered, by an opponent [an opponent!], who would not let us march unmolested”. In fact, Peter’s portrayal of the protest is peppered with exclamations over the sheer audacity of the actions of he and his fascist comrades. Thus the brave boys (and one or two girls) bravely withstood an “impending communist assault” conducted by “old men wearing reflector vest jackets with ‘security’ written on the back”, one “tall, intimidating communist” who addressed the group “coldly”, another “old man, with a ‘dancing skeleton’ mounted on a pole”, etcetera. Worse yet, the National Anarchists were cunningly forced by the dastardly Reds — much like the US Army in Vietnam, with one hand tied behind their backs — “to play by the Marquess of Queensbury rules” (‘No shoes or boots with springs allowed’). Peter dealt with the situation like any proud fascist would: “I reached over and clasped the hand of one of the others”.

The degree of collaboration between the police and neo-Nazis is evident in the fact that the police allowed the neo-Nazis to maintain their disguises; a practice mirrored by the police’s own removal of their ID, rendering both safe from the prying eyes of citizens. But whereas insisting police identify themselves was largely pointless, removing the disguises of perhaps one or two of the handful of neo-Nazis would likely have motivated the group as a whole to disperse. The possibility of this action occurring, however, would have required no small degree of co-operation between anti-fascists present at the demonstration, as well as devising a means by which to do so which didn’t involve much in the way of physical conflict.

Notional Anarchism

According to Peter, “the communists” — a generic term for the numerous members of the crowd who took the opportunity to abuse he and his comrades for being fascists — “were in a complete state of confusion as regards to our ideology and aims”. Thus, the brochure distributed by the group, which featured a photograph of Subcommandante Marcos, apparently caused one elderly woman much consternation, while another, older man denounced them as police agents. Such confusion was supposedly only dispelled when a speaker on the main platform announced that the Men in Black were, in fact, neo-Nazis. In reality, this fact had been discovered independently by the anarchists present (and no doubt others), though Peter appears to believe that, on the basis that there was no anarchist black bloc, consequently, there were no anarchists. “Astonishingly”, this is untrue. Still, given his more general ignorance concerning anarchism, it’s not surprising that he should have arrived at such a daft conclusion on the basis of such a poor understanding.

Beyond the fact that the neo-Nazis were able to maintain a presence at the demonstration — according to Peter for several hours, according to other sources, less than half — there’s little else to add regarding the event, at least insofar as the fascists are concerned. Their movement forward, for example, and any possibility of their joining the march, was prevented by a handful of women holding a banner in front of the ‘bloc’ and, like the bloc itself, simply not moving until police instructed them to do so: “…a senior police office walked up and said to one of the co-ordinators: ‘Your part in the march is over: masks off, banners down’,” to which the group agreed. Further, “The senior officer had told us that he had received intelligence that the communists… were arranging an ambush for us. So he felt it best to avoid a confrontation which would result in violence, and [asked] for us to leave”, and so they did. In summary, “We were tremendously pleased, afterwards, that no arrests had occurred and that none of us had been physically assaulted. We had avoided identification, too”.

Lessons

For Peter, the main lessons he learnt from his brief excursion to APEC revolve around the nature of ‘communists’ and ‘communism’, and they are:

1) ‘Communists’ control the streets and prevent fascists from freely marching;
2) They do so in keeping with a long tradition of suppressing oppositional speech;
3) “Communists do such things in a state of high moral dudgeon”;
4) Communists are very odd-looking people;
5) They are many;
6) And they are muy peligroso.

Consequently, Peter is frustrated:

I would like to see marches by nationalists [sic], and I would like to attend gentlemanly seminars by nationalists, and gentlemanly debates between opposing nationalist factions. But, in order to hear Guillaume Faye and Alain de Benoist debate their respective points of view, we would have to smuggle them into Australia like rats. We have to do that already with visiting nationalists from overseas, lest they suffer the fate of de Benoist, who once had his glasses broken by an Antifa on a trip to Canada.

Hmmm. I wonder if Monsieur de Benoist has considered wearing contact lenses? Seriously though, I think perhaps Peter may be confusing, not only the need to bypass immigration authorities, but this supposed incident in Canada for an incident which occurred in Berlin, Germany. (Either that, or Alain is indeed, much like Hitler, a sucker for punishment.) “In early February 1993, about a dozen Autonomen interrupted a speech by Alain de Benoist, whom they considered “one of the chief theoreticians of French neo-fascism.” After escorting him from the lecture hall, they beat him, broke his glasses and left him in a distant part of the city.” Such actions formed a part of a more general campaign in Kreuzberg to combat gentrification, and to keep yuppies and fascists from moving into or settling in the area. A strategy, ironically, which the NPD has appropriated and applied elsewhere in Germany, with some degree of success (albeit with far less opposition from capital and state). Which, in turn, is obviously an example Peter and his comrades would dearly love to emulate. The chief problem in doing so, however, is obvious even to him: lack of numbers.

So how do we move forward? Well, we have to have more of the same as we had at the APEC demo: except we need more people… if half of the activists we had begged to come weeks before the rally… had shown up, our numbers would have been greater than what they were. We could have physically intimidated the communist enemy, simply by our presence, and without breaking the law (we at New Right do not endorse anyone breaking the law)… After the APEC demo, I was reminded of an old Oswald Mosley post-war interview. The interviewer harangued him for the ‘thuggish’ tactics of the British Union of Fascists in the pre-war era. Mosley replied simply, ‘We adopted those tactics in response to those of the Left’. Before APEC, I didn’t understand what Mosley meant; after APEC, I do. (And keep in mind that the communists of the 1930s were much more violent and forceful than those of today). A hundred, two hundred, NA activists… at APEC would have lead to the complete paralysis and demoralisation of the communist forces. We would have been able to appoint our own… ‘security’… and decide who can, and who cannot, attend the march. We could approach the communist ‘red bloc’ and say, ‘Commies, hey? Tsk, tsk, tsk… You no march here, man. You be gone’.

To be concluded…

    See also : Graham D. Macklin, Co-opting the counter culture: Troy Southgate and the National Revolutionary Faction, Patterns of Prejudice, Vol.39, No.3, 2005 [PDF] | Alan Wolfe, A Fascist Philosopher Helps Us Understand Contemporary Politcs, The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 2, 2004 [PDF]
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APEC : Peter Middleclass on New Reich

A pseudonymous member of the fascist demonstration at APEC has written an entertaining and informative account of his experience confronting the Communist hordes in Sydney last weekend, which is available for your outraged (or bemused) perusal at the New Reich Australia/New Zealand blog. His caustic commentary is actually quite amusing — especially in his characterisation of the various types (screeching leftists, media vultures, loud-mouthed but hopelessly ineffectual ‘anti-fascists’, etcetera) always present at events such as these — and is relatively well-written, if obviously ill-informed in parts.

I’ll respond to it later.

http://newrightausnz.blogspot.com/2007/09/battle-of-apec-by-peter-middleton-1.html

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reading…

uri got blog: it’s alive!

so does chuck morse, who’s a negative nelly

this article is heaps interesting: ‘Specters of Malthus: Scarcity, Poverty, Apocalypse’, Iain Boal in conversation with David Martinez, Counterpunch, September 11, 2007

while this one’s funny-sad: Student’s path to FBI informant — Using alias, woman tells of alleged terrorism plot, Denny Walsh, Sacramento Bee, September 12, 2007. it’s about an fbi informant named “anna”, who’s currently testifying in the trial of eric mcdavid: “She said that in the fall of 2003, as research for a class project, she dressed in “grunge” clothes and mingled with protesters at an international free trade conference. After she presented a report to the class, the witness recalled, a fellow student who was a state law enforcement officer asked for a copy of the paper she had written about her experiences. The paper found its way to the FBI in Miami, and she was recruited to infiltrate the “anarchist movement” that consistently has a presence at anti-establishment demonstrations, she said. The bureau’s proposition that she report all violent and criminal activity she witnessed at these events “intrigued” her, she said…”

…and i need to spend more time away from blogging, writing more serious stuff…

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