The Anti-Defamation League, one of the most sinister and subversive anti-American organizations operating in the United States, is hyping the alleged threat of "right wing extremism" ahead of the 20th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing. According to a recent press release from the ADL:
First, as many readers are probably aware, the official narrative alleging that Timothy McVeigh and his accomplice Terry Nichols were responsible for the bombing is entirely false. The documentary film A Noble Lie is an excellent source that critically examines the official narrative, debunking it in its entirety.
Twenty years since the Oklahoma City bombing, anti-government extremists and white supremacists who share an ideology and worldview similar to that of Timothy McVeigh still pose a threat to society, according to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which monitors the activities of extreme right-wing groups and movements in the United States.There are a few points worth making about the latest efforts of the ADL to demonize and hype the threat allegedly posed by "right wing extremists," and their continued promotion of the officially sanctioned narrative explaining the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City roughly 20 years ago.
“People don’t necessary realize that the growth of anti-government extremists was just as dramatic in 2009 and 2010 as it was in 1994 and 1995,” said Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director. “The growth of the sovereign citizen movement alone was the highest extremist-related concern among law enforcement in 2014. White supremacists have also engaged in many shocking acts of violence.
“While after 9/11 America appropriately focused security and intelligence on the danger of Islamic extremism, which has largely protected us from that threat, it is important to recognize the continuing harm caused by right-wing extremists,” Mr. Foxman added. “There are still a disturbing number of violent acts and plots stemming from extreme right-wing movements that have targeted Jews and other minorities, government officials and buildings, and law enforcement officers.” [...]
“In the year 2015, the U.S. is still in the midst of a right-wing extremist surge,” said Dr. Pitcavage. “The 20th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing is an opportunity to acknowledge the ongoing threat of right-wing extremism, a singularly pernicious form of homegrown violent extremism that not only took so many lives in April 1995, but has taken hundreds of lives in the years since then.”
McVeigh, the primary perpetrator of the attack, who had both anti-government and white supremacist views, is not viewed as a “hero” among most right-wing extremists. In the immediate aftermath of the bombing, anti-government extremists rushed to disassociate themselves from McVeigh’s actions, and today most see him as a patsy of the government or as a “government plant.”
The most widely accepted conspiracy theory about the bombing among domestic far-right extremists is that the U.S. government itself was somehow responsible for the bombing.
“The Oklahoma City bombing still stands as a potent reminder that the U.S. faces threats both from abroad and from its own extremist fringes,” Mr. Foxman said. “We must have the wisdom to respond effectively to violence from all sources of extremism. That would be the most positive way to pay homage to those who so tragically lost their lives on April 19, 1995.” [...]
First, as many readers are probably aware, the official narrative alleging that Timothy McVeigh and his accomplice Terry Nichols were responsible for the bombing is entirely false. The documentary film A Noble Lie is an excellent source that critically examines the official narrative, debunking it in its entirety.
Second, the ADL had foreknowledge of McVeigh's activities, and was likely involved in the actual operation, which was then used to crack down on and demonize "the extreme right" (i.e., the militia movement, racialist and nationalist groups, etc.). Obviously, the ADL has a major interest in perpetuating and reinforcing the false official narrative of the OKC bombing.
Finally, the ADL and allied groups (the Southern Poverty Law Center, for example) are constantly hyping the alleged "threats" from ostensibly sinister groups, including "right wing extremists," anti-abortion activists, and "Muslim fanatics," providing various organizations of the federal government, local and state law enforcement agencies, and federal and state legislative bodies with "intelligence," "advice," and "training" in order to "deal with" or "combat" these alleged threats.
In many cases, as with the Oklahoma City bombing, the ADL and criminal factions of various governmental agencies are actually involved with planning and setting up "terrorist attacks," which are then used to further demonize and crack down on the different groups or entities the ADL does not like.
It is time Americans recognize how subversive anti-American groups like the ADL operate, and what their true agenda really is.
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