The turner diaries pdf free download
States have been dissolved, and the country divided into regions. Lenard's protagonist, Stonewall Bedford, is persecuted by militant blacks because of his loyalty to the rebel flag.
They spring up right in our midst, spurred on daily by the goading of their own political leaders. Protected by the U. Justice Department, these militants push for the necessity of remolding Southerners into more pliant people. But they won't remold Bedford. As angry blacks threaten to remove the Confederate battle flag from city hall — and open fire on Bedford's family — he tries valiantly to preserve the flag.
Nothing can keep him from being true to his Southern heritage. In John Ross' Unintended Consequences, a white Southern man faces another form of oppression — an "obscure federal gun law written to promote massive noncompliance and give idled [gun] prohibition agents something to do.
Bowman, an expert gunman, makes sure that the agents he captures don't abuse citizens' rights any more: He dismembers them and feeds their bodies to hogs.
Bowman's violent revenge has drawn comparisons — both positive and negative — to Earl Turner's adventures. A review from Publisher's Weekly notes that Ross's novel "seethes with a grudge against a government that is portrayed as having persecuted praiseworthy citizens who merely want to exercise their civil rights. Like the notorious and paranoid Turner Diaries, this novel may speak to readers on the fringes of American society — but it misses the middle, both artistic and political, by a long shot.
Whites in Outer Space Of course, the middle is not what these novelists are aiming for. Extremist novelists see radical problems that mainstream Americans don't — and they dream up equally radical solutions. McManus' novel follows racist tyrant Alexander McGrail as he rises "with phenomenal quickness from relative obscurity to the top rung of American politics" — and then usurps the U. McManus describes the victims being herded into pits and shot, massacred in the streets, and sterilized through tainted drinking water.
Whites who fail an IQ test are sterilized, too. Pregnant black women are killed on sight. He's flattered when readers tell him that his book is "like a sequel to The Turner Diaries, " even if he's never actually read Pierce's work. Like Pierce, McManus is not about to apologize for the mass killings of people of color. His concern, he says, is ultimately the preservation of humanity.
Outer space is often the ultimate destination for white characters who survive the violent plots of these books. In Hold Back This Day, Ward Kendall describes a racist dystopia — a super-globalized world of "Unification" where all major religions are distilled into one, Chrislamhindbuddhism, and where brown skin is preferred over white.
The story revolves around one of the Earth's remaining fair-skinned men, Jeff Huxton. After having a white son in his first marriage, Huxton joins the multicultural majority, taking an Asian woman as his second wife and fathering a biracial daughter. When his white son, Adam, has trouble fitting in at school, Huxton recalls his own days of being a misfit: "Like Adam, he too had been the class 'freak,' having had the misfortune of being born to one of the last sets of parents who were 'unblended.
Young Adam finds a white mentor, Karl Ramstrom, who teaches him about white history, back in the good old days before Unification. Adam falls in love with Ramstrom's daughter. The plot thickens when Huxton discovers Adam's plan to leave for Mars with his new white friends and join Avalon, the only white colony left in the universe.
Huxton comes around to a new way of thinking, rejecting his multicultural beliefs and blended family in favor of Avalon. Kendall says his novel has been embraced by "white nationalists" not because it ends with a utopian fantasy, but because it's based on reality. Against the Odds The idea of a lone hero doing battle with the world's evils is nothing new.
But William Pierce was apparently on to something when he gave that old storyline a new, white-supremacist twist. Most extremist novels published since The Turner Diaries focus on a white protagonist who wakes up to what's wrong with the world, and then acts against the odds to make things right.
There's a good reason for that, says Harvard University lecturer Rebecca Wingfield. Social protest novels — whether it's Uncle Tom's Cabin or Hold Back This Day — work on readers by drawing them into the experiences of a protagonist they can relate to. Since the appeal here is to our emotions and sympathies, and not just our intellects, fiction offers a much more subtle way of bringing us around to a particular point of view than abstract political argument.
Pat Shannan certainly hopes so. A writer for the antigovernment Media Bypass magazine, Shannan centers his novel, One In a Million, around the character of Brock Freeman, an easy-going, wholesome attorney from the Midwest. Freeman begins to question the federal tax system, revisiting laws like the Federal Reserve Act of and determining that gold and silver are the only valid forms of tender.
Freeman goes on to discover what antigovernment "Patriots" have been saying all along: filing taxes is downright un-American. In the shower one morning, he ruminates: "The Fourth Amendment protection of people to be secure in their 'persons, homes, papers, and effects' is violated by any law that would require one to voluntarily declare all that information on a government form. As Freeman shifts his thinking, Shannan hopes readers will shift theirs along with him — and feel his fury when the IRS cracks down on the tax-protesting hero, killing his wife in the process.
Shannan told the Intelligence Report that One In a Million is "a historical novel because most of it's true. After years of writing nonfiction stories for Media Bypass and other outlets, Shannan says he turned to fiction because it works. A century after Thomas Dixon brought out The Clansman , Shannan hopes to take a page out of Dixon's book — by taking his "blood and guts" approach to the big screen.
He's convinced that One In a Million could work as a movie. To that end, he's mailed a copy of the novel to Hutton Gibson, Mel's anti-Semitic father. No word yet on whether the star is interested. Search splcenter. Fall Issue. October 14, Camille Jackson. No other viable reason.
Jul 08, Matthew W rated it really liked it. Not bad. Less entertaining than "The Turner Diaries," but also much better written. This is one of few "action packed" novels that I enjoyed reading. I found it quite therapeutic. Too bad Hollywood wouldn't be interested View 2 comments. Feb 27, Simon rated it did not like it. Expounding on Pierces arguments only makes them seem more shallow and pathetic.
Far less amusing than The Turner Diaries , and no good gunfights. Sep 14, John Wiltshire rated it it was ok. Well, huh. I now know more than anyone could possibly want to know about the One-World Jewish conspiracy.
That's all this book basically is. Exposition, wrapped weakly around the story of a man doing research on stuff he didn't know That and some loony creation of a fake on-air TV evangelist who persuades all the gullible white rubes in flyover land that he's the second coming and that they need to rise up against the wait for it Well, huh. That and some loony creation of a fake on-air TV evangelist who persuades all the gullible white rubes in flyover land that he's the second coming and that they need to rise up against the wait for it One-World Jewish conspiracy.
If we're heading into an apocalyptic race war, I do not want any of these idiots on my side. I'm giving it two stars because I did get to the end and there are so few books out there covering any of these issues that an attempt to do so deserves some credit.
But this was a real struggle to finish and I really didn't enjoy it. Feb 13, Rampage rated it it was amazing Shelves: disgusting-things-made-by-terrible.
Please note: I've rated this a 5, not because of its content, but because of its value as a historical artifact, especially as it hypothetically contributed to the Oklahoma City bombing. This is the prequel to The Turner Diaries, and This time, instead of a fully-fledged race war, this guy one Oscar Yaeger goes around assassinating multiracial couples and civil rights activists in the Washington D.
Yeah, it's just as disgusting as it sounds. May 21, HK rated it it was amazing. Liked "Turner Diaries" more, but this is still good. Same amount of action only on more realistic scale , and same amount and line of ideology unsurprisingly. May 01, Friedhelm rated it liked it. This book would've better served its purpose as a political commentary, rather than a fictional action thriller.
The dialogues between characters are extremely unnatural and awkward, and it is clear the authors intention was to relay a message through them, which unfortunately ended up not being a very good idea. Still, it had some decent enough action so i can't toll 3 stars just for the dialogue, but i feel it could've been so much more.
It also ends in a "cliffhanger" of sorts, which leaves y This book would've better served its purpose as a political commentary, rather than a fictional action thriller. It also ends in a "cliffhanger" of sorts, which leaves you wanting a sequel that is obviously not going to happen. Oh, and if you have issues with some "uncomfortable" politically incorrect truths, you will hate this book with a passion.
Sep 12, T. M rated it liked it. Much more realistic than the Turner Diaries. Good points on Christ-insanity and the dialogue between characters I think some would find informative. My criticism would be that the conversations were a bit stilted, and the book was slow at times. Not bad though. Feb 11, Jeffrey Gao rated it did not like it.
I feel compelled to write a scathing review in response to the disturbing amount of positive reviews. The author is blatantly racist, sexist and homophobic and makes his views very obvious. Any who rates this pile of paper higher than one star needs to be reformed top to bottom!
Mar 28, Joe rated it it was amazing. Not a pleasant read. Oct 06, Ignacio rated it did not like it. Basura racista. Aug 20, William Retherford rated it liked it Shelves: books-read Mar 25, K. I found this one to be more enjoyable than The Turner Diaries, and I'm glad it ended how it did as, if memory serves me rightly, it leads right into the Turner Diaries.
Sep 27, Austin rated it it was amazing. Kind of like Hitman, but based. Sep 09, S rated it it was amazing. View all 3 comments. Dec 11, Don rated it it was amazing Shelves: adventure , apocalyptic , crime-fictional , dystopian , fbi , fantasy , fiction , fictional-history , five-star , government. Exactly as expected. If one was to look past the obvious racist tones and certain prose pertaining to Anti-Gov, the story is worthy of a Hollywood treatment—as what has already been done with the likes of 'Falling Down'.
Mel Gibson director? But being in the age of severe Political Correctness there are very thin lines that can be nudged and upset usually somebody even though that particular ethnic group calls themselves such as a word in greeting? I liked the story and how it flowed in the di Exactly as expected. I liked the story and how it flowed in the direction that it did. Yes, I did cringe at certain parts but was expected for the racial overtones Hunter has been deemed to obtain.
It's an adventure story concerning a violent nut case who tries to make things better his own way. Apr 28, Larry McCloskey rated it liked it. Oscar Yeager goes from a disillusioned vigilante, lashing out at race traitors to a driving force in the movement to restore the dignity of his Race. Almost by accident. He comes to question what his long term strategy is and what he's hoping to accomplish right around the same time two external forces both drive him, despite their own differing aims and viewpoints, to realize the Jewish conspiracy behind his Race's sorr Oscar Yeager goes from a disillusioned vigilante, lashing out at race traitors to a driving force in the movement to restore the dignity of his Race.
He comes to question what his long term strategy is and what he's hoping to accomplish right around the same time two external forces both drive him, despite their own differing aims and viewpoints, to realize the Jewish conspiracy behind his Race's sorry state. After his epiphany, he throws himself into his mission with a renewed focus and motivation, vowing to shake the pillars of Heaven to save his Race.
This book is a lot more abstract than "The Turner Diaries", by the same author. As such, it's easier to grasp at times, but has a tendency to devolve away from "the action" and into preaching - with entire sections dedicated to straw man "debates" between characters. The story, too, takes some ridiculously implausible turns, rendering it a few steps above listening to a drunken skinhead ranting after a few too many beers about how he's going to fix our society's problems.
Sep 25, Bobby Daugherty rated it it was amazing Shelves: fiction-adventure. This was influenced by a serial killer that targeted racially mixed couples and managed to shoot and paralyze pornographer Larry Flynt of Hustler Magazine. Anansi rated it it was amazing Oct 14, Sentinel rated it it was amazing Jun 04, Maximilian Odgaard rated it really liked it Nov 06, There are no discussion topics on this book yet.
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