A friend says: If you can, go see the documentary Welcome to Lieth, if only for the purety of its SPLC propaganda, right down to the ominous music as it discusses white nationalism.
Really appalling. I mean, the guy they went after is a nazi kook, but they violated just about all of his civil rights, got him jailed for I think a year on totally bogus charges, passed bills of attainder aimed at him, seized his house and then literally burned it to the ground without providing him any compensation. I know this because that is what the documentary shows, and I got to ask the documentarian who made it to be sure.
Had the target any sense he’d have sought the assistance of the ACLU — and gotten it.
This documentary did not have its intended effect on me.
I mean, they caught it all, and I mean ALL, on video, so there really isn’t much doubt about what happened in that town of 24 people.
If only we were that hard on illegals.
Seriously, they seize his house because it lacks a direct sewer hookup – a law they explicitly and openly draft just to use against this guy – and when he fails to pay for that, they just march in, pour gasoline on his house, and burn it to the ground. No compensation paid!
Not even a matter for interpretation, as everyone admits to what they are doing on camera. And all these smarmy SPLC mouthpieces. Oddly enough, all goyim, I think.
The terrifying documentary Welcome to Leith is a twisted thought experiment come to life. What if, today, a white supremacist lunatic convinced enough other white supremacist lunatics to move into a small American town and managed to take it over, using the democratic systems in place — town council meetings, elections, etc.? (No Trump jokes, please.) Well, it almost happened, in the teeny-tiny North Dakota town of Leith — consisting of “three square miles and 24 residents, with the children” — when, in 2012, a notorious neo-Nazi named Craig Cobb moved in, bought up cheap lots of land, and started selling them to “luminaries in the white supremacist movement.”
The film lands us right in the middle of his attempted takeover. With only a dozen or so townspeople to deal with, Cobb’s plan seems ominously plausible. If even just a small handful of Cobb’s fellow travelers become residents, he’ll have control of the place. And he has his whole vision mapped out: He’ll dot the place with the flags of all the formerly all-white nations of Europe (including Nazi Germany and the countries it occupied), he’ll get young women to come and mate with white Aryan males, and eventually the town will be a swinging-dick Nazi utopia. Cobb’s neighbors in Leith, a place where people live because they like the privacy and the you-mind-your-business-I’ll-mind-mine remoteness of rural life, take a while to grasp what’s going on, but soon enough, they find themselves having to act. Still, what can they do?
It’s a fascinating story, filled with fascinating characters — not just the nutter-butters like Cobb, but his neighbor, councilman Lee Cook, known to his fellow townsfolk as “the nicest fucking guy on the planet,” who runs afoul of Cobb early and starts packing heat and sleeping with a small arsenal after receiving threats from the man. Or the kindly Bobby Harper, Leith’s sole black resident, who refuses to be intimidated by the neo-Nazis cropping up in town. Or even Kynan Dutton, a troubled Iraq War veteran and white supremacist who moves to Leith with his family and at first seems coolly articulate about all the legal issues involved, then later shows his shockingly violent side.