Spencer Sunshine, Neo-Nazi Terrorism and Countercultural Fascism: The
Origins and Afterlife of James Mason's Siege
(Routledge, New York,
2024), 453pp.

Spencer Sunshine's Neo-Nazi Terrorism and Countercultural Fascism: The
Origins and Afterlife of James Mason's Siege
(Routledge, 2024)
describes how America's early Cold War neo-Nazi movement reacted and
adapted to the late 1960s American youth counterculture. The story is
told through the person of James Mason, a Boomer neo-Nazi heavily
influenced by Satanism, who, in 1966, at 14 years old, affiliated with
the youth wing of George Lincoln Rockwell's American Nazi Party (ANP).
Sunshine describes how Mason brought the 1960s counterculture into the
movement's strategy, tactics, and its branding. The book is also a
production and reception history of Mason's magnum opus, Siege, which
is a compilation of his 1970s-1980s neo-Nazi writings. Solicited and
edited by alternative publishers and musicians operating in neo-Nazi,
ethnoseparatist, and Satanist circles, Siege was initially released in
1993 and later retrieved and popularized in the mid-2010s through the
now-defunct online forum Iron March and by the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen
Division.

Let's get some preliminaries out the way. Sunshine is an unabashed
leftist. His 2013 Ph.D. from City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate
Center was on the history of post-1960s anarchism in the United States,
and featured anarcho-primitivist John Zerzan and Bullshit Jobs's David
Graeber.[1] Since 2014, Sunshine has written about facets of the
American right-wing for publications like The New Republic, the
Southern Poverty Law Center, and The Daily Beast --- the kind of
outlets that make many conservative Christian believers auto-roll their
eyes, say "Nope!," and slam their laptops shut. Even so, I'd caution the
skeptical and the wary to keep their tabs open a little longer. Years
ago, I assigned one of Sunshine's longer reports on Oregon's Patriot
movement to my Patrick Henry College undergraduates because Sunshine is
what I call a "digger" and he knows his subject matter in ways many do
not.[2] And if you desire insights about the origins of the alternative
and dissident American right that existed before the "alt-right" and
dissident right we've all heard about over the last ten years,
Sunshine's book will be a key text for many years to come.


You likely didn't hear much about the American Nazi Party (ANP) in your
US history classes, but for almost five years in the 1960s, George
Rockwell and his party knew how to draw headlines. Established in the
late 1950s, the party didn't garner much public attention until 1962. It
was the ANP's Roy James who, that September, charged to the front of a
church in Birmingham, Alabama and repeatedly punched Martin Luther King,
Jr. at a Southern Christian Leadership Conference event.[3]

Rockwell's ANP saw local battles over integration and fair housing as a
way to build its brand. For instance, throughout 1962 and 1963, as the
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) held "Freedom Dweller" pickets,
sit-ins, and "dwell-ins" at newly-built, racially segregated housing
developments in the southern California cities of Torrance and
Carson/Dominguez Hills, the ANP's "Western Division" organized and led
counterprotests.[4], [5] In 1966, Rockwell and his Chicago Division
had appropriated Stokely Carmichael's call for "black power," and had
rallied local "white power" to fight off housing integration in
Southwest Chicago. On August 5, the group attacked a march during which
King himself was struck by a rock. King commented afterwards that he
"[had never seen in Mississippi or Alabama] mobs as hostile and as
hate-filled as [he'd] seen in Chicago."[6]

Sunshine's story really takes off with the assassination of Rockwell in
August 1967, just eight months after re-christening his own organization
as the National Socialist White People's Party (NSWPP). The name change
reflected Rockwell's desire to tone down the group's explicit Nazi
features, transforming it into a wider, "white power" umbrella
coalition. Indeed, Rockwell had already made efforts to construct a more
"Americanized" Nazism, one in which "Aryan" was replaced with "white,"
where adherents of the Christian Identity movement were made more
comfortable, and where Holocaust denialism had a more "central" role.
Rockwell had even tried to start a "front" --- the Fighting American
Nationalists (FAN) --- he hoped could attract more whites by minimizing
the ANP's "Nazi trappings."[7]

Despite his best efforts at building some form of unified party system,
however, local chapter priorities, strategic and tactical disagreements,
and commonly held frustrations over the leadership style of Rockwell's
successor, Matthias Koehl, split the

the post-Rockwell party along geographic lines by the mid-seventies.
Koehl desperately tried to maintain authority over a rump NSWPP, but
Sunshine relates --- in startling detail --- how that remnant and other
NSWPP splinter groups in northern California, southern California,
Chicago, Virginia, New York/Buffalo, and parts of Ohio evolved,
competed, further divided, changed names, and tried to outbid one
another for personnel, recruits, funding, and market share through the
rest of the 1970s into the 1980s.

Enter the Ohio boy, James Mason, and his assessment of how the 1960s
counterculture impacted the neo-Nazi movement's recruiting, strategy and
tactics, and how, going forward, that counterculture could be
beneficially appropriated.

Mason well understood his era's "vibe shift": the youthful energy; a
new, outside-of-the-home political/advocacy role for women; "free love,"
sexual laxity, and public acceptance of pornography; an anti-law
enforcement bias ("anti-pigism"); and a replacement of the tired, mass
politics-as-usual with militant vanguardism, direct action, and
guerrilla warfare. Mason's writing highlighted the structures and
actions of violent leftist groups such as the Weather Underground,
Symbionese Liberation Army, May 19th Communist Organization, and the
Black Liberation Army. He argued how a "few" could accelerate a collapse
of the "Jew Capitalist system" through bombings, "expropriations,"
street battles, and murder/assassinations. And, like these leftist
groups, Mason believed the "few" included women in more operational
roles, which was very distinct from Rockwell's older, more "stag"
approach.

Unsurprisingly, Mason found his closest allies among the California
splinter groups; that is, from the post-Rockwell factions that were
operating well within the counterculture's ground zero. In the mid
1970s, Mason tried to construct his own above-ground, combined Klan-Nazi
umbrella organization using southern California's National Socialist
Liberation Front (NSLF) as a tandem, underground "armed wing" or
"liberation army." In fact, until the early 1980s, Mason would regularly
look to the NSLF as a seed group, even with that group's various
leadership changes and despite Mason having a short stint of cooperation
with the National Socialist White Workers' Party (NSWWP) in northern
California.

Keeping with the zeitgeist, Mason's own religious beliefs and personal
spirituality were also in flux. In the 1970s, he adhered to Christian
Identity, which Rockwell himself had believed compatible with Nazism. As
time went on, however, Mason transitioned away from his heterodox
Christianity into Nietzscheanism and atheism, decrying any forms of
Christianity as "weak" and "alien." By the 1980s, Mason thought one
could support Christian Identity, but at best, only as a utilitarian
"conveyor belt" into non-Christian racialism.

Mason's spiritual moves and his continued fascination with late 1960s
counterculture also led him to his most controversial stance --- the
assertion that Charles Manson and his followers ("The Family")
represented a tactical and spiritual model for the post-Rockwell
Neo-Nazi movement. In some of Mason's earlier musings on the use of
assassination as a tactic, he lauded Manson Family member Squeaky
Fromme's unsuccessful attempt on President Ford's life). Mason's
personal interactions with Manson Family members and his direct
communication with Manson himself only served to enhance his praise of
the jailed murderer.

The Family, to Mason, was akin to the Weather Underground. It was a
non-monogamous, sexually promiscuous, drug-friendly, countercultural
community of "free love" in which women had an active role in violent,
anti-system plans and operations. The 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders, he
argued, were a solid example of direct action and "redemptive violence,"
aimed at accelerating an American race war. The Family's rural outpost
was a place where, if needed, an intentional, white racial community
could sit out the coming societal apocalypse, engage in "mutual aid,"
and establish a new, white racialist, antisemitic polis as the
existing "system" was toppled. Moreover, Manson's "gnosticism," says
Sunshine, guided Mason's eventual move into what he [Mason] described
as "universal order," a "new kind of revolutionary National Socialist
consciousness," that transcended all boundaries between Christianity and
Satanism and identified world-historical "Christ figures" in Jesus,
Hitler, Rockwell, and Manson.

While his promotion of Manson and The Family severed many of Mason's
relationships to older neo-Nazis, it made him very attractive in the
mid-to-late 1980s to the Abraxas Circle, a coterie of
alternative/dissident book publishers and editors, Holocaust deniers,
industrial and deathrock musicians, Nazi skinheads, and, lastly, various
friends, relatives and associates of Anton LaVey, the head of the Church
of Satan.

Over five dense chapters, Sunshine recounts Mason's personal and
professional relationships with the Abraxas Circle, and, in particular,
how Mason's longevity in the American neo-Nazi movement and the access
he had to Charles Manson endeared him to four men within the Circle's
innermost ring (what Sunshine deems the 'Abraxas Clique'): Boyd Rice,
Adam Parfrey, Nikolas Schreck, and Michael Moynihan. Describing itself
as "a sort of Thule Society for the 90s," The Abraxas crowd and Mason
hit it off well, particularly in light of the group's focus on the
occult, fascism, natural inequality, dysgenics, and Social Darwinism.
Schreck, LaVey's son-in-law and one of the founders of the
goth/deathrock band Radio Werewolf, at one time described the group's
aim as introducing young men and women to "the western European
tradition" in order to provide them with a "firm alternative" to the
"dysgenic ocean of mud that has swept the [western] world."

Parfey, who was Schreck's publisher and was Abraxas' conduit to
numerous Holocaust deniers associated with the Institute for Historical
Review (IHR), told James Mason in early communications that they
believed Charles Manson was an "important figure [to save] the white
race from a dysgenic condition."[8] Schreck, Rice, and Parfrey would
use Mason's stories, recollections, and arcana for The Manson File
(1988) and the related documentary,"Charles Manson Superstar." (1989).
Released by Parfrey's Amok Press (now known as Feral House), The Manson
File
is one part of a book catalog that includes Joseph Goebbels' novel
Michael: Pages from a German Destiny, assorted LaVey volumes, and two
of Parfrey's own neo-Nazi anthologies (Apocalypse Culture I and
II).[9]

Like many even today, Schreck and Parfrey played the "ironic aesthetics"
card when it comes to their brandishing of neo-Nazism. Sunshine
dismisses their attempts. Regardless of whether Schreck's Radio Werewolf
viewed the use of Nazi and Satanic symbols or references in ironic
terms, Sunshine argues the band had attracted real neo-Nazis by 1988
– the year the mainstream media declared as "the year of the Nazi
skinhead." Schreck's overt relationships and associations had also by
that time moved him well away from mere aesthetics. And Parfrey's Feral
House continued to publish works on Nazi occultism and insider
recollections of the Nazi skinhead music scene. In fact, Sunshine says,
Parfrey was much less reticent about his white racialism near the end of
his life. Parfrey died in 2018, and Feral House is releasing a
posthumous "Apocalypse Omnibus" later this summer.[10]

It was, however, the fourth member of the Abraxas Clique, Michael
Moynihan, who would take on the greatest importance for James Mason's
continued popularity. Moynihan is the one who first pitched Mason with
the idea of compiling a "best of" anthology to get all of his neo-Nazi
materials from the 1970s and 1980s into a single volume. It took longer
than expected, but the Moynihan-edited, first edition of Siege came
out in April 1993. The volume was dedicated to Charles Manson, who Mason
called "the Son of Man." Throughout 1993 and into 1994 --- which was the
year Moynihan was made a Church of Satan high priest --- Mason's Siege
generated serious buzz across the neo-Nazi and black metal worlds. It
was advertised in music fanzines, in Black Flame, the Church of
Satan's regular newsletter, and was the subject of evangelical "shock
jock" Bob Larson's radio talk show. It also had a rare media breakout
moment when mentioned on an episode of the McLaughlin Group.

And then, suddenly, Mason and Siege all but disappeared.

In May 1995, Mason went to prison. While Siege had been making the
rounds, Mason, who was then living in Colorado, had taken up with the
15-year old daughter of a fellow neo-Nazi. Sunshine relates how Mason
had long been into pornography (including an interest in CSAM, or child
sexual abuse material), and it wasn't long before he was arrested,
released, and then re-arrested for CSAM-related crimes, contributing to
the delinquency of a minor, and for menacing the 15-year old's
subsequent boyfriend. Mason would be in and out of prison for the next
four years.

Once released, Mason continued to produce content and worked in retail
security. He had rediscovered a heterodox Christianity in prison. His
prison and post-prison writings are a cafeteria-style bonanza of
(ostensible) Christianity, antisemitism, white racialism, "ancient
aliens" (a la Chariot of the Gods), "alien DNA," and a divine
elevation of Hitler. Between 2001 and 2003, Mason worked with a
different set of alternative, white racialist publishers --- Greg
Johnson and Ryan Schuster --- to release the second edition of Siege
under the imprint Black Sun (now Counter Currents Publishing).[11],
[12] Mason's initial publisher, Moynihan, on the other hand, moved to
editing new English language translations of Italian occultist
philosopher Julius Evola, French New Right thinker Alain de Benoist,
and, most recently with Arcana Europa Media, works by "Germanic
Revival," pagan, Odinist, and Asatru writers.[13]

It was fairly quiet for Mason until Iron March and Atomwaffen Division
(AWD) retrieved and popularized Mason's counterculture-inflected
neo-Nazism for online-savvy Millennials and early Zoomers in the mid
2010s. Those interested in Siege's second reception period will want
to pay very close attention to Sunshine's opening chapter, the
concluding parts of his chapter on Nazi Satanism, and portions of
Chapter 17 ("From Prison to Revival"). Iron March released a third
edition of Siege in 2015, which caught the eye of the Atomwaffen
Division. According to Sunshine, Atomwaffen Division was enchanted by
the entire Mason package: the long-standing white racialism and
antisemitism, the turning-away from Rockwellian-era party building, his
loathing of run-of-the-mill conservative culture-warring, the
comfortability with California "drop-out" drug culture, the love for
Charles Manson and the Family, his connections to Satanism, and, most
importantly, his anti-system accelerationism and the call for direct
action and "cleansing" violence. It took very little time for Mason's
Siege to become Atomwaffen's "Bible" and for Mason to become the
group's guru. And it didn't take long for others to catch on. Sunshine
reports that by July 2017, Siege had approximately 16,000 downloads from
the Iron March forum.

And even more young men and women have "Siege-pilled." Mason's
anthology has been updated and re-released multiple times since its
third edition. As Sunshine attests, one can easily research Mason's
influence on Atomwaffen Division's domestic and international affiliates
or splinters --- groups like Feuerkrieg Division, Sonnenkrieg Division,
and AWD Russland. Or --- and I solemnly warn you, this part gets even
darker --- you can read through available news stories and legal
documents involving the Siege-inspired Order of the Nine Angles (O9A),
the National Socialist Order of the Nine Angles (NSO9A), Satanic Front,
MKY/No Lives Matter (NLM), and 764, the child predator online occult
network.[14] None of this is Sunshine's leftist fever dream.

This book isn't a comfortable read. It isn't an easy read. But it is to
be respected. Sunshine is refreshingly unafraid to show his work. He
offers nine pages of dramatis personae, charts/graphics, a rundown of
the archives he used, a full periodical list of Mason's writings,
granular footnotes, and, for his final hundred pages, eleven full
appendices covering various individuals, groups, and concepts associated
with Mason. I heartily recommend it. Not only that, I strongly recommend
the Routledge series of which Sunshine's book is a part --- the
Routledge Studies in Fascism and the Far Right series. I own a number
of the now over 100-volume series.[15] Together with Brill's free
online Fascism: Journal of Comparative Fascist Studies[16] (which was
discontinued in 2025, but involves many of the same American and
European scholars), the Routledge series offers some of the best,
up-to-date work on interwar fascism, the interwar, Cold War, and
post-Cold War transnational right, and more granular assessments of far
right phenomena.

Sunshine's Neo-Nazi Terrorism and Countercultural Fascism clearly
establishes that the counterculture of the "long 1960s" is not merely
a left-wing or so-called "cultural Marxist" story, but that its
appropriation and its impact is also discerned on the political right.
Moreover, at a time in which neo-Nazi, white identitarian, and/or
European New Right outlets are finding their way into vendor tables at
conservative Christian conferences, it is high time for conservative
Christian believers to have a clear, historical perspective on this
entire ecosystem.


  1. Spencer Sunshine, "Post-1960 U.S. Anarchism and Social Theory,"
    Ph.D. dissertation, City University of New York Graduate Center
    (September 2013),
    https://search.worldcat.org/title/Post-1960-U.S.-anarchism-and-social-theory/oclc/873626873;
    and
    https://www.gc.cuny.edu/sites/default/files/2023-05/2014_50th_Commencement_Program.pdf. ↩︎

  2. Spencer Sunshine, Up in Arms: A Guide to Oregon's Patriot
    Movement
    (Rural Organizing Project and Political Research
    Associates, 2016),
    https://rop.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Up-in-Arms_Report_PDF.pdf. ↩︎

  3. William H. Schmaltz, For Race and Nation: George Lincoln Rockwell
    and the American Nazi Party
    (River's Bend Press, 2013), p. 225;
    David J. Garrow, Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King Jr. and the
    Southern Christian Leadership Conference
    (Open Road Media
    [ebook], 2015), p. 221. ↩︎

  4. Mike Davis and Jon Wiener, Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the
    Sixties
    (Verso, 2020), pp. 82-100; M. Keith Claybrook, Jr., "CORE's
    Struggle for Fair Housing Rights in LA," Black Perspectives,
    African American Intellectual History Society, 1 March 2022,
    https://www.aaihs.org/cores-struggle-for-fair-housing-rights-in-la/;
    Hadley Meares, "In the summer of '63, black students led protests
    against the South Bay's white-only neighborhoods," Curbed Los
    Angeles
    , 27 February 2020,
    https://la.curbed.com/2020/2/27/21153265/torrance-fair-housing-protests;
    Global Images Works, "Rare Color Footage of Protests Southwood
    Riviera Royale - 1963," ID 10916_071,
    https://www.globalimageworks.com/library/footage/protests-southwood-riviera-royale-1963. ↩︎

  5. The ANP's "Western Division" had its home in the Southern
    California cities of Glendale and El Monte. Glendale was one of
    Southern California's most notorious "sundown" towns. See Mike
    Davis and Jon Wiener, Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties
    (Verso, 2020), p. 14, 219; Schmaltz, For Race and Nation, pp.
    334-336; Angie Crouch, "City of Glendale Apologizes for its History
    as a 'Sundown Town," NBC Los Angeles, 13 October 2020,
    https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/city-of-glendale-apologizes-for-its-history-as-a-sundown-town/2443011/.
    Davis and Wiener highlight how California Army National Guard troops
    from Glendale were some of the very first deployed in response to
    the August 1965 Watts Riots. Davis and Weiner, Set the Night on
    Fire
    , p. 219. This fact is also outlined in State of California,
    Military Support of Law Enforcement during Civil Disturbances: A
    Report Concerning the California National Guard's Part in
    Suppressing the Los Angeles Riot --- August 1965
    , pp. 13-15 ("1st
    Battalion, 160th Infantry"), https://militarymuseum.org/watts.pdf.
    On El Monte's racial history, including information on the "El Monte
    Boys," the Klan, and the ANP, see the Youtube interview with Fresno
    State University professor Dan Cady, "Scared Shitless (Dan Cady),"
    on Latinish [Podcast] with Hector Luis Alamo, #64, 3 October 2020,
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZbSrLUEPlE. Also see Emma Bianco,
    "Demons in the City of Angels: Neo-Nazis and White Nationalism in
    Southern California," MA thesis, California State University
    Fullerton, Spring 2022, pp. 17-19, 22-23, 28-29,
    https://scholarworks.calstate.edu/concern/theses/2v23w245n. ↩︎

  6. Schmaltz, For Race and Nation, pp. 415-417; Joanna Hernandez and
    Blair Paddock, "'Chicago Tonight' in Your Neighborhood: Martin
    Luther King Jr's Legacy in Marquette Park," WTTW News, 13 January
    2023,
    https://news.wttw.com/2023/01/13/chicago-tonight-your-neighborhood-martin-luther-king-jr-s-legacy-marquette-park. ↩︎

  7. Schmaltz goes into additional detail about FAN, particularly FAN
    in Chicago, which was the entity through which Matthew Koehl was
    recruited. Schmaltz, For Race and Nation, pp. 144-145, 193. ↩︎

  8. Sunshine mentions three IHR-connected individuals in particular:
    William Grimstad, Keith Stimely, and Michael A. Hoffman II. Grimstad
    was the author of The Six Million Reconsidered: Is the 'Nazi
    Holocaust' Story a Zionist Propaganda Ploy?
    (1979), published by
    IHR's Noontide Press. Stimely did editorial work (including serving
    as chief editor) for IHR's Journal of Historical Review in the
    early 1980s. See description in the Finding Aid for "Keith Stimely
    Collection on Revisionist History and Neo-Fascist Movements,"
    Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon,
    https://scua.uoregon.edu/repositories/2/resources/2104. Hoffman
    served as IHR's assistant director, and later moved to Coeur
    d'Alene, Idaho and published under Independent History and Research,
    https://www.revisionisthistory.org/. ↩︎

  9. For a discussion of the initial history of Parfrey, Amok Press,
    and its catalog (including Goebbels and LaVey), see Michael Lee
    Nirenberg, "Conversation with Adam Parfrey (Part One)," Huffpost,
    13 October 2015,
    https://www.huffpost.com/entry/conversation-with-adam-pa_b_8277892.
    Amok Press's translation of Goebbels' Michael: Pages from a German
    Destiny
    was reviewed in the Los Angeles Times. Tom Clark, "The Nazi
    Wrote a Novel," Los Angeles Times, 25 October 1987,
    https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-10-25-bk-16144-story.html.
    For Apocalypse Culture I and II, see
    https://feralhouse.com/apocalypse-culture/ and
    https://feralhouse.com/apocalypse-culture-ii/. ↩︎

  10. On the upcoming Parfrey Apocalypse Omnibus, see interview of
    Feral House's Christina Ward, "Member Spotlight: Feral House,"
    Community of Literary Magazines and Publishers (CLMP), 13 July 2024,
    https://www.clmp.org/news/member-spotlight-feral-house/. See also
    https://feralhouse.com/apocalypse-omnibus/. ↩︎

  11. Sunshine describes how Black Sun Publications was planning on
    publishing individuals like Ernst Junger (who intellectual historian
    Richard Wolin recently described in Heidegger in Ruins as a
    "conservative revolutionary," a "protofascist," a "fascist
    sympathizer," a "spiritual fascist," and "a type of
    Frontgeneration Jules Verne"), Nouvelle Droite founder Alain de
    Benoist, the 19th century scientific racist Arthur de Gobineau, and
    Hindu-Nazi esotericist Savitri Devi (309). Sunshine wrote a much
    shorter but more detailed piece on the history of Black Sun
    Publications, Counter-Currents, and the Foundation for Human
    Understanding (FHU), in which he offers more details about the
    publishing of Savitri Devi. Spencer Sunshine, "How a Mainstream
    Racist Group Revived the Terroristic Tome 'Siege,' Hatewatch,
    Southern Poverty Law Center, 28 March 2024,
    https://www.splcenter.org/resources/hate-watch/how-mainstream-racist-group-revived-terroristic-tome-siege/.
    Black Sun Publications released And Time Rolls On: The Savitri Devi
    Interviews
    in 2005, and Devi's Gold in the Furnace: Experiences in
    Post-War Germany
    in 2006. These, and even more by Devi, have been
    reissued by Counter-Currents Publishing. See
    https://counter-currents.com/shop/books/. For historical background
    on Devi and her influence on neo-Nazism, see Maria Margaronis,
    "Savitri Devi: From the Aryans to the 'Alt Right,' BBC Radio Four,
    27 October 2017, https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09b19y4. ↩︎

  12. In 2016, Greg Johnson described his white racialism to Darryl
    Cooper (aka Martyr Made) in this way: "The political order we
    envision is ethno-nationalist. We want to create a white homeland in
    North America for people of European descent. And the reason for
    that is very simple. We don't think that multiculturalism is working
    out very well for white people. We look around the world, and in
    every white society, birth rates are below replacement. There are
    many causes for this, but the principal cause, in our view, is that
    we've lost sovereign control of our homelands. There are no white
    societies that make the preservation of their people and our race as
    a whole a political priority," Greg Johnson, "Darryl Cooper in
    Conversation with Greg Johnson," transcript of 2016 Decline of the
    West
    podcast, online transcript dated September 2024, located at
    https://counter-currents.com/2024/09/darryl-cooper-in-conversation-with-greg-johnson/. ↩︎

  13. Sunshine explains how Michael Moynihan started working with
    Joshua Buckley circa 2002. Moynihan and Buckley worked together on
    the TYR: Myth-Culture-Tradition journal, and Sunshine attributes
    Greg Johnson's conversion to white racialism to Buckley. Sunshine
    describes Buckley as a "former Nazi skinhead" and "[someone who]
    for decades had been active in White Supremacist politics in the
    Atlanta, Georgia area" (248-249). In 2002, Moynihan edited a version
    of Julius Evola's Men Among the Ruins with the publisher Inner
    Traditions. More recently, Moynihan and Buckley have worked with
    translator Jon Graham to publish Alain de Benoist under the Arcana
    Europa Media banner --- re-publishing On Being a Pagan (2018) and
    The Empire of Myth (2021). Arcana Europa Media also publishes
    Stephen Flowers (aka Edred Thorsson), an American runologist and
    occultist. See
    https://web.archive.org/web/20241110142648/https://arcanaeuropamedia.com/.
    According to online corporation data, Buckley appears to operate out
    of South Carolina and Georgia, and in addition to Arcana Europa
    Media, he maintains companies named for Elder Futhark runes (Ansuz,
    Elhaz, Fehu, Raido, and Uruz). ↩︎

  14. For background on Atomwaffen Division, see The Soufan Center,
    "The Atomwaffen Division: The Evolution of the White Supremacy
    Threat," August 2020,
    https://thesoufancenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/The-Atomwaffen-Division-The-Evolution-of-the-White-Supremacy-Threat-August-2020-.pdf.
    For more on post-Atomwaffen and Siege, see Southern Poverty Law
    Center, "Atomwaffen and the Siege Parallax: How One Neo-Nazi's
    Life's Work is Fueling a Younger Generation," 22 February 2018,
    https://www.splcenter.org/resources/hate-watch/atomwaffen-and-siege-parallax-how-one-neo-nazis-lifes-work-fueling-younger-generation/.
    On Atomwaffen and Feuerkrieg Division, see American Odyssey,
    "Telegram Messages Reveal New Details About Neo-Nazi Group
    Feuerkrieg Division," 2 October 2019,
    https://medium.com/americanodyssey/telegram-messages-feuerkrieg-division-jarrett-william-smith-arrested-neo-nazi-34d8dbd32653.
    On O9A, see Dominic Alessio, "Racist occultism in the UK: behind the
    Order of Nine Angles (O9A)," Open Democracy, 23 July 2020,
    https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/countering-radical-right/racist-occultism-uk-behind-order-nine-angles-o9a/,
    and also US Department of Justice, "Former U.S. Army Soldier
    Sentenced To 45 Years In Prison For Attempting To Murder Fellow
    Service Members In Deadly Ambush," 3 March 2023,
    https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/former-us-army-soldier-sentenced-45-years-prison-attempting-murder-fellow-service.
    On the 764 child predator network, its online precursors, and the
    influence of Nazi-Satanism, see the following: [a] Marc-Andre
    Argentino, Barrett G, and M.B. Tyler, "764: The Intersection of
    Terrorism, Violent Extremism, and Child Sexual Exploitation," 19
    January 2024, Global Network on Extremism and Technology,
    https://gnet-research.org/2024/01/19/764-the-intersection-of-terrorism-violent-extremism-and-child-sexual-exploitation/;
    [b] US Department of Justice, "Member Of Violent 764 Terror
    Network Sentenced to 30 Years in Prison For Sexually Exploiting a
    Child," 7 November 2024,
    https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/member-violent-764-terror-network-sentenced-30-years-prison-sexually-exploiting-child;
    [c] US Department of Justice, "Four Members of Online Neo-Nazi
    Group that Exploited Minors Charged with Producing Child Sexual
    Abuse Material," 30 January 2025,
    https://www.justice.gov/usao-cdca/pr/four-members-online-neo-nazi-group-exploited-minors-charged-producing-child-sexual;
    [d] Marc-Andre Argentino, "CVLT Historical Threat Assessment of
    the Precursor to 764," 31 January 2025,
    https://www.maargentino.com/cvlt-historical-threat-assessment-of-the-precursor-to-764/;
    and [e] Andrea Marks, "Violent Online Group CVLT Coerced Kids to
    Self-Harm, DOJ Says," Rolling Stone, 6 February 2025,
    https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/violent-online-group-cvlt-indicted-1235258786/. ↩︎

  15. For the catalog for the Routledge series, see
    https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Studies-in-Fascism-and-the-Far-Right/book-series/FFR?publishedFilter=alltitles&pd=published,forthcoming&pg=1&pp=48&so=pub&view=list. ↩︎

  16. For a listing of available volumes and articles in the journal,
    see
    https://brill.com/view/journals/fasc/fasc-overview.xml?language=en. ↩︎

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Brian Auten

Brian J. Auten is an independent scholar of Cold War strategy, politics, and religion. He is the author of Carter’s Conversion: The Hardening of American Defense Policy (University of Missouri Press, 2008).

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