Gay neonazi

MÄNNER, HELDEN UND SCHWULE NAZIS

Deutschland 2004 – Director: Rosa von Praunheim – Unique language: German – Length: 90 min.

My documentary portrays gay men who describe themselves as right-wing, or who have a history of alignment with the extreme right. Andre is a skinhead. He associates with a collective of other bald-headed right-wing men, most of whom tolerate his being male lover. […] Bernd Ewald Althans, who gained a reputation for his film, Profession: Neonazi, was imprisoned for his denial of the Holocaust. Today, he organises gay parties in Berlin. For nine years, Jörg Fischer was an active member of the extreme right-wing parties NPD and DVU. During this moment he had a relationship with another male party member which lasted four years. He left these organisations in 1991 and now works as a journalist. Journalist Rainer Fromm estimates that 10–15% of neo-Nazi party leadership is gay and that their homosexuality is tolerated within the party. Some may be shocked that I do not take a remain in my motion picture and do not portray gay neo-Nazis as monsters, but as people living their lives in dramatic contradiction. Professor Rüdiger Lautmann provides the most conclusive explan

Andrew Dymock: Student 'called for purge of gay people'

BBC

An alleged neo-Nazi told police he was multi-attracted despite publishing an article stating that gay people were degenerate, a court hears.

Andrew Dymock, 23, from Bath, is on trial at the Old Bailey charged with 15 terrorism and widespread order offences.

It is alleged he was the creator of the homophobic article and is accused of using the System Resistance Network (SRN) website for racist and homophobic propaganda.

Mr Dymock denies all of the charges.

He is alleged to contain been part of the now banned groups SRN and Sonnenkrieg Division.

Jocelyn Ledward, prosecuting, referred to SRN material that was part of "an agenda against the LGBT community".

Jurors were shown an article from 2017 entitled "homosexuality: the eternal social menace" in which the author - allegedly Mr Dymock - stated that homosexual people "are simply degenerate and must be purged from society for the greater good".

Pride event targeted

The court heard that an SRN video, which prosecutors say Mr Dymock took part in and uploaded online, shows two masked figures plastering homophobic stickers

The gay Nazi with Jewish heritage and the bloke with an Australian connection who helped him

Much of Kevin Wilshaw's life has been defined by a belief in white supremacy.

Over the past 44 years, between the ages of 14 and 58, he has worked with UK far-right extremist groups peddling Neo-Nazi ideology.

His actions ranged from mundane "leafletting" to "occasionally getting involved in political violence".

Mr Wilshaw was still an active member of a far-right political party earlier this year, even speaking at common events.

But now he claims to have put his days as a Mein Kampf-reading racist behind him to address the contradictions that have plagued him in private.

Mr Wilshaw is not only gay, but has Jewish blood through his mother.

"I tended to compartmentalise things," he said.

"I put my political existence in one section and my normal life in the other."

Mr Wilshaw was recently arrested on online abuse charges — the second time he has been arrested.

He said he quit the movement for good after being attacked for his sexuality.

"I've had threats from people on the far left who think I'm insincere but especially

Demons in the City of Angeles: Gay Neo-Nazis in Southern California

About the Author

Emma Bianco is an American historian who specializes in right-wing and extreme right ideologies and organizations in the mid-20th to 21st century. Her past work has examined anti-communist and neo-Confederate groups in Orange County, California, as well as Los Angeles neo-Nazis and their significance in California racial politics. She is primarily interested in the gendered dynamics of racial extremism and white power movements; in the future, she plans to dedicate research to the role of women and feminist theories within transnational far-right programs.

Abstract

This article explores the perplexing history of self-proclaimed “Aryan homophiles:” the National Socialist League of Los Angeles. A neo-Nazi group made up of exclusively gay men, this organization’s reign from the 1970s to mid-1980s offers an atypical perspective into Southern California’s racial and political settings. Garnered from the ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives, this story showcases how far from utilizing a “paranoid style,” the NSL’s identity of hate did not stray too far from that already clearly established