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3028 lines
147 KiB
Plaintext
3028 lines
147 KiB
Plaintext
The Patriot Guidebook
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to a Better America
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-by-
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Minuteman [DiP/Misfits/BMF]
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polaris@np.newpower.com
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This material is free to copy electronically. However, this article, nor
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any portion of it, may be reproduced without express consent of the author.
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Most all of the information in this guide is available over the global
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internet separately.
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Before i begin, i would like to thank lots of people for their help in
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writing and compiling this journal... guys... you deserve a strong pat on
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the back...
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Sarin
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br0k3n
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Thorzine
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Leprekaun
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Weasel
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And all of the other wonderful folks on #anarchy...
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I hope all you guys enjoy what you've helped to create. :)
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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*WARNING*
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The material you are about to read may be offensive and shocking to some.
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The author did not write this with the intention to incite or instruct anyone
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to form a revolution, create violence, or commit illegal acts within the
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United States of America. This manual was written only for informational
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sake. The political feelings are of the author only. Should anyone use
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the information in this manual to violate the laws of the United States,
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let he/she beware that the author of this guide takes no responsibility
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for the consequences of their actions. If you violate this agreement, you
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threaten the freedom of the press by demonstrating that the people cannot be
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trusted with provocative documents.
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LET THE BUYER BEWARE!
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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"...We have studied your Communist Smersh, Mao, Che, Bucharin. We have
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learned our lessions well, and have added a few home-grown Yankee tricks
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of our own. Before you start your next smear campaign, before you murder
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again, before you railroad another patriot into a mental institution...
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better think it over.
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See the old man at the corner where you buy your paper? He may have a
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silencer equipped pistol under his coat. That extra fountain pen in the
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pocket of the insurance salesman that calls on you might be a cyanide-gas
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gun. What about your milkman? Arsenic works slow but sure. Your auto
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mechanic may stay up nights studying booby traps.
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These patriots are not going to let you take their freedom away from them.
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They have learned the silent knife, the strangler's cord, the target rifle
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that hits sparrows at 200 yards. Only their leaders restrain them.
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Traitors beware! Even now the cross hairs are on the back of your necks!"
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- From the March 15, 1963 issue of "On Target"
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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I. Description of the PG
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II. The Organizations of the Right Wing
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III. Sabotage/Harassment/Espionage
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IV. The Weapons of the Right Wing
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V. The Enemies of the Right Wing
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VI. Final Notes
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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I. What is the Patriot Guidebook
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I wrote this guide a few weeks after the bombing incident in Oklahoma
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City. I am a member of several militia and right-wing groups, and
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realized the lack of any real complete guide to a small-time militia
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member with ideas and information for him to do locally. What you
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are about to read is a document based on various groups, individuals,
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and articles that definitively explains what the role of a right-wing
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extremist is, and how to accomplish that role.
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I did *NOT* write this guide for White Supremacists. Let me use this
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temporary soapbox to explain the intense hate i hate for nazis and the
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klan. The real Right Wing does not embrace or accept nazis or white
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supremacists as valid members. To me, they are only fringe lunatics
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who really dont know what they are fighting for. In order for us to
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succeed in our goal, we must unite all the people of the United States,
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because as Abraham Lincoln once said, "A divided house cannot stand."
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This guide was written for sane, well-minded right-wingers who are
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tired of the status quo and who are looking for a change. If I
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have offended you so far, i suggest you stop reading now, and save
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yourself further annoyance.
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II. The Organizations of the Right Wing
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"...March on, march on,
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Keep us forever free...
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...Fight on, Fight on,
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And keep our nation free.
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And let them see our motto be,
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'Don't Tread On Me.'"
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- Right-Wing protest chant
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"Join or DIE."
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- Motto from a Revolutionary Propaganda page by Benjamin Franklin.
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The first thing one needs to know, is the various groups within the
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right wing. If i was to list every single organization within the
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right-wing, i'd be wasting my time. Here are a few that a good
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conservative/extremist SHOULD know, if nothing, for basic knowledge.
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If you know of any specific groups you think i should add to this list
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for later versions of this manual, please email me at
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polaris@np.newpower.com with the appropriate information.
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- The John Birch Society -
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Phone # : 1-800-JBS-USA1, 414-749-3780
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Address : The John Birch Society
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P.O. Box 8040
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Appleton, Wisconsin 54913
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Membership Dues: $48 plus an optional subscription cost for The
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New American newspaper.
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The John Birch Society has been a major facet of the right-wing
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since its creation in 1958. It is a non-militant, ultraconservative
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anti-communist group that supports termination of all relations
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and trade with communist countries and urges the maintenance of a
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strong U.S. military. It describes itself as an educational group
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that seeks less government and "more responsibility." The JBS
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advocates FREE ENTERPRISE, LOWER TAXES, and complete U.S. withdrawal
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from the United Nations. It publishes two newspapers, The JBS
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Bulletin, and The New American. The JBS accepts any ethnic or
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religious minority so long as they put America over their background.
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If one orders information with them, they send very clear and fact-
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based literature about their positions, and why they are valid.
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For instance, one pamphlet details 12 well backed reasons, why we
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must "GET OUT" of the United Nations. Birchers are known for their
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political vigilance, and their credibility.
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- The Minutemen -
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Phone # : <Unknown>
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Address : <Unknown> <Was previously: 'Minutemen'
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613 East Alton
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Independence, Missouri >
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Current Membership Dues: <Unknown> <Previously were unrequired.>
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Little has been heard from the Minutemen since the late '70's. I am
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99% sure that they still exist, it seems they have just slipped from
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the limelight. The Minutemen were one of the most publicized militant
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groups of right-wingers in the '60's and '70's. Robert DePugh, their
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charasmatic leader kept the Minutemen active and vigilant, throughout
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this period. The Anti-Defamation League several times conducted
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covert espionage activities on them, trying to discern that rumors
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concerning wether the Minutemen were anti-semetic were true. Those
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rumors proved false, when the On Target Newsletter of theirs called
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neo-Nazis "tin-horn Hitlers" and various other derogatory terms.
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The Minutemen stress non-communism, non-socialism, and non-facism.
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They horde weapons and doomsday material for the "Day". They can
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be contacted through publications distributed by the JBS, and other
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groups.
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- The Freemen -
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I have no information on joining or addresses for this group. However,
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they are extremely similar to the Minutemen, and have been featured in
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various magazine and newspaper articles with the Michigan Militia and
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other highly publicized right wing groups.
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- Local Militias -
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Local militias can often be contacted through various right-wing
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national groups, like the Minutemen, or through electronic bulletin
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board systems, national or local. If you intend on joining a local
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militia, be sure to know the following:
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1.) How many members does it have? (It should have 100+)
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2.) Does it conduct armed training sessions? (It should)
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3.) Does it have any links to other groups? Which ones?
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4.) Is it a white supremacy group? (If they are serious, the answer
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should be a firm NO)
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5.) What are the requirements for joining, and how much
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does it cost (if anything)?
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Here is a base list of several militias in active states. This info was
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found in an ADL (Anti-Defamation League) report, and had to be edited
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extensively because of intense political bias, and because of several
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listings of white-supremacist (illegitimate, in my opinion) groups.
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Arizona
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Efforts have recently begun in Arizona to create a militia movement.
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David Espy, who portrays himself a latter-day American Revolutionary
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captain, has attempted to organize militia meetings over the last
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several weeks. An advertisement he placed in the September 11
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and 25. 1994 issues of the Prescott Courier announced a meeting
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in Paulden, Arizona of the "Association of the Sons of Liberty
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and the Volunteer Militia." The purpose of the meeting was
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to discuss plans for action against the federal government which,
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in his words, "continue[s] to pass legislation that weaken
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our unalienable, private property and Bill of Rights (sic)."
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The formation of a militia is an integral part of Espy's plan:
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"So, everyone out there, who thinks that taking pride in owning
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firearms, is being fanatical or nuts, should remember where you
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are living and how we all got here to begin with. It wasn't by
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just sitting back and letting the government run our lives and
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usurping our fundamental rights as free people. So forgive me,
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if I see a clear and present danger with what is happening in
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our country today, and that I feel a genuine and rational need
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to form a volunteer militia force. If for no other reason than
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to [let] Washington know that there is still a large group of
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us out here that have inherited revolutionary DNA and are willing
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to fight for it until our dying breath."
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Another aspect of his plan is a demand for "the legal cessation
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(sic) of Arizona from these federal United States." Also
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active in Arizona is Gary D. Hunt, a man obsessed with the Waco
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Branch Davidian incident. Hunt himself was present during the
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siege in Waco and wrote about the event at the time, comparing
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the Branch Davidians to the original revolutionary Minutemen:
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"I understand why [the Minutemen] were willing to stand and
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face portions of the greatest military force in the world. And
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I understand why David Koresh and the other brave defenders of
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Mount Carmel stand fearlessly defending their home and mine."
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More recently, Hunt has distributed a flier dated July 2, 1994
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and labeled "Sons of Liberty No. 3." The flier describes
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the effectiveness of militias in the Revolutionary War and suggests
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that militias are again needed now. At the bottom of the flier,
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written in by hand, Hunt announced: "March on Phx FBI 8-25-94
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5-6 p.m. to release the Branch Davidians. Bring legal signs +
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guns. Tell a friend." The FBI and Phoenix Police paid close
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attention, but the planned march never materialized.
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Colorado
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Militias in Colorado have benefitted from the support of a number
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of right-wing groups. Most active in the movement are so-called
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Patriot groups that proliferate throughout the state. Others showing
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support for militias in Colorado are the Constitutionists, The
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Guardians of American Liberties (GOAL), and state representative
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Charles Duke. Militias, calling themselves Patriots, are being
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formed across the state and are currently operating in Lakewood,
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Longmont, Boulder, and Greeley. The Patriots propaganda promotes
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the view that the federal government has betrayed the people
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and the Constitution through laws regarding home-schooling,
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abortion, taxation, freedom of speech and religion, and, most
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importantly, gun control. While calling on citizens to take
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political action (for example, write their Congressmen, attend
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meetings, etc.), they also urge that people prepare to resist the
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government by forming militias and stockpiling weapons, groceries
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and other necessities for survival.
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The Patriots publish a newsletter and sell tapes and videos through
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"The Patriot Library." Among the titles for sale are
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"The New World Order, Communist groups supported by Hillary
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Clinton," as well as tapes describing black helicopters said
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to be scrutinizing the actions of citizens in the western states.
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Guardians of American Liberties, a multi-slate organization centered
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in Boulder, is attempting to take a leadership role in the militia
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movement. It describes itself as a national grassroots network
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of American Citizens formed to insure our government is free of
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corruption, that it is actively aligned with the will of the people
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and to safeguard the Constitution of the United States of America
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from all forms of corruption." GOAL has some 40 to 50 members
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in Colorado as well as claimed chapters in Texas, Arizona, California
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and Nevada. It has established a militia committee, although it
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is not clear what degree of success it has achieved in organizing
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militias in Colorado or elsewhere. GOAL literature lists these
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additional committees: a "Federal Reserve IRS Committee."
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a "Political Prisoner Committee," and a "Sovereignty
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Freedom Committee," beneath which is printed the slogan,
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"Kick the Feds out of the Counties."
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The Constitutionists, a Kansas-based extremist group whose leadership
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includes Evan Mecham, the impeached former governor of Arizona,
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has received support in its promotion of militias from Colorado
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State representative Charles Duke (not related to David Duke). Duke
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spoke at the group's June conference in Indianapolis and promoted
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the formation of militias as an effective way for citizens to protect
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themselves from the government. At a Patriots meeting last July,
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Duke demanded that "We need some ability to get some firepower to protect
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the citizens. I would like to see a militia...[the type] that
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functions as a sheriff's posse and has sufficient training."
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Radio station KHNC in Johnstown has offered its facilities to
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the Patriots and other groups active in the militia movement.
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KHNC broadcasts continuous Patriot programs and talk on "conservative
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issues." In addition to using the radio to air their views.
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Colorado militias also disseminate information on computer bulletin
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boards that reach readers across the country. The Colorado Free
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Militia and Boulder Patriots, for example, are promoted on the
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New Age Electronic Information Service, a Colorado bulletin board.
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Florida
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A Key Largo-based group calls itself alternately the United States
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Militia and the 1st Regiment Florida State Militia. Making a specious
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claim to legitimacy from such documents as the U.S. Constitution,
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the Federalist Papers, the Florida Constitution and Florida statutes,
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this group has been attempting to recruit members at "patriotic"
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and anti-gun control gatherings in Florida. Mimicking the style
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of the Declaration of Independence, its literature speaks of a
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"Train of Abuses" perpetrated on state and local governments
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and the citizenry by the federal government. "Just as our
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Founding Fathers of this country shook off their shackles of bondage,"
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the group declares, "so must we."
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The militia's regulations state that "County units will be
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organized in each county of the state." Militia members are
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told to expect to spend one weekend a month engaging in unit activities
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including rallies, shooting events and fund raisers. A list of
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suitable equipment is provided, which includes one thousand rounds
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of ammunition per weapon and six 30-round magazines for each militia
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member. While the group's regulations state that "The unit
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may not be used against the police or governmental authority within
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the state of Florida," an exception may be made when such
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an "entity" commits "crimes of violation of their oath of officer
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and "of "sections or articles of the Constitution of the United States
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of America and of this state."
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The United States Militia's material was distributed at a U.S.
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Constitution Restoration Rally in Lakeland, Florida, on October
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1, 1994. Attended by 1,000 to 1,500 people, the event was sponsored
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by Operation Freedom, an outfit created by Charles and Ruth Ann
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Spross of Maitland Florida. The Sprosses describe their effort
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as a "for profit partnership," and, indeed, they offer
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for sale scores of video and book titles, such as "The Planned
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Destruction of America" and Linda Thompson's "Waco,
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The Big Lie." Featured on the schedule at the October 1 gathering
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was a speech by M. J. "Red" Beckman, of Montana, who
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has been influential in the militia movement in his home state.
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Distributed along with the speakers program at the rally was a
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sheet bearing the heading: "Paul Revere Rides Again."
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It proclaimed: "A strong and growing Underground Patriotic
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Movement with state-wide militia groups exists against The Sinister
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Ones that is unreported by the monopolistic and controlled establishment
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media." Stockpile food, water, guns and ammo. Never surrender
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your weapons.... Form or attend meetings with other spirited patriots....
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Consider yourself warned!"
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Also distributed in large numbers at the rally was a flier urging
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that "All Gun Owners Should Fire A WARNING SHOT As A Signal
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To The New Congress" on November 11 at 11:00 pm. "Congress
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has failed to safeguard the Bill of Rights," it reads, "especially
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the 2nd Amendment." It further declares: A warship will fire
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a warning shot across the bow, a rattlesnake will sound off: these
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warnings are never ignored. It is time to warn politicians that
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if they do not respect the Bill of Rights they should at least
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fear the wrath of the People. Congress is forcing the country
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into a civil war.
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A group in Tampa that claims alignment with a national "patriot
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movement" has ordered four judges and several Hillsborough
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County officials, including the tax collector, to give themselves
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up for arrest to the group's "Constitutional Court". Founder
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of the group, Emilio Ippolito, and his daughter, Susan Mokdad,
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reportedly said they have an unarmed militia composed of volunteers
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to execute the Constitutional Court's orders. Subsequently, Ed
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Brown, an activist with an armed militia group in New Hampshire,
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contacted Florida law enforcement authorities, prosecutors' offices
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and the Florida Bar Association to express support for Ippolito's
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court.
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Idaho
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As in other parts of the country, the recent rise of militias
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in Idaho can be linked to four events: the Randy Weaver siege,
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the Waco disaster, the passage of the Brady Law and the federal
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anti-crime law. Idaho militias identify particularly closely with
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the Weaver incident because it took place inside the state and
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because some key militia figures in the region were allied with
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Weaver and indeed participated in the events surrounding the siege.
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Samuel Sherwood, an Idaho militia leader, has recruited hundreds
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of Idahoans into his United States Militia Association. At a July
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meeting in Blackfoot, Idaho, Sherwood reportedly told potential
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recruits that President Clinton's crime bill authorized the government
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to hire 100,000 former Royal Hong Kong police to come to America
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to enforce gun control laws. As of August 1991, Sherwood's association
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has organized militias in at least a dozen of Idaho's counties.
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Sherwood's recruitment campaign has met with opposition from law
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enforcement officials. The Tri-County Sheriff's Association, representing
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16 eastern Idaho counties, has passed a resolution against the
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formation of militias. Greg Moffat, Madison County Sheriff and
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the leader of the association, has asserted that they would "give
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absolutely no support to the idea of a militia."
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Indiana
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Indianapolis is the home base of Linda Thompson, an influential
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figure in the militia movement nationally. Thompson is a lawyer
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and chairman of the American Justice Federation, which describes
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itself as "a group dedicated to stopping the New World Order
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and getting the truth out to the American public." Thompson
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claims to have contact with militias in all 50 states. She appears
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frequently at militia gatherings and gun shows, to lecture and
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sell her videos "Waco, The Big Lie," and "Waco
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II - The Big Lie Continues." The latter, she claims, "proves
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conclusively the government murdered 100 men, women and children
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at Mt. Carmel in April, 1993." She also sells other propaganda
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material such as "The Traitor Files," which purport
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to link "Bill and Hillary Clinton to a Marxist-Terrorist
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network." On July 13, 1991, Thompson was arrested in Indianapolis
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for using her vehicle to block a bus carrying supporters of President
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Clinton's health care plan. She was charged with obstructing traffic.
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At the time of her arrest police officers seized from her person
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a .45-caliber pistol and a .22-caliber Derringer pistol. They
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also found in her vehicle an assault rifle with 295 rounds of
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ammunition. Her case is pending.
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Thompson had an even more controversial message to be delivered to
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the government. The ultimatum commanded members of Congress
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to initiate legislation immediately that would, among
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other things, repeal the 14th, 16th and 17th Amendments to the
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Constitution, and the Brady Law and NAFTA. Designating herself
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"Acting Adjutant General" of the "Unorganized
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Militia of the United States" Thompson ordered all participants
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to come "armed and in uniform." She announced that,
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besides delivering the ultimatum, "The militia will arrest
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Congressmen who have failed to uphold their oaths of office, who
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will then be tried for Treason by citizens courts." Realizing
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after several months that support for her march was lacking, Thompson
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called it off, yet her standing in the militia movement apparently
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|
remains undiminished. The John Birch Society, troubled about Thompson's
|
|
influence on its members and staff, found it necessary to warn
|
|
them against her. On May 12, 1994. the Society, issued an official
|
|
"admonition to all members and a directive to all employees"
|
|
to "stay clear of her schemes." They said: "Linda
|
|
Thompson's call for the arrest in September of members of Congress
|
|
and the President of the United States by an armed militia is
|
|
not just insane, it is contrary to all understanding of the nature
|
|
and identity of the enemy." It appears that even by the standards
|
|
of the John Birch Society, Thompson is very radical.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, Thompson continues to appear at rallies and conferences
|
|
around the country, and on radio, promoting the militia cause
|
|
and calling down thunder upon the American government and its
|
|
law enforcement agencies. A rally to form a militia in Indianapolis
|
|
took place in September 1994, at a union hall in the south central
|
|
part of the city. In attendance were some 200 persons, filling
|
|
the hall to capacity, while an overflow crowd was turned away.
|
|
A smaller militia is believed to be functioning in Switzerland
|
|
County, in eastern Indiana.
|
|
|
|
Michigan
|
|
|
|
The militia movement has gained a following in Michigan. The most
|
|
visible such group in the state has sprung up in northern Michigan.
|
|
Spokesmen there make the (probably exaggerated) claim that militias
|
|
have 10,000 members and that brigades are operating or are currently
|
|
forming in 66 of the state's 83 counties. Meetings reportedly
|
|
draw 50 to 100 attendees.
|
|
|
|
The issues animating Michigan's militias are the same as those
|
|
fueling the movement nationally. Chief among them is a belief
|
|
that gun control legislation is but a prelude to a complete ban
|
|
on firearms ownership in this country. An essential additional
|
|
ingredient, though, is their conviction that the government intends
|
|
to wage war on citizens who refuse to give up their weapons. They
|
|
cite as evidence for this view the tragic assault on the Branch
|
|
Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, and the 1992 raid on the cabin
|
|
of Randy Weaver in Idaho, in which Weaver's wife and son and a
|
|
federal marshal were killed. They also contend that this same
|
|
federal government is acquiescing in the surrender of U.S. sovereignty
|
|
to the United Nations and other international bodies. The militia's
|
|
aims are to "stand against tyranny, globalism, moral relativism,
|
|
humanism and the New World Order threatening to undermine these
|
|
United States of America."
|
|
|
|
Norman E. Olson, 47, a Baptist minister and gun-shop owner in
|
|
Alanson, is the Commander of the 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, Northern
|
|
Michigan Regional Militia. After a few months of discussion and
|
|
recruitment, the group was established in April 1994. It conducts
|
|
training exercises twice a month. At a recent session, weapons
|
|
reportedly included Chinese SKS semi-automatic assault rifles,
|
|
shotguns and deer rifles. Olson strenuously denies that the
|
|
Northern Michigan Regional Militia is racist or anti Semitic.
|
|
He claims some Jewish ancestry, and professes admiration for Israel.
|
|
In reference to the aborted march on Washington promoted by
|
|
Indianapolis militia leader Linda Thompson, Olson has written:
|
|
"Many thousands are prepared to go to Washington in uniform, carry
|
|
their guns, prepared to present the ultimatum to the President and
|
|
to Congress. This may be the beginning of a Concord-like
|
|
confrontation." A militia pamphlet distributed at a May meeting in
|
|
Petoskey attended by some 55 people reportedly asked: "What force
|
|
exists to prevent a state or federally orchestrated massacre like
|
|
the one in Waco from occurring in Michigan?" Ray Southwell, a real
|
|
estate agent who is the group's information officer, has said: "I'd
|
|
guess that within the next two years, you will see the Constitution
|
|
suspended." His further prediction: "Christian fundamentalists
|
|
will be the first to go under fascism this time. Just like the
|
|
Jews were the first last time."
|
|
|
|
Southwell speaks as though he regards confrontation with law enforcement
|
|
as inevitable. His militia is preparing for the day "when
|
|
martial law is declared." "We are taking a stand," he says, "and are
|
|
prepared to lose everything." Other militia activists in Michigan
|
|
have had their own encounter with the law. Police in Fowlerville
|
|
(Livingston County) arrested three militia members on September 8, 1994.
|
|
Loaded rifles and handguns, as well as gas masks, night-vision
|
|
binoculars and two-way radios, were found in their car. At the
|
|
men's scheduled September 14 hearing, at least two dozen uniformed
|
|
supporters staged a protest in front of the courthouse and stomped
|
|
on a United Nations flag. The suspects failed to appear and are
|
|
considered fugitives. They were described by their supporters as
|
|
security aides to Mark Koernke (a.k.a. "Mark from Michigan"), a former
|
|
Army intelligence officer whose "America in Peril" video and speeches
|
|
have helped to recruit members to militias around the country.
|
|
|
|
Missouri
|
|
|
|
Militias are active in Missouri but do not appear to be as well-organized
|
|
as in other states. They operate in at least five southern Missouri
|
|
counties: Crawford, Green, Barton, Dade and Cedar, and number
|
|
collectively approximately 130 members. The militias hold irregular
|
|
meetings to view training videos, discuss paramilitary techniques
|
|
and exchange literature reflecting right-wing views. Missouri's
|
|
militias are attempting to organize themselves for political action
|
|
by, among other things, running candidates for local office. In
|
|
keeping with their political aspirations, they have attempted
|
|
to avoid any public identification with more extreme groups, although
|
|
some members also belong to the John Birch Society and the Populist
|
|
Party.
|
|
|
|
Montana
|
|
|
|
Militias have been forming in Montana since February 1991. The rhetoric
|
|
of these groups focuses mainly on gun control and other familiar militia
|
|
causes. Meetings have been held across the state, drawing as many as
|
|
800 at a March 10 meeting in Kalispell. Two other meetings there also
|
|
drew over 150 participants. Similar gatherings held in Hamilton, Eureka,
|
|
Big Timber and Great Falls drew over 200 participants each. Smaller
|
|
numbers attended meetings in Sanders County, Billings and Troy.
|
|
While the crowds at initial meetings have been large, they have
|
|
tended to fall off somewhat at subsequent gatherings. Montana
|
|
militias often dwell on the state's history as an independent
|
|
outpost of freedom. A recent militia newsletter quoted, with approval,
|
|
Gary Marbut, president of The Montana Shooting Sports Association
|
|
(an anti-gun control group) in a call for rejection of all federal
|
|
control over the state: "Montanans are fed up with the federal
|
|
government dictating to Montana and the people of Montana and
|
|
we are through with Congress's increasing encroachment on the
|
|
Bill of Rights. We have a thirst for freedom in Montana, and we
|
|
simply will not subsist under the boot heel of federal tyranny.
|
|
There may be some debate about what the Second Amendment means
|
|
to the U.S. Supreme Court or the people of Peoria, but there is
|
|
no question about what the Second Amendment means to the people
|
|
of Montana. 'The great purpose' as Patrick Henry said,
|
|
'is that every man be armed.'"
|
|
|
|
New Hampshire
|
|
|
|
New Hampshire law provides for an "unorganized militia"
|
|
made up of all citizens over the age of 18 who are not in the
|
|
national guard or state guard. Militia enthusiasts in New Hampshire
|
|
have pointed to the state's legislation (as well as the Second
|
|
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution) to explain and justify their
|
|
seemingly oxymoronic organization of "unorganized militias."
|
|
New Hampshire is the home of the Constitution Defense Militia,
|
|
a well-organized group with at least 15 members. It is not known
|
|
if the group engages in paramilitary training or the stockpiling
|
|
of weapons.
|
|
|
|
New Mexico
|
|
|
|
As in neighboring Arizona, the organization of militias in New
|
|
Mexico is in the nascent stages. Thus far, the most visible manifestation
|
|
of pro-militia sentiment in New Mexico has been found in The Free
|
|
American, a monthly newspaper published privately by Clayton R.
|
|
Douglas and his wife, Jan Douglas. The September 1994 issue contained
|
|
an advertisement declaring: "It's Time To Take Matters Into
|
|
Our Own Hands, It's Time To Protect Our Constitution! Join The
|
|
New Mexico Unorganized Militia." The accompanying phone number
|
|
for more information was the number of the newspaper itself. The
|
|
militia movement appears to be taking hold in Catron County, an
|
|
area that in recent years has experienced much anti-federal government
|
|
sentiment among some residents. Among the groups attempting to
|
|
organize a local militia are "Concerned Citizens" and
|
|
the "Patriots of Catron County."
|
|
|
|
Finally, literature from Linda Thompson's (see Indiana section)
|
|
"Unorganized Militias of the United States," has been
|
|
distributed through gun shops in Albuquerque.
|
|
|
|
North Carolina
|
|
|
|
North Carolina's militia movement has been fueled by an alarmist
|
|
vision of a U.S. government bent on the destruction of American
|
|
liberties. A Monroe-based group called Citizens for the Reinstatement
|
|
of Constitutional Government has coalesced around Albert Esposito.
|
|
He denies that he is preaching revolution, but his rhetoric includes
|
|
clear overtones of preparation for battle with the enemy.
|
|
He urges the group to amass caches of the "Four B's":
|
|
Bibles, bullets, beans and bandages. Many members own semiautomatic
|
|
weapons, including AR-15's and AK-47s. The group's program is
|
|
a mixture of anti-government, religious and conspiratorial ideas.
|
|
It aims to "make the Holy Bible and the United States Constitution
|
|
the law of the land," and it vows to "resist the coming
|
|
New World Order (one world government)." To accomplish its
|
|
goals, it promises to "Remove treasonous politicians and
|
|
corrupt judges from positions of authority, and return authority
|
|
to the people."
|
|
|
|
Citizens for the Reinstatement of Constitutional Government meets
|
|
twice a month, alternating between Monroe, in Union County, and
|
|
Matthews, in neighboring Mecklenburg County. At one meeting, Esposito,
|
|
a 43-year-old contractor, reportedly repeated G. Gordon Liddy's
|
|
alleged statement about the new crime law's assault weapons ban:
|
|
"He said. If they pass it, don't obey it. And if they come
|
|
after you, meet force with force."
|
|
|
|
The group has distributed application forms for the "National
|
|
Free and Sovereign Civilian Militia, North Carolina state Division."
|
|
The forms ask applicants whether they are proficient in the operation
|
|
of handguns and rifles, "reloading ammo," and a variety
|
|
of survivalist skills. Esposito has espoused his views on guns
|
|
at Union County commissioners' meetings. He also railed against
|
|
federal encroachment in announcing his support for a nonbinding
|
|
resolution passed by the commission in support of school prayer.
|
|
Holding a copy of the Constitution in the air, he declared: "We
|
|
control the county. Not Washington."
|
|
|
|
Consistent with such anti-federal government views, Esposito says
|
|
he has refused to file federal income tax returns for three years
|
|
running because he regards the tax as unconstitutional. The group
|
|
he leads split off from a tax-protest group in Charlotte called
|
|
the Carolina Patriots, three of whose leaders were convicted in
|
|
October 1994 of conspiracy to help people avoid their tax obligations.
|
|
Esposito's group has attempted to distance itself from the Carolina
|
|
Patriots. In addition to their views on guns and taxes, members
|
|
of the Monroe group have expressed ideas and conspiracy theories
|
|
that are characteristic of some other militias around the country.
|
|
These include charges that the Federal Reserve system has enriched
|
|
a tiny elite (the group's literature advocates the abolition of
|
|
the Federal Reserve), and that some government employees have
|
|
been implanted with computer chips in order to monitor the citizenry.
|
|
Another claim made at one of the group's meetings, that the government
|
|
cannot require private citizens to obtain a driver's license,
|
|
echoes the stand of an earlier extremist group, the Posse Comitatus.
|
|
A separate North Carolina militia group has been formed in Greenville,
|
|
in the eastern part of the state. Led by Scott Brown, the unit
|
|
is part of the Idaho-based United States Militia Association.
|
|
Brown reportedly has said his group worries that government
|
|
representatives "don't really understand what the Constitution means
|
|
and stands for, and they're voting away our unalienable rights."
|
|
It is not known whether the Greenville unit is engaging in any
|
|
more incendiary rhetoric or activity.
|
|
|
|
A computer bulletin board in Alamance County, called "The
|
|
Spirit of '76," has served as an area recruiting point for
|
|
the militia led by Linda Thompson, the Indianapolis woman who
|
|
is a leading figure in the militia movement nationwide. Another
|
|
bulletin board system that made Thompson's computerized materials
|
|
available has referred individuals interested in joining the militia
|
|
to The Spirit of '76. For its part, The Spirit of '76 has declared
|
|
itself off limits to police and other government authorities by
|
|
posting a warning that states: "This BBS [bulletin board
|
|
system] is a PRIVATE system. Only private citizens who are NOT
|
|
involved in government or law enforcement activities are authorized
|
|
to use it."
|
|
|
|
Ohio
|
|
|
|
A militia-type group called "Patriots" meets in Cincinnati and conducts
|
|
paramilitary exercises in rural Clermont County. Another group, the Ohio
|
|
State Militia has been featured on television several times. They are
|
|
also paramilitarists, dedicated to opposing gun control, the United
|
|
Nations, and the like. For a period, some of their membership were
|
|
scanning and contacting persons with similar viewpoints over a mailnet
|
|
called FidoNet, but it is unknown if this link still exists.
|
|
|
|
Virginia
|
|
|
|
On July 27 of this year, James Roy Mullins, a founding member
|
|
of a militia-like group called The Blue Ridge Hunt Club, was arrested
|
|
and charged with the possession and sale of a short-barreled rifle
|
|
and unregistered silencers and with facilitating the unlawful
|
|
purchase of a firearm. Ultimately, three other members were also
|
|
charged with firearm offenses. Federal officials said that Mullins
|
|
had formed the club to arm its members in preparation for war
|
|
with the government. The cases are pending.
|
|
|
|
The group, formed earlier in 1994, has had as many as 15 members.
|
|
They are said to have met three times before Mullins' arrest.
|
|
While members of the group say that their purpose is to lobby
|
|
against gun control laws, federal law enforcement officials describe
|
|
it differently. An ATF official who investigated the case
|
|
said that "Mullins is organizing a group of confederates,
|
|
to be armed and trained in paramilitary fashion, in preparation
|
|
for armed conflict with government authorities should firearms
|
|
legislation become too restrictive." Evidence of such preparation
|
|
is substantial. In searches of members' homes and storage facilities,
|
|
federal agents found a stockpile of weapons. In Mullins' home,
|
|
agents found 13 guns, several of which had homemade silencers.
|
|
They also found explosives, hand grenades, fuses and blasting
|
|
caps in a separate warehouse.
|
|
|
|
Even pretrial incarceration has not stopped Mullins from threatening
|
|
violence. While in jail, he wrote a letter to a friend saying
|
|
that he wanted to borrow a machine gun in order to "take
|
|
care of unfinished business" with certain prosecution witnesses.
|
|
|
|
The strongest indications of the group's goals was the draft of
|
|
a portion of its newsletter found on a computer disk obtained
|
|
by federal agents. On the disk, Mullins had written: Hit and run
|
|
tactics will be our method of fighting... We will destroy targets
|
|
such as telephone relay centers, bridges, fuel storage tanks,
|
|
communications towers, radio stations, airports. etc... human
|
|
targets will be engaged ... when it is beneficial to the cause
|
|
to eliminate particular individuals who oppose us (troops. police,
|
|
political figures, snitches, etc.).
|
|
|
|
There are various other militias in other states. There is even an IRC
|
|
(Internet Relay Chat) Militia that engages in sabotaging left-wing and
|
|
seditious channels. These can most easily be contacted through other
|
|
militia/right-wing/gun buff groups.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Committees of Correspondence -
|
|
|
|
Phone # : (615)856-6185
|
|
|
|
Address : Nick Hull, secretary
|
|
Committees of Correspondence
|
|
2702 Kimbrell Rd
|
|
Lenoir City, TN 37772
|
|
|
|
The time has come for liberty minded people to begin to talk about how
|
|
the anti-liberty trends of this country can be reversed. For this
|
|
purpose, we need to form Committees of Correspondence in each
|
|
community.
|
|
|
|
Note that these Committees are not oriented towards subversion or
|
|
revolution - far from it! They are meant as forums where people will
|
|
discuss how this country is off track, and how it can be gotten back
|
|
on track. While discussion of such theoretical possibilities is not
|
|
barred from such groups, it is not the central factor - discussion is.
|
|
|
|
These Committees have greater benefits than stimulating discussion for
|
|
their members. They provide a method by which like minded people can
|
|
meet each other, thus developing a known community of such people. By
|
|
doing so, the foundations are laid for a true citizen's militia,
|
|
should such a body ever become necessary.
|
|
|
|
Please volunteer to be a member of such a committee! There are no
|
|
requirements, except that you be willing to meet others in your
|
|
community, who, like yourself, believe that this country has departed
|
|
from the ideals of the founding fathers, and has moved towards being a
|
|
totalitarian state that you would not wish to live in.
|
|
|
|
- The People's Phrunt -
|
|
|
|
Address : TPP c/o RevWilson
|
|
427 E. 13th Street
|
|
Eugene, Oregon 97401
|
|
|
|
This is a new group that i was told about over Internet Relay Chat.
|
|
They stand for basically the same thing as the JBS and Minutemen, and
|
|
are firmly against white supremacy. I cant tell you too much, because
|
|
i havent had a chance to talk in depth with the creator. But i
|
|
encourage you to get more info.
|
|
|
|
|
|
III. Sabotage/Espionage/Harassment Techniques
|
|
|
|
- BASIC LOCK PICKING -
|
|
|
|
At home you can take your time picking a lock, but in the field, speed
|
|
is always essential. A lock picking technique called scrubbing
|
|
can quickly open most locks in a pressure situation.
|
|
|
|
The slow step in basic picking is locating the pin which is binding
|
|
the most. The force diagram suggests a fast way to select the correct
|
|
pin to lift. Assume that all the pins could be characterized by the
|
|
same force diagram. That is, assume that they all bind at once and
|
|
that they all encounter the same friction. Now consider the effect of
|
|
running the pick over all the pins with a pressure that is great
|
|
enough to overcome the spring and friction forces but not great enough
|
|
to overcome the collision force of the key pin hitting the hull. Any
|
|
pressure that is above the flat portion of the force graph and below
|
|
the top of the peak will work. As the pick passes over a pin, the pin
|
|
will rise until it hits the hull, but it will not enter the hull.
|
|
The collision force at the sheer line resists the pressure of the
|
|
pick, so the pick rides over the pin without pressing it into the
|
|
hull. If the proper torque is being applied, the plug will rotate
|
|
slightly. As the pick leaves the pin, the key pin will fall back to
|
|
its initial position, but the driver pin will catch on the edge of
|
|
the plug and stay above the sheer line. In theory one stroke of the
|
|
pick over the pins will cause the lock to open.
|
|
|
|
In practice, at most one or two pins will set during a single stroke
|
|
of the pick, so several strokes are necessary. Basically, you use the
|
|
pick to scrub back and forth over the pins while you adjust the
|
|
amount of torque on the plug.
|
|
|
|
You will find that the pins of a lock tend to set in a particular
|
|
order. Many factors effect this order (obviously), but the primary
|
|
cause is a misalignment between the center axis of the plug and the
|
|
axis on which the holes were drilled. If the axis of the pin holes
|
|
is skewed (non-aligned) from the center line of the plug, then the
|
|
pins will set from back to front if the plug is turned one way, and
|
|
from front to back if the plug is turned the other way. Many locks
|
|
have this defect.
|
|
|
|
Scrubbing is fast because you don't need to pay attention to
|
|
individual pins. You only need to find the correct torque and
|
|
pressure.
|
|
|
|
1.) Insert the pick and torque wrench. Without applying any torque
|
|
pull the pick out to get a feel for the stiffness of the lock's
|
|
springs.
|
|
2.) Apply a light torque. Insert the pick without touching the
|
|
pins. As you pull the pick out, apply pressure to the pins. The
|
|
pressure should be slightly larger than the minimum necessary to
|
|
overcome the spring force.
|
|
3.) Gradually increase the torque with each stroke of the pick
|
|
until pins begin to set.
|
|
4.) Keeping the torque fixed, scrub back and forth over the pins
|
|
that have not set. If additional pins do not set, release the
|
|
torque and start over with the torque found in the last step.
|
|
5.) Once the majority of the pins have been set, increase the
|
|
torque and scrub the pins with a slightly larger pressure. This
|
|
will set any pins which have set low due to beveled edges, etc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ADVANCED LOCK PICKING
|
|
|
|
Simple lock picking is a trade that anyone can learn. However,
|
|
advanced lock picking is a craft that requires mechanical sensitivity,
|
|
physical dexterity, visual concentration and analytic thinking. If you
|
|
strive to excel at lock picking, you will grow in many ways.
|
|
|
|
Mechanical Skills
|
|
|
|
Learning how to pull the pick over the pins is surprisingly
|
|
difficult. The problem is that the mechanical skills you learned early
|
|
in life involved maintaining a fixed position or fixed path for your
|
|
hands independent of the amount of force required. In lock picking,
|
|
you must learn how to apply a fixed force independent of the position
|
|
of your hand. As you pull the pick out of the lock you want to apply a
|
|
fixed pressure on the pins. The pick should bounce up and down in the
|
|
keyway according to the resistance offered by each pin.
|
|
|
|
To pick a lock you need feedback about the effects of your
|
|
manipulations. To get the feedback, you must train yourself to be
|
|
sensitive to the sound and feel of the pick passing over the pins.
|
|
This is a mechanical skill that can only be learned with practice. The
|
|
exercises will help you recognize the important information coming
|
|
from your fingers.
|
|
|
|
The Art of Lock Picking
|
|
|
|
In order to excel at lock picking, you must train yourself to have a
|
|
visually reconstructive imagination. The idea is to use information
|
|
from all your senses to build a picture of what is happening inside
|
|
the lock as you pick it. Basically, you want to project your senses
|
|
into the lock to receive a full picture of how it is responding to
|
|
your manipulations. Once you have learned how to build this picture,
|
|
it is easy to choose manipulations that will open the lock.
|
|
|
|
All your senses provide information about the lock. Touch and sound
|
|
provide the most information, but the other senses can reveal critical
|
|
information. For example, your nose can tell you whether a lock has
|
|
been lubricated recently. As a beginner, you will need to use your
|
|
eyes for hand-eye coordination, but as you improve you will find it
|
|
unnecessary to look at the lock. In fact, it is better to ignore your
|
|
eyes and use your sight to build an image of the lock based on the
|
|
information you receive from your fingers and ears.
|
|
|
|
The goal of this mental skill is to acquire a relaxed concentration on
|
|
the lock. Don't force the concentration. Try to ignore the sensations
|
|
and thoughts that are not related to the lock. Don't try to focus on
|
|
the lock.
|
|
|
|
Analytic Thinking
|
|
|
|
Each lock has its own special characteristics which make picking
|
|
harder or easier. If you learn to recognize and exploit the
|
|
"personality traits" of locks, picking will go much faster. Basically,
|
|
you want to analyze the feedback you get from a lock to diagnose its
|
|
personality traits and then use your experience to decide on an
|
|
approach to open the lock. These are very much the same tactics a right
|
|
winger would use in other situations, such as evaluating a target.
|
|
|
|
People underestimate the analytic skills involved in lock picking.
|
|
They think that the picking tool opens the lock. To them the torque
|
|
wrench is a passive tool that just puts the lock under the desired
|
|
stress. Let me propose another way to view the situation. The pick is
|
|
just running over the pins to get information about the lock. Based on
|
|
an analysis that information the torque is adjusted to make the pins
|
|
set at the sheer line. It's the torque wrench that opens the lock.
|
|
|
|
Varying the torque as the pick moves in and out of the keyway is a
|
|
general trick that can be used to get around several picking problems.
|
|
For example, if the middle pins are set, but the end pins are not, you
|
|
can increase the torque as the pick moves over the middle pins. This
|
|
will reduce the chances of disturbing the correctly set pins. If some
|
|
pin doesn't seem to lift up far enough as the pick passes over it,
|
|
then try reducing the torque on the next pass.
|
|
|
|
The skill of adjusting the torque while the pick is moving requires
|
|
careful coordination between your hands, but as you become better at
|
|
visualizing the process of picking a lock, you will become better at
|
|
this important skill.
|
|
|
|
Pick Shapes
|
|
|
|
Picks come in several shapes and sizes. The handle and tang of a pick
|
|
are the same for all picks. The handle must be comfortable and the tang
|
|
must be thin enough to avoid bumping pins unnecessarily. If the tang is
|
|
too thin, then it will act like a spring and you will loose the feel
|
|
of the tip interacting with the pins. The shape of the tip determines
|
|
how easily the pick passes over the pins and what kind of feedback you
|
|
get from each pin.
|
|
|
|
The design of a tip is a compromise between ease of insertion, ease of
|
|
withdrawal and feel of the interaction. The half diamond tip with
|
|
shallow angles is easy to insert and remove, so you can apply pressure
|
|
when the pick is moving in either direction. It can quickly pick a
|
|
lock that has little variation in the lengths of the key pins. If the
|
|
lock requires a key that has a deep cut between two shallow cuts, the
|
|
pick may not be able to push the middle pin down far enough. The half
|
|
diamond pick with steep angles could deal with such a lock, and in
|
|
general steep angles give you better feedback about the pins.
|
|
Unfortunately, the steep angles make it harder to move the pick in the
|
|
lock. A tip that has a shallow front angle and a steep back angle
|
|
works well for Yale locks.
|
|
|
|
The half round tip works well in disk tumbler locks. The full diamond
|
|
and full round tips are useful for locks that have pins at the top and
|
|
bottom of the keyway. The rake tip is designed for picking pins one by
|
|
one. It can also be used to rake over the pins, but the pressure can
|
|
only be applied as the pick is withdrawn. The rake tip allows you to
|
|
carefully feel each pin and apply varying amounts of pressure. Some
|
|
rake tips are flat or dented on the top to makes it easier to align
|
|
the pick on the pin. The primary benefit of picking pins one at a
|
|
time is that you avoid scratching the pins.
|
|
|
|
Scrubbing scratches the tips of the pins and the keyway, and it
|
|
spreads metal dust throughout the lock. If you want to avoid leaving
|
|
traces, you must avoid scrubbing. The snake tip can be used for
|
|
scrubbing or picking. When scrubbing, the multiple bumps generate more
|
|
action than a regular pick. The snake tip is particularly good at
|
|
opening five pin household locks. When a snake tip is used for
|
|
picking, it can set two or three pins at once. Basically, the snake
|
|
pick acts like a segment of a key which can be adjusted by lifting and
|
|
lowering the tip, by tilting it back and forth, and by using either to
|
|
top or bottom of the tip. You should use moderate to heavy torque with
|
|
a snake pick to allow several pins to bind at the same time. This
|
|
style of picking is faster than using a rake and it leaves as little
|
|
evidence.
|
|
|
|
Bristle Picks
|
|
|
|
The spring steel bristles used on street cleaners make excellent tools
|
|
for lock picking. The bristles have the right thickness and width, and
|
|
they are easy to grind into the desired shape. The resulting tools are
|
|
springy and strong. Keep reading to find out how to make tools that are
|
|
less springy.
|
|
|
|
The first step in making tools is to sand off any rust on the
|
|
bristles. Course grit sand paper works fine as does a steel wool
|
|
cleaning pad (not copper wool). If the edges or tip of the bristle are
|
|
worn down, use a file to make them square.
|
|
|
|
A torque wrench has a head and a handle (all do, not some). The
|
|
head is usually 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch long and the handle varies from
|
|
2 to 4 inches long. The head and the handle are separated by a bend
|
|
that is about 80 degrees. The head must be long enough to reach over
|
|
any protrusions (such as a grip-proof collar) and firmly engage the
|
|
plug. A long handle allows delicate control over the torque, but if it
|
|
is too long, it will bump against the doorframe. The handle, head and
|
|
bend angle can be made quite small if you want to make tools that are
|
|
easy to conceal (for example, in a pen, flashlight, or belt buckle). Some
|
|
torque wrenches have a 90 degree twist in the handle. The twist makes
|
|
it easy to control the torque by controlling how far the handle has
|
|
been deflected from its rest position. The handle acts as a spring
|
|
which sets the torque. The disadvantage of this method of setting the
|
|
torque is that you get less feedback about the rotation of the plug.
|
|
To pick difficult locks you will need to learn how to apply a steady
|
|
torque via a stiff handled torque wrench.
|
|
|
|
The width of the head of a torque wrench determines how well it will
|
|
fit the keyway. Locks with narrow keyways (e.g., desk locks) need
|
|
torque wrenches with narrow heads. Before bending the bristle, file
|
|
the head to the desired width. A general purpose wrench can be made by
|
|
narrowing the tip (about 1/4 inch) of the head. The tip fits small
|
|
keyways while the rest of the head is wide enough to grab a normal
|
|
keyway.
|
|
|
|
The hard part of making a torque wrench is bending the bristle without
|
|
cracking it. To make the 90 degree handle twist, clamp the head of the
|
|
bristle (about one inch) in a vise and use pliers to grasp the bristle
|
|
about 3/8 of an inch above the vise. You can use another pair of
|
|
pliers instead of a vise. Apply a 45 degree twist. Try to keep the
|
|
axis of the twist lined up with the axis of the bristle. Now move the
|
|
pliers back another 3/8 inch and apply the remaining 45 45 degrees.
|
|
You will need to twist the bristle more than 90 degrees in order to
|
|
set a permanent 90 degree twist.
|
|
|
|
To make the 80 degree head bend, lift the bristle out of the vise by
|
|
about 1/4 inch (so 3/4 inch is still in the vise). Place the shank of
|
|
a screw driver against the bristle and bend the spring steel around
|
|
it about 90 degrees. This should set a permanent 80 degree bend in
|
|
the metal. Try to keep the axis of the bend perpendicular to the
|
|
handle. The screwdriver shank ensures that the radius of curvature
|
|
will not be too small. Any rounded object will work (e.g., drill bit,
|
|
needle nose pliers, or a pen cap). If you have trouble with this
|
|
method, try grasping the bristle with two pliers separated by about
|
|
1/2 inch and bend. This method produces a gentle curve that won't
|
|
break the bristle.
|
|
|
|
A grinding wheel will greatly speed the job of making a pick. It
|
|
takes a bit of practice to learn how make smooth cuts with a grinding
|
|
wheel, but it takes less time to practice and make two or three picks
|
|
than it does to hand file a single pick. The first step is to cut the
|
|
front angle of the pick. Use the front of the wheel to do this. Hold
|
|
the bristle at 45 degrees to the wheel and move the bristle side to
|
|
side as you grind away the metal. Grind slowly to avoid overheating
|
|
the metal, which makes it brittle. If the metal changes color (to
|
|
dark blue), you have overheated it, and you should grind away the
|
|
colored portion. Next, cut the back angle of the tip using the corner
|
|
of the wheel. Usually one corner is sharper than the other, and you
|
|
should use that one. Hold the pick at the desired angle and slowly
|
|
push it into the corner of the wheel. The side of the stone should
|
|
cut the back angle. Be sure that the tip of the pick is supported. If
|
|
the grinding wheel stage is not close enough to the wheel to support
|
|
the tip, use needle nose pliers to hold the tip. The cut should pass
|
|
though about 2/3 of the width of the bristle. If the tip came out
|
|
well, continue. Otherwise break it off and try again. You can break
|
|
the bristle by clamping it into a vise and bending it sharply.
|
|
|
|
The corner of the wheel is also used to grind the tang of the pick.
|
|
Put a scratch mark to indicate how far back the tang should go. The
|
|
tang should be long enough to allow the tip to pass over the back pin
|
|
of a seven pin lock. Cut the tang by making several smooth passes
|
|
over the corner. Each pass starts at the tip and moves to the scratch
|
|
mark. Try to remove less than a 1/16th of an inch of metal with each
|
|
pass. I use two fingers to hold the bristle on the stage at the
|
|
proper angle while my other hand pushes the handle of the pick to
|
|
move the tang along the corner. Use whatever technique works best for
|
|
you.
|
|
|
|
Use a hand file to finish the pick. It should feel smooth if you run
|
|
a finger nail over it. Any roughness will add noise to the feedback
|
|
you want to get from the lock.
|
|
|
|
The outer sheath of phone cable can be used as a handle for the pick.
|
|
Remove three or four of the wires from a length of cable and push it
|
|
over the pick. If the sheath won't stay in place, you can put some
|
|
epoxy on the handle before pushing the sheath over it.
|
|
|
|
An alternative to making tools out of street cleaner bristles is to
|
|
make them out of nails and bicycle spokes. These materials are easily
|
|
accessible and when they are heat treated, they will be stronger than
|
|
tools made from bristles.
|
|
|
|
Torque Wrenches
|
|
|
|
A strong torque wrench can be constructed from an 8-penny nail (about
|
|
.1 inch diameter). First heat up the point with a propane torch until
|
|
it glows red, slowly remove it from the flame, and let it air cool;
|
|
this softens it. The burner of a gas stove can be used instead of a
|
|
torch. Grind it down into the shape of a skinny screwdriver blade and
|
|
bend it to about 80 degrees. The bend should be less than a right
|
|
angle because some lock faces are recessed behind a plate (called an
|
|
escutcheon) and you want the head of the wrench to be able to reach
|
|
about half an inch into the plug. Temper (harden) the torque wrench by
|
|
heating to bright orange and dunking it into ice water. You will wind
|
|
up with a virtually indestructible bent screwdriver that will last for
|
|
years under brutal use.
|
|
|
|
Bicycle spokes make excellent picks. Bend one to the shape you want
|
|
and file the sides of the business end flat such that it's strong in
|
|
the vertical and flexy in the horizontal direction. Try a righ t-angle
|
|
hunk about an inch long for a handle. For smaller picks, which you
|
|
need for those really tiny keyways, find any large-diameter spring and
|
|
unbend it. If you're careful you don't have to play any metallurgical
|
|
games.
|
|
|
|
For perfectly serviceable key blanks that you can't otherwise find at
|
|
the store, use the metal strap they wrap around bricks for shipping.
|
|
It's wonderfully handy stuff for just about anything you want to
|
|
manufacture. To get around side wards in the keyway, you can bend the
|
|
strap lengthwise by clamping it in a vice and tapping on the
|
|
protruding part to bend the piece to the required angle.
|
|
|
|
Brick strap is very hard. It can ruin a grinding wheel or key cutting
|
|
machine. A hand file is the recommended tool for milling brick strap.
|
|
|
|
That's about it for lock picking. Its an important talent to have,
|
|
especially for espionage/sabotage. If this explanation didnt suffice
|
|
your quest for knowledge, there are various premade tools and manuals
|
|
available through mail-order or in a "Spy" store near you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
TAPPING A FONE LINE
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equipment Needed
|
|
|
|
First thing you need is an audio tape recorder. What you will be
|
|
recording, whether it be voice or data, will be in an analog audio format.
|
|
Most references will be towards voice recording, but it is also possible
|
|
to data record. Most standard cassette recorders will work just fine.
|
|
However, you are limited to 1 hour recording time per side. This can
|
|
present a problem in some situations. A reel to reel can also be used.
|
|
The limitations here are size and availability of A.C. Also, some reel
|
|
to reels lack a remote jack that will be used to start and stop the
|
|
recorder while the line is being used. This may not present a problem.
|
|
The next item you need, oddly enough, is sold by Radio Shack under the
|
|
name "Telephone recording control" part # 43-236.
|
|
|
|
Connecting the Parts
|
|
|
|
The Telephone recording control (TRC) has 3 wires coming out of it.
|
|
|
|
1.) Telco wire with modular jack. Cut this and replace with alligator
|
|
clips.
|
|
|
|
2.) Audio wire with miniature phone jack (not telephone). This plugs
|
|
into the microphone level input jack of the tape recorder.
|
|
|
|
3.) Audio wire with sub miniature phone jack. This plugs into the "REM"
|
|
or remote control jack of the tape recorder.
|
|
|
|
Now all you need to do is find the telephone line, connect the alligator
|
|
clips, turn the recorder on, and come back later. Whenever the line goes
|
|
off hook, the recorder starts. It's that simple.
|
|
|
|
Why is recording important? Recording of evidence against communists,
|
|
recording information, and recording important personal info about the
|
|
enemy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
BUGS
|
|
|
|
The government often uses bugs, or electronic sound surveillance devices
|
|
to spy on extremist groups, and use the evidence they get against them.
|
|
They also use them to intercept plans and foil them. It is extremely
|
|
important to search for these devices... UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES DO YOU
|
|
DESTROY THEM!!! If you destroy it, the government/enemy will just find a
|
|
way of putting a new one in. You must fix it so the person on the other
|
|
end of the line still thinks he is listening to something... some ideas
|
|
are:
|
|
|
|
- Keep it where it is, just be careful what you say.
|
|
- Leaving it in an unclassified meeting room of a business.
|
|
- Putting it in a closed environment with a taped conversation of you
|
|
talking about fake plans and information.
|
|
- Leave it at an airport/bus station bathroom.
|
|
|
|
But how do you scan for bugs? Room bugs are miniature radio stations. As
|
|
such, anyone can tune them in. This rarely happens, though, because the
|
|
range is limited and the frequency is known only to the person who placed
|
|
the bug. In practice, most bugs transmit by frequency modulation, on or
|
|
near the standard FM broadcast band (88 to 108 MHz). There is a toy
|
|
called Mr. Microphone that is, in effect, a bug shaped like a large hand-
|
|
held microphone. The user speaks into the microphone, and others may hear
|
|
his voice on their FM radios. Clandestine bugs work similarly but are
|
|
more likely to transmit just off either end of the FM band -- from 86 to
|
|
88 MHz (which infringes on a band allocated to television channels 5 and
|
|
6) or 108 to 110 MHz. In that way, the chance of accidental interception
|
|
or of someone complaining to the FCC is less. The Watergate bugs was to
|
|
have transmitted at 110 MHz. You can check for bugs using a FM radio.
|
|
Turn the tuner to the extreme left side of the dial, as far as it will go,
|
|
and turn the volume up. Although 88 MHz is the lowest frequency marked,
|
|
most receivers have enough "overcoverage" to pick up 87 or 86 MHz. No FM
|
|
stations are assigned below 88 MHz, so anything you may hear there is
|
|
suspicious. Slowly move the dial to the right until you come to the first
|
|
commercial FM station. Sweep over the FM band proper, and then check the
|
|
overcoverage region above 108 MHz. Any bug you hear will be in your
|
|
immediate neighborhood: typical transmitters use a few milliwatts of
|
|
power and have a range of a few hundred yards. If you suspect the bug is
|
|
in a nearby room, have someone talk or play music while you scan. A few
|
|
bugs can be picked up only with special shortwave receivers. The
|
|
frequencies from 48 to 50 MHz and 72 to 75 MHz are sometimes used.
|
|
Several shortwave operators have reported conversations that seem to be
|
|
from room bugs at 167.485 -- an FBI frequency.
|
|
|
|
If you really want to get back at the person at the other end of the bug
|
|
you might want to consider building a blast box. All a blast box is, is
|
|
a really cheap amplifier, (around 5 watts or so) connected in place of
|
|
the microphone on the transmitting device/bug. If you cant figure out how
|
|
to do that, you might just place the bug in a massive amplifier at a music
|
|
concert, and you'll have basically the same effect. You'll not only
|
|
blast a hole in the eardrum of the listener, but you'll teach snooping
|
|
government agents a lesson that they wont soon forget.
|
|
|
|
|
|
HI-TECH BUG DETECTION
|
|
|
|
For high technology bugs, the radio trick wont work. You'll need to
|
|
either buy or build a high class detector. If you wish to build one,
|
|
follow these directions...
|
|
|
|
What you will need for your bug-detector:
|
|
(the numbers in brackets is a reference number which matches the number in
|
|
parentheses on this list.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) 1n34a crystal diode
|
|
(2) 2 2n107 audio transistors
|
|
(ge-2 or equivalent)
|
|
(3) 3k ohm variable resistor
|
|
(4) 560 ohm 1/2 watt resistor
|
|
(5) 15k ohm variable resistor
|
|
(6) 500 ohm variable resistor
|
|
(7) .002 Uf capacitor
|
|
(8) 1.5 Volt aa battery
|
|
(9) aa battery holder
|
|
(10) 0-300 microammeter
|
|
(lafayette 99-g-5028 or
|
|
equivalent)
|
|
(11) 10 millihenry choke (ohmite
|
|
z-50)
|
|
(12) single-pole single-throw
|
|
(spst) toggle switch
|
|
(13) project box (radio shack)
|
|
(14) antenna (either from an old
|
|
transistor radio or a stiff
|
|
piece of wire will also work)
|
|
(15) 2000 ohm headset (or a mini-
|
|
ature earphone like most tv
|
|
and radios use)
|
|
|
|
These parts can be purchased from Radio Shack or any other electronics
|
|
store for less than $20. This is a very good high-gain meter-type bug
|
|
detector. It has a crystal diode with 2 amplification stages to boost the
|
|
power of the meter. This produces a broad-band, battery-powered, receiver
|
|
that can sense radio-frequency transmitters up to a mile away.
|
|
Unfortunately, it will also pick up a commercial am or fm station up to
|
|
3 miles away....
|
|
|
|
Bug detector schematics (these may seem complicated, but if you are
|
|
building the device, you'll understand what they are showing):
|
|
|
|
[14] [1]
|
|
|
|
(*)-----+------\<---+------+----\
|
|
\ \ \ \ \
|
|
\ \ \ \ \
|
|
\-/ ( / [7] \ \
|
|
v ) [3] \ --- \
|
|
[11] ( / ^^^ \
|
|
[0] ) --> \ \ \
|
|
\ \ / \ \
|
|
\ \ \ \-/ \
|
|
\-/ \ \ v \
|
|
v ----+ \
|
|
\ [0] \
|
|
[0] \ \
|
|
\-/ \
|
|
v \
|
|
\
|
|
[0] \
|
|
\
|
|
|
|
\
|
|
---------------------------------------
|
|
\ /----\
|
|
\ ( /--)-----------\ --->>b<<
|
|
\ ( \/ ) \ \
|
|
------(---\ ) \ \
|
|
( \\ ) ----+---\
|
|
( <--)-----\ \ \
|
|
[2] \----/ \ \ \
|
|
\ \ \
|
|
\ / \
|
|
[0] \-/ \ \
|
|
v / \
|
|
[4] \ \
|
|
/ \
|
|
\ \
|
|
\ \
|
|
>>a<< \
|
|
|
|
|
|
\
|
|
|
|
\
|
|
---------------------------------------
|
|
\
|
|
\ [12] [8&9]
|
|
\ ____ <-><+>
|
|
\ / \
|
|
---------() ()-----\ \---->>c<<
|
|
\
|
|
|
|
|
|
[4]
|
|
|
|
>>a<<--------\/\/\/\/\----->>c<<
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------------->>d<<
|
|
\
|
|
[2] /---\-----\
|
|
( \ )
|
|
( \-\ )
|
|
>>c<<----(---\ \-----)----\
|
|
( \-->-\ ) \
|
|
( ) \
|
|
\---------/ \
|
|
[0] \-/
|
|
v
|
|
|
|
|
|
[5]
|
|
|
|
>>b<<-------\/\/\/\/\---
|
|
|
|
^
|
|
\
|
|
\
|
|
------------>>d<<
|
|
|
|
|
|
[6]
|
|
|
|
>>d<<-------/\/\/\/\/--
|
|
^
|
|
\
|
|
\
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CAR TRACKER
|
|
|
|
|
|
Another useful "bug"-type tool is a device known as a "bumpbeeper."
|
|
It attaches to the under side of a car with magnets and then sends out
|
|
a signal that can be heard on a radio. This enables you to be able to
|
|
track the enemy's automobiles and location.
|
|
|
|
Parts list: () = diagram #
|
|
|
|
(1) 2n635a transistor
|
|
(2) 4.3K 1/2 watt resistor
|
|
(3) 1 meg potentiometer
|
|
(4) 10k 1/2 watt resistor
|
|
(5) 50pf capacitor
|
|
(6) 365pf variable capacitor
|
|
(7) .005Uf capacitor
|
|
(8) .01Uf capacitor
|
|
(9) ferrite loopstick (from a crys-
|
|
(10) coil [see text] tal radio)
|
|
(11) single-pole single-throw switch
|
|
(12) 9 volt battery
|
|
(opt.) Battery clip & case
|
|
(13) antenna
|
|
|
|
This device is a constant tone signalling source that can be tuned to any
|
|
clear spot below 1000 khz. If magnets are attached to the case, it can
|
|
quickly be installed under the persons car. (9) is a standard ferrite
|
|
loopstick that can be purchased at Radio Shack. (10) Is simply 12 turns
|
|
of plastic covered hookup wire wound over (9).
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
(*)-------\(----+-----______--- >>a<<
|
|
\ \ ^^^^^^
|
|
\ 5 \ \ 9
|
|
--- -\(-- --\(--->>b<<
|
|
- 6 \ 7
|
|
v \
|
|
--->>a<<
|
|
|
|
|
|
>>a<<------+------+------o/ o-----
|
|
\ \ 11 \
|
|
/ --- \
|
|
\ - \
|
|
/ v \
|
|
4 \ --------
|
|
\ \
|
|
\ --[][]->>c<<
|
|
--->>b<< 12
|
|
|
|
"@ j >>c<<----/\/\/\/\----+-----+------
|
|
2 \ \ \
|
|
\ \ \
|
|
>>d<<---)\------- \ \
|
|
v >>e<<
|
|
|
|
8 -----/\/\/\--
|
|
\ 3
|
|
>>f<<-----------+
|
|
/---\
|
|
1 ( \ )
|
|
( / /-)---->>d<<
|
|
( \ > )
|
|
( ----- )
|
|
( \ )
|
|
\---/
|
|
\
|
|
\
|
|
>>b<<
|
|
|
|
|
|
>>e<<-------
|
|
\
|
|
(
|
|
)
|
|
(
|
|
10 )
|
|
\
|
|
------>>f<<
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
>>d<<---
|
|
\
|
|
---
|
|
-
|
|
v (ground)
|
|
|
|
To tune the transmitter:
|
|
|
|
1.) Pick an empty spot on the am car radio below 1000 khz.
|
|
2.) Switch on the transmitter with the spst switch.
|
|
3.) Tune the 365 variable capacitor slowly until a shrill note can be
|
|
heard from the car radio.
|
|
4.) The pitch of the note is adjustable by turning the 1 meg
|
|
potentiometer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- HARASSMENT TECHNIQUES -
|
|
|
|
THE $99 BUS TOUR
|
|
|
|
The Minutemen were known for their variety of harassment techniques. At
|
|
one point, they were prosecuted by the federal government for attempted
|
|
murder of communists. The key prosecution witness was a man named Jerry
|
|
Brooks. Brooks claimed that Robert DePugh (leader of the Minutemen) had
|
|
handed him a vial of strychnine and a $99 Greyhound Bus ticket around
|
|
the country, and was told to kill as many communists as he could.
|
|
|
|
When asked to respond afterward by a reporter, DePugh replied that, like
|
|
much of what Brooks testified to, there was a glimmer of truth in this.
|
|
Brooks had allegedly been given the $99 ticket, but ordered to go around
|
|
the country pretending to be a possible recruit for various communist
|
|
organizations. He would get inside the various organizations offices
|
|
and take note of what they looked like, and any peculiarities about
|
|
them. Then, as Robert DePugh described it, "We were going to wait quite
|
|
a little while, so they would no longer associate it with his visit and
|
|
then write to them in such a manner they would think for sure that
|
|
recently someone had been inside their office. You know, like for
|
|
example, we were going to write to Elizabeth Gurley Flynn [American
|
|
Communist Party chairman at that time] and tell her, 'Why don't you
|
|
wash the windows in your office? They're so dirty we can hardly see
|
|
through our telescopic lens.'"
|
|
|
|
According to notes taken at a later Minutemen training session, "We
|
|
must win through Psychological Warfare." The notes mention such
|
|
ideas as:
|
|
|
|
* Sending boxed scorpions to left-wing radio announcers.
|
|
* Telephone Harassment (Look up a local communist party chapter, and
|
|
start prank calling, and hate calling.)
|
|
* Physical Harassment : Find a communist's house, go there late at
|
|
night, and shine a few lights in the windows.
|
|
* Mail Harassment (sending bloody letters, violent letters, tampering
|
|
with their mail, burning their mail, etc.)
|
|
* Blackmail and Bribery
|
|
* Burglarize and Vandalize a communists house.
|
|
For instance:
|
|
|
|
Use hydroflouric acid on his windows. Then, when the window is
|
|
nice and brittle, you can literally punch out a section of the
|
|
window without setting off an alarm. From there, you can steal
|
|
and pillage to your heart's desire.
|
|
|
|
Knocking on the door, and nailing him with paintballs when
|
|
he comes to the door, and subsequently paintballing his house.
|
|
|
|
Egg his car, his house, and whatever else you like.
|
|
|
|
Paint his house red.
|
|
|
|
Nail a Declaration of Independence, or a Constitution to his door.
|
|
|
|
Burn a stake/cross/hammer&sickle on his lawn.
|
|
|
|
Take target practice on his front door.
|
|
|
|
Stalk him, and chase him down.
|
|
|
|
* Buy things with stolen credit card #'s and send them to his house.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- ENCRYPTION/CRYPTOGRAPHY -
|
|
|
|
Cryptography (secret codes) are essential for security. The basic
|
|
rule of security for right-wing militant groups is summed up in the
|
|
statement "One of the set rules of Guerilla Warfare is don't operate
|
|
with a set pattern or plan."
|
|
|
|
However, for definite agendas, there are certain precautions that must
|
|
be taken with ALL documents. For electronic material, PGP or another
|
|
cipher key program must be used. For written documents, ciphers are
|
|
more difficult to do, but they can also be more imaginative and
|
|
creative.
|
|
|
|
The Number Code
|
|
|
|
Out of the various codes one can make, a number code is easiest. The
|
|
simplest number cipher is simply to assign a certain letter as one,
|
|
and keep numbering up. So, for example....
|
|
|
|
A = 5
|
|
B = 6
|
|
C = 7
|
|
D = 8
|
|
E = 9
|
|
F = 10
|
|
G = 11
|
|
H = 12
|
|
I = 13
|
|
J = 14
|
|
K = 15
|
|
L = 16
|
|
M = 17
|
|
N = 18
|
|
O = 19
|
|
P = 20
|
|
Q = 21
|
|
R = 22
|
|
S = 23
|
|
T = 24
|
|
U = 25
|
|
V = 26
|
|
W = 1
|
|
X = 2
|
|
Y = 3
|
|
Z = 4
|
|
|
|
So if you wanted to say, "Minuteman was here", you would write:
|
|
|
|
17-13-18-25-24-9-17-5-18 1-5-23 12-9-22-9.
|
|
|
|
The problem with a code like this is that an experienced cryptographer
|
|
by a simple combination of trial and error and analysis of sentence
|
|
structure can determine very close to the exact code. A better code
|
|
is a more original, less standardized code. The first example of
|
|
this would be a Freemason type code.
|
|
|
|
A B C \ J / N O P \ W /
|
|
\ / \ /
|
|
D E F \/ \/
|
|
K /\ L Q R S X /\ Y
|
|
G H I / \ / \
|
|
/ M \ / Z \
|
|
T U V
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For that same message, "Minuteman was here", you would write:
|
|
|
|
/\ Ŀ Ŀ Ŀ /\
|
|
/ \ / \
|
|
/ \ / \
|
|
|
|
\ /
|
|
\ /
|
|
\/
|
|
|
|
Ŀ Ŀ Ŀ Ŀ
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
However, the most effective cipher by far is a cipher that uses a
|
|
renaming type motif. That being, certain phrases and certain words
|
|
mean exact things. This method eliminates much of the possibility of
|
|
a cryptographer doing anything but blindly guessing what the message
|
|
you send might mean. For instance
|
|
|
|
John = Minuteman
|
|
Ivan = Polaris
|
|
"contact" = connect
|
|
5:00 PM = High Noon
|
|
|
|
Someone wants to tell someone else that Minuteman will contact Polaris
|
|
at 5:00 PM.
|
|
|
|
"John will connect Ivan at High Noon". If you dont know the
|
|
code, its easy to see how little one can derive from such a statement.
|
|
|
|
What happens if you dont use encryption? Federal agents use whatever
|
|
documents they can find from your group to implicate and arrest members
|
|
of it for illegal acts that they probably didnt commit, or at least with
|
|
a just cause. Remember, without any evidence and with a good lawyer,
|
|
the government will have a much harder time trying to stop you.
|
|
|
|
You must also, however, protect your normal mail, with certain techniques
|
|
to insure absolute security. If not, the communists may use the very
|
|
same harassment/espionage tactics against you.
|
|
|
|
SEALS
|
|
|
|
Wax seals are not a guarantee against unauthorized opening of a letter.
|
|
According to the CIA Flaps and Seals Manual (available from Paladin
|
|
Press, Boulder CO), there is a way to remove and replace seals. First
|
|
the opener takes a plaster of Paris cast of the seal. This is set aside
|
|
to harden. The wax is gently heated with an infrared lamp. When soft,
|
|
it is rolled into a ball and set aside. The flap of the envelope is
|
|
steamed open, and the letter is taken out and photocopied. After the
|
|
envelope's contents are replaced and the flap resealed, the same wax is
|
|
used to recreate the seal. It is heated till pliable and pressed back
|
|
into shape with the plaster of paris mold. One type of seal is secure,
|
|
even according to the CIA manual quoted before: one made of two or more
|
|
colors of wax melted together. The colors inevitably come out different
|
|
on the second secret pressing. But a color Polaroid of the seal must be
|
|
sent under separate cover so that the recipient can compare it with the
|
|
seal on the message letter. None of the other common seals are reliable
|
|
against unauthorized opening, assuming that knowledgeable letter-openers
|
|
may want to open your mail. Scotch tape across the flap of an envelope
|
|
comes off cleanly with carbon tetrachloride (applied wiht a brush or
|
|
hypodermic needle). If you suspect that someone is opening your mail,
|
|
the manual suggests sending yourself a letter containing a sheet of
|
|
carbon or wax paper. The heat and mechanical treatment of the letter
|
|
opening will smudge the carbon and melt the wax. Otherwise, you have to
|
|
examine letters carefully to detect prior opening. A torn flap,
|
|
smudging of the flap glue, flattened ridges in the flap, or concave
|
|
(from the back) curling due to steaming are evidence of opening. A more
|
|
sophisticated test requires steaming part of the envelope near the flap
|
|
for fifteen seconds. Then place the envelope under an ultraviolet lamp.
|
|
If there is a difference in fluorescence between the steamed and
|
|
unsteamed part of the envelope, then the envelope paper is suitable for
|
|
the test. If so, examine the unsteamed part of the flap under the
|
|
ultraviolet lamp. If it shows a different fluorescence than the other
|
|
unsteamed parts of the envelope, it indicates that the flap may have
|
|
been previously steamed. The ultraviolet lamp is also useful in
|
|
detecting invisible writing. An effective ultraviolet ink need not
|
|
fluoresce brightly, as the silicate stamp inks do. Any substance that
|
|
changes the fluorescence of paper in ultraviolet light yet is invisible
|
|
in ordinary light will work. Prisoners have used human urine as ink.
|
|
Salt water, vinegar, milk, fruit juices, saliva, and water solutions of
|
|
soap or drugs also work, with varying degrees of legibility.
|
|
|
|
|
|
IV. The Tools and Tactics of the Militants
|
|
|
|
"... The true guerrila is never beaten. He will never negotiate
|
|
away his freedom. He will never compromise his ideas. He will never
|
|
surrender.
|
|
History offers many examples of far larger and better equipped
|
|
armies that were finally defeated by guerrillas. They can fight on
|
|
for years, even generations. Guerrilla bands can fight in the cities
|
|
country, forests, swamps, deserts, or mountains. They are everywhere
|
|
and yet nowhere. They strike without warning and vanish without a
|
|
trace. They take away with them the arms, food, and ammunition they
|
|
will need to fight again another day.
|
|
The guerrilla is a grim fighter and a terrible foe. His strength
|
|
is in his heart--in his love for his country--in his hatred of the
|
|
enemy. His chief weapons are stealth, cunning, endurance, and most
|
|
of all, an intense belief in the righteousness of his own cause.
|
|
He will fight to the death with a fury that makes his enemies
|
|
cower before him."
|
|
|
|
From "Principles of Guerrilla Warfare," copyright 1961,
|
|
Robert B. Depugh -- a booklet
|
|
|
|
|
|
"The Pen is mightier than the Sword.
|
|
The Court is mightier than the Pen.
|
|
The Sword is mightier than the Court."
|
|
|
|
- Rey Barry -
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Walk softly, and carry a big stick."
|
|
|
|
- Theodore Roosevelt -
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is probably the section half of those reading this manual have
|
|
been waiting for: the firearms. I would stress to those reading this
|
|
my earlier warning that the information provided is for INSTRUCTION
|
|
ONLY. Should you do this, its your own fault what happens. I would
|
|
also stress that in several cases, action can be taken without
|
|
involving serious violence. Please explore all alternatives before
|
|
shooting anyone.
|
|
|
|
- GUNS AND RELATED WEAPONS -
|
|
|
|
There are several important things you must know about guns (being
|
|
their types, specifications, and how to use them.) However, there
|
|
is other information that is perhaps even more important.
|
|
|
|
First of all, you need to know what guns to buy for who. Although
|
|
slightly outdated, the April 1, 1964 issue of "On Target" has some
|
|
interesting suggestions for firearms:
|
|
|
|
Adult Males: 30-06 Garands, 7.62 NATO FNs, 30-06 bolt-action
|
|
Springfields or Enfields, high-caliber sporting
|
|
rifles as desired, 12-gauge double barrel, pump or
|
|
semi-automatic shotguns.
|
|
|
|
Adult Females: Winchester Model 100 in .308 caliber, Remington
|
|
Model 742 in 30-06 caliber of 30-caliber military
|
|
carbines.
|
|
|
|
Older Children: Sporting rifles in 6mm., .243, .270, .222 calibers.
|
|
|
|
Younger Children: Semi-automatic .22 rifles.
|
|
|
|
I also suggest newer productions, namely the TEC-DC9, the CAR-15,
|
|
the AR-15, and any Kalishnikov rifles (or their Chinese variants)
|
|
that are available. Necessary additions to these weapons would be
|
|
silencers, clips, laser-targeting scopes, night-vision scopes,
|
|
and/or shoulder supports.
|
|
|
|
In addition to buying guns, one can also produce makeshift guns if
|
|
one knows how they work.
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOMEMADE STUN GUNS
|
|
|
|
|
|
Materials
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
- 1 camera flash (rip this out of a cheap camera or buy a seperate one,
|
|
get the flashes that run off of a couple of double A's)
|
|
- 1 hobby box (large enough to fit your disassembled flash in, get one
|
|
WITHOUT a metal base plate!)
|
|
- 2 stainless steel nails
|
|
- 2 1.3 volt AA batteries (for the flash)
|
|
- 1 soldering iron and solder
|
|
- 1 tube of super glue
|
|
- 1 pair of wire cutters
|
|
|
|
|
|
1.) First of all disconnect any batteries from your camera flash.
|
|
2.) Take apart the camera flash and chuck out all the excess plastic
|
|
container.
|
|
3.) Locate the flash tube (the bit that flashes, duh!), and cut the two
|
|
wire that lead to it.
|
|
4.) Taking these two wires and solder each one to a seperate nail.
|
|
5.) Now prepare your hobby box buy cutting two holes large enough to
|
|
slide the point of a nail through (the nails should be about .5 cm
|
|
apart), and cut a whole for the switch that was hooked up to the
|
|
flash originally. Super glue all the parts in place. Carefully
|
|
connect up your batteries (the battery compartment should be still
|
|
intact if you didn't butcher the camera flash too much when you
|
|
were taking it apart). Ensure there are no exposed wires touching
|
|
each other. The finished hobby box should look like this:
|
|
|
|
Ŀ
|
|
|
|
<====
|
|
<==== <==== - nails
|
|
Ŀ - hobby box
|
|
- switch
|
|
|
|
5.) Screw on the base plate and you're ready.
|
|
|
|
To use it just flick on the switch and you should hear a high pitch
|
|
squeal starting to get louder. Turn the switch off (the longer you
|
|
leave it on the greater the shock will be) and holding the box touch
|
|
someones skin with the tips of both the nails.
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOW TO MAKE A PSEUDO-GUN
|
|
|
|
To do this, you first need to know how a gun works. A gun is simply
|
|
a bullet, in a type of vise, that has a sharp object shoved up its
|
|
back very quickly, and explodes. So basically, to build a pseudo-
|
|
gun, take a vice type device, and make it an easy close/open vise
|
|
operation (like a gun hammer). Then, attach a mechanism that allows
|
|
the operator to swing a nail, or other sharp object, into the back
|
|
of the bullet quickly. And there, you've got a gun!
|
|
|
|
SILENCERS
|
|
|
|
" The advantages of a gun that makes no noise when fired are
|
|
obvious. In underground warfare the availability of such weapons
|
|
would be invaluable to individuals or small combat teams forced to
|
|
operate against a superior enemy force... The time may come when
|
|
citizens may profit from a knowledge of how to construct such
|
|
devices... Telescopic sights are often helpful. Some companies
|
|
make mounting rings that hold the telescopic sight well above the
|
|
barrel of the rifle. This may be sufficient for a silencer that is
|
|
about two and one-half inches in diameter. Special scope mounts may
|
|
be purchased or constructed for silencers having a larger diameter..."
|
|
|
|
- From Minutemen pamphlet on how to build
|
|
your own gun silencer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOW TO MAKE A ONE-USE SILENCER
|
|
|
|
This is a simple way to make a one use silencer. It only works once,
|
|
for obvious reasons, as you will see. Take an empty 12 ounce plastic
|
|
soft drink container, and tape if firmly to the end of the gun/pistol/
|
|
rifle. Then, go ahead and shoot! Keep in mind, this is not perfect,
|
|
and it only works once, because once the bottle has a hole in it, it
|
|
no longer will work.
|
|
|
|
HOW TO MAKE A MULTI-USE SILENCER
|
|
|
|
Silencers made for multi-use for improvised small arms weapons
|
|
can be made from steel gas or water pipe and fittings.
|
|
|
|
Material Required:
|
|
|
|
Grenade Container
|
|
Steel pipe nipple, 6 in. (15 cm) long - (see Graph 1 for diameter)
|
|
2 steel pipe couplings - (see Graph 2 for dimensions)
|
|
Cotton cloth - (see Graph 2)
|
|
Drill
|
|
Absorbent cotton
|
|
|
|
Procedure:
|
|
|
|
1.) Drill hole in grenade container at both ends to fit outside diameter
|
|
of pipe nipple. (see Graph 1)
|
|
|
|
-> /----------------------\
|
|
/ | |
|
|
2.75 in | ) ( <-holes
|
|
dia. \ | |
|
|
-> \-----------------------/
|
|
|
|
|-----------------------|
|
|
5 in.
|
|
|
|
2.) Drill four rows of holes in pipe nipple. Use Graph 1 for diameter and
|
|
location of holes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
6 in.
|
|
|-----------------------------------|
|
|
_____________________________________ ___
|
|
| O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O | | C (nom. dia.)
|
|
-------------------------------------
|
|
(size of hole) | \ / (space between)
|
|
B (dia.) A
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.) Thread one of the pipe couplings on the drilled pipe nipple.
|
|
4.) Cut coupling length to allow barrel of weapon to thread fully into
|
|
low signature system. Barrel should butt against end of the drilled
|
|
pipe nipple.
|
|
5.) Separate the top half of the grenade container from the bottom half.
|
|
6.) Insert the pipe nipple in the drilled hole at the base of the bottom
|
|
half of the container. Pack the absorbent cotton inside the container and
|
|
around the pipe nipple.
|
|
7.) Pack the absorbent cotton in top half of grenade container leaving a
|
|
hole in center. Assemble container to the bottom half.
|
|
8.) Thread the other coupling onto the pipe nipple.
|
|
|
|
Note: A longer container and pipe nipple, with same "A" and "B"
|
|
dimensions as those given, will furthur reduce the signature of the
|
|
system.
|
|
|
|
How to use:
|
|
|
|
1.) Thread the silencer device on the selected weapon securely.
|
|
2.) Place the proper cotton wad size into the muzzle end of the system
|
|
(see Graph 2)
|
|
3.) Load weapon
|
|
4.) Weapon is now ready for use
|
|
|
|
Graph 1 -- Low Signature System Dimensions
|
|
|
|
(Coupling) Holes per (4 rows)
|
|
A B C D Row Total
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
.45 cal 3/8 1/4 3/8 3/8 12 48
|
|
|
|
.38 cal 3/8 1/4 1/4 1/4 12 48
|
|
|
|
9 mm 3/8 1/4 1/4 1/4 12 48
|
|
|
|
7.62 mm 3/8 1/4 1/4 1/4 12 48
|
|
|
|
.22 cal 1/4 5/32 1/8* 1/8 14 50
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
*Extra Heavy Pipe
|
|
(All dimensions in inches)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Graph 2 -- Cotton Wadding - Sizes
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
|
Weapon Cotton Wadding Size
|
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
|
.45 cal 1-1/2 x 6 inches
|
|
|
|
.38 cal 1 x 4 inches
|
|
|
|
9 mm 1 x 4 inches
|
|
|
|
7.62 mm 1 x 4 inches
|
|
|
|
.22 cal Not needed
|
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
ARTILLERY
|
|
|
|
Before i go into homemade artillery, i would like to make suggestions
|
|
for heavy weapons worth actually buying. Here they are:
|
|
|
|
- RPG's (Rocket Propelled Grenades)
|
|
- Self-Propelled Miniguns
|
|
- Mortars
|
|
- Anti-Vehicle Weapons and mines
|
|
- If you can get your hands on them, AAA guns and anti-aircraft
|
|
missiles
|
|
|
|
Improvised Artillery:
|
|
|
|
There is a simple way to make a small artillery device for home defense
|
|
use. The easiest way to build it is described, and anyone with any
|
|
knowledge of weaponry can make obvious substitutions if necessary.
|
|
|
|
Take a thick and mediumly wide metal pipe. Take a metal cap, drill a
|
|
hole in it, and weld it on to one side of the metal pipe. Now, take
|
|
a firecracker (an M-80, or an M-100), and carefully drop it in the
|
|
bottom of the pipe, putting the fuse through the hole in the cap.
|
|
Now, place some tissue paper/toilet paper in the pipe. Now, pour
|
|
(NOT STUFF) some BB's, or metal pellets into the pipe. Stuff some
|
|
more toilet paper into the pipe. Now pour some more bb's/pellets,
|
|
and another layer of toilet paper. Basically, now just prop this
|
|
up against a tree or something, and you'll have a working artillery
|
|
piece/mortar that can be very deadly if accurately aimed. To make
|
|
this weapon much more deadly, take heavy rocks, or the like, and place
|
|
them in the pipe. You can substitute black powder/gun powder/blasting
|
|
powder and a fuse for the firecracker. The firecracker just makes the
|
|
business easier for the slow at intellect.
|
|
|
|
Another type of artillery are Model Shrapnel Rockets. Basically, fill
|
|
the cone and the very upper portion of the rocket with gunpowder/black
|
|
powder/etc. Lead a fuse (judge the length of the fuse based on the
|
|
range to target) from the cone to the engine. Then pack the rest of the
|
|
middle and inside of the rocket with lightweight materials like shards of
|
|
glass, and fiberglass, nails, and whatnot. Basically, just fire the
|
|
rocket slightly above your target. When it explodes, the "shrapnel" on
|
|
the inside will shoot out and maim/kill your target.
|
|
|
|
Other types of model rockets can also be extremely useful. Experimenting
|
|
with them firsthand is the best solution, because it will enable you to
|
|
determine what kind and what design is best for your uses.
|
|
|
|
Another home-design type artillery device is a sprinkler hooked up to a
|
|
pump-bucket filled with a gasoline/gunpowder/blackpowder mix. Then,
|
|
start the pump, and have the sprinkler start going on the target area...
|
|
when the bucket is nearly empty, strike a match and throw it. You'll
|
|
a homemade HADES type weapon. Basically, the air around the sprinkler,
|
|
and everything touched by the spray will go up like spontaneous
|
|
combustion.
|
|
|
|
FLARES
|
|
|
|
If you would like to make a flare, there are several ways. But the most
|
|
original and interesting way would be the following:
|
|
|
|
Take an Erienmeyer flask (the kind with the fat bottoms and thinly necked
|
|
tops), and dump some Antimony powder at the bottom. Then, while holding
|
|
your nose, funnel some Chlorine Gas into the flask. FOOM! You'll have
|
|
a flare gun for a few minutes. The reaction is quick and bright. The
|
|
flask also gets warm, so be careful.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- BOMBS AND PARAFANALIA -
|
|
|
|
The Minuteman journal "On Target" continually stresses that if you
|
|
are going to build bombs, build simple, easy to test and construct
|
|
ones. In fact, in notes from one training session, it reads "Black
|
|
Powder is the best. Put it in a 2" pipe, drill a hole in it, insert
|
|
fuse, light the fuse, throw it, and run." How do you make Black
|
|
Powder? The recipe followed directly afterward.
|
|
|
|
Black Powder
|
|
|
|
Place 5 pints of alcohol in a bucket. In another bucket, put 3 cups
|
|
of granulated potassium nitrate, 2 cups powdered wood charcoal, and
|
|
1/2 cup of powdered sulfur (can be obtained from match heads) into
|
|
the bucket. Add 1 cup of water and stir well with a wooden stick.
|
|
Place the bucket on a heat source and add 2 more cups of water and
|
|
wait for it to bubble but don't let it boil. Remove the bucket from
|
|
the heat and pour it into the alcohol while stirring well. Let the
|
|
alcohol stand for about 5 minutes. Strain the liquid through
|
|
cheesecloth to remove the powder. Wrap the cloth around the powder
|
|
and squeeze out the excess liquid. Place a piece of screen on top
|
|
of a bucket. Place a workable amount of black powder (That black
|
|
muddy looking stuff) on the screen and begin to work it through.
|
|
Spread the end result on a piece of newspaper and let it dry in
|
|
the sunlight.
|
|
|
|
The notes go on to describe another explosive that should be used
|
|
under doors or entrances to sensitive rooms/buildings, called
|
|
Ammonium Tri Iodide. To make it:
|
|
|
|
Mix solid Nitric Iodine (or take the liquid form, and evaporate the
|
|
liquid off) with household ammonia. Wait overnight and pour off
|
|
the liquid. You will be left with a muddy substance. Let it
|
|
dry untill it hardens up. To use it, put it in a bottle or can
|
|
and just drop it or throw it at something.
|
|
|
|
Other types of powders and the such that are useful to know how to make:
|
|
|
|
Gun Powder:
|
|
|
|
1.) Pour 10ml of both Sulfuric and Nitric acid in a beaker.
|
|
2.) Add come Cotton with the mixture of th acids.
|
|
3.) Let it dry and crumble it into powder.
|
|
|
|
Easy Gun Powder:
|
|
|
|
1.) Put 100 grams of Potassium nitrate in beaker.
|
|
2.) Put 100 grams of Sulfur in beaker.
|
|
3.) Put 100 grams of charcoal in beaker.
|
|
|
|
Flash Powder (Another useful ingredient for homemade flares):
|
|
|
|
1.) Add 1 ounce of Sulfur in beaker.
|
|
2.) Add 2 ounces of Sodium chlorate in beaker.
|
|
3.) Add 1 ounce of 400 mesh aluminum powder in beaker.
|
|
|
|
Greek Fire (A popular home explosive):
|
|
|
|
1.) Add 100 grams of Potassium Nitrate in Beaker.
|
|
2.) Add 100 grams of Charcoal in beaker.
|
|
3.) Add 50 grams of Sulfur in beaker.
|
|
4.) Add 50 grams of Sugar in beaker.
|
|
|
|
Thermite (An extremely useful diversion weapon, as well as for
|
|
destructive purposes):
|
|
|
|
1.) Ground aluminum mesh into a powder.
|
|
2.) Mix the powder carefully into an amount of Iron (III) Oxide.
|
|
3.) When you wish to ignite the reaction, take a strip of Magnesium
|
|
(other heat sources can be used, but this works best), and quickly
|
|
place it in the mixture (back off very quickly).
|
|
4.) The reaction is quick, explosive, and dangerous. You must be very
|
|
careful how you place the ignition source, and a fuse type design
|
|
works best. The reaction is so hot that the iron turns molten.
|
|
|
|
Other bombs suggested by these notes, and other sources:
|
|
|
|
Homemade Grenades
|
|
|
|
During the Winter, or in a wet area, you can use a piece of a simple
|
|
chemical that can be procured from any chemical supply store for a
|
|
hand grenade. Take a piece of potassium or rubydium (potassium is more
|
|
stable, and easier to handle), and just throw it at water surrounding
|
|
your target. You will be more than suprised at what a small piece of
|
|
chemical can do. BOOM!
|
|
|
|
Carbide Bomb
|
|
|
|
This is EXTREMELY DANGEROUS. Exercise extreme caution....
|
|
Obtain some calcium carbide. This stuff can be found at nearly any
|
|
hardware store. Take a few pieces of this stuff (it looks like gravel)
|
|
and put it in a glass jar with some water. Cover the jar tightly. The
|
|
carbide will react with the water to produce acetylene carbonate which
|
|
is similar to the gas used in cutting torches. Eventually the glass
|
|
with explode from internal pressure. If you leave a burning rag
|
|
nearby, you will get a nice fireball.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exhaust Bomb (for a car)
|
|
|
|
Install a spark plug into the last four or five inches of the tail
|
|
pipe by drilling a hole that the plug can screw into easily.
|
|
Attach a wire (this is regular insulated wire) to one side of the
|
|
switch and to the spark plug. The other side of the switch is attached
|
|
to the positive terminal on the battery. With the car running, simply
|
|
hit the switch and watch the flames.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Hearts and Diamonds Bomb, A.K.A. the Pipe Bomb
|
|
|
|
Take an old-style, non-laminated hearts or diamonds playing card, and
|
|
stick in in a pvc or metal pipe. Glug some glycerine hand lotion in
|
|
it, and add a few shakes of potassium permanganate (snake-bite
|
|
medical formula in most medical kits). Let it sit and absorb for a
|
|
few hours, and then place it upon a hot radiator, or flame.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Mayonnaise Bomb
|
|
|
|
Take an empty mayonnaise jar, and pour a few drops of gasoline in it.
|
|
Roll the jar around to create a thin layer of gasoline inside the jar.
|
|
Add a few shakes of potassium permanganate (snakebite formula), and
|
|
cap the jar. Now, leave it out in the sun for a few hours to
|
|
evaporate the gas into the jar. Then, throw the jar at something.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Turn Signal Bomb (for a car)
|
|
|
|
Detach the plastic running light (or turn signal) cover on someones
|
|
car. Break the bulb. Test the bulb with a voltage meter to make sure
|
|
it is not live. Pack the bulb with Flash Paper and replace the cover.
|
|
When the person starts his car or goes to turn, a quick burst of flame
|
|
will pop out of the back of his car making him think it is on fire.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Piss Bomb (Uric Acid Explosive)
|
|
|
|
|
|
MATERIALS
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
- 1 cup concentrated solution of uric acid <Concentrated Piss>
|
|
(C5 H4 N4 O3)
|
|
- 1/3 cup of nitric acid
|
|
- 4 heat-resistant glass containers
|
|
- 4 filters (coffee filters will do)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Filter the concentrated solution of uric acid through a filter to remove
|
|
impurities. Slowly add 1/3 cup of nitric acid to the solution and let
|
|
the mixture stand for 1 hour. Filter again as before. This time the
|
|
Urea Nitrate crystals will collect on the filter. Wash the crystals by
|
|
pouring water over them while they are in the filter. Remove the
|
|
crystals from the filter and allow 16 hours for them to dry. This
|
|
explosive will need a blasting cap to detonate, or a suitable substitute.
|
|
|
|
|
|
HEAVY EXPLOSIVES
|
|
|
|
This next section may seem confusing at first. However, you do not need
|
|
to be a chemist to be able to understand and duplicate what is being
|
|
shown here. It is important for a militiaman to be able to make or have
|
|
a source to make heavy explosives because of the opportunities this lends
|
|
you.
|
|
|
|
You've all read about the manure bomb that the fellows in Oklahoma
|
|
used. Well, here's a way to get the Potassium Nitrate direct from
|
|
normal soil, instead of having to buy it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Potassium Nitrate
|
|
|
|
The following recipe was found in the Improvised Munitions Handbook
|
|
published by the Department of the Army.
|
|
|
|
Potassium nitrate can be extracted from many natural sources (soil) and
|
|
can be used to make nitric acid, black powder, and many pyrotechnics.
|
|
The yield ranges from 1% to 10% by weight, depending on the fertility
|
|
of the soil.
|
|
|
|
Materials Source
|
|
--------- ------
|
|
|
|
Nitrate bearing earth or other Soil contaying decaying animal
|
|
material, about 3-1/2 gallons. or vegetable matter.
|
|
|
|
Fine wood ashes, 1/2 cup. Totally burned wood products.
|
|
|
|
5 gallon bucket
|
|
|
|
2 pieces of finely woven cloth,
|
|
each slightly larger than the
|
|
bottom of the bucket.
|
|
|
|
Shallow pan or dish at least as
|
|
large as bottom of bucket.
|
|
|
|
Shallow heat resistant container
|
|
ceramic or metal.
|
|
|
|
Water, 1-3/4 gallons.
|
|
|
|
Awl, knife screwdriver or other
|
|
hole producing instrument.
|
|
|
|
Alcohol (ethyl or isopropyl)
|
|
1 gallon
|
|
|
|
Heat source, fire, stove.
|
|
|
|
paper
|
|
|
|
Tape
|
|
|
|
Procedure
|
|
---------
|
|
1.) Punch holes in the bottom of the bucket so that the entire surface
|
|
is covered with them.
|
|
|
|
2.) Place cloth flat on bottom of bucket.
|
|
Spread ashes on cloth.
|
|
Place second piece of cloth on top of ashes
|
|
|
|
3.) Fill bucket with earth.
|
|
|
|
4.) Place bucket over shallow container. Support bucket with sticks if
|
|
necessary.
|
|
|
|
5.) Boil water and pour it over earth in bucket a little at a time.
|
|
Allow water to run through holes in bucket into shallow container.
|
|
Be sure water runs through all of the earth. Allow liquid to cool
|
|
and settle for 1 to 2 hours.
|
|
|
|
6.) Carefully drain liquid into heat resistant container. Discard
|
|
sludge at bottom of shallow container.
|
|
|
|
7.) Boil mixture over hot fire for at least 2 hours. Small grains of
|
|
salt will appear in the solution. Scoop these out as they form
|
|
and discard.
|
|
|
|
8.) When liquid has boiled down to about half of its original volume,
|
|
remove from fire and let sit. After half hour add an equal volume
|
|
of alcohol.
|
|
|
|
9.) Make an improvised strainer out of paper tape and bucket. Tape
|
|
paper so that it covers the top of a clean bucket.
|
|
|
|
10.) Pour mixture through paper strainer. Small white salt crystals
|
|
will collect on top of it. These are potassium nitrate.
|
|
|
|
11.) To purify the potassium nitrate, re-dissolve the dry crystals in
|
|
the smallest amount possible of boiled water (make sure they all
|
|
dissolve). Remove any salt crystals that appear (step 7) pour
|
|
through an improvised filter made of several pieces of paper and
|
|
evaporate or gently heat solution to dryness.
|
|
|
|
12.) Spread crystals on plat surface and allow to dry. The potassium
|
|
nitrate crystals are now ready to use.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This method was tested, and it is effective. Large quantities (1 to 2
|
|
pounds) of potassium nitrate can be obtained this way.
|
|
|
|
|
|
R.D.X.
|
|
|
|
RDX can be produced by the method given below. It is much easier
|
|
to make in the home than all other high explosives, with the possible
|
|
exception of ammonium nitrate.
|
|
|
|
MATERIALS
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
- hexamine or methenamine -
|
|
- 1000 ml beaker -
|
|
- ice bath -
|
|
- glass stirring rod -
|
|
- thermometer -
|
|
- funnel -
|
|
- filter paper -
|
|
- distilled water -
|
|
- ammonium nitrate -
|
|
- nitric acid (550 ml) -
|
|
- blue litmus paper -
|
|
- small ice bath -
|
|
|
|
1.) Place the beaker in the ice bath, and carefully pour 550 ml of
|
|
concentrated nitric acid into the beaker.
|
|
|
|
2.) When the acid has cooled to below 20 , add small amounts of the
|
|
crushed fuel tablets to the beaker. The temperature will rise, and it
|
|
must be kept below 30 , or dire consequences could result. Stir the
|
|
mixture.
|
|
|
|
3.) Drop the temperature below zero degrees celsius, either by adding
|
|
more ice and salt to the old ice bath, or by creating a new ice bath.
|
|
Continue stirring the mixture, keeping the temperature below zero for
|
|
twenty minutes.
|
|
|
|
4.) Pour the mixture into 1 liter of crushed ice. Shake and stir the
|
|
mixture, and allow it to melt. Once it has melted, filter out the
|
|
crystals, and dispose of the corrosive liquid.
|
|
|
|
5.) Place the crystals into one half a liter of boiling distilled
|
|
water. Filter the crystals, and test them with the blue litmus paper.
|
|
Repeat steps 4 and 5 until the litmus paper remains blue. This will
|
|
make the crystals more stable and safe.
|
|
|
|
6.) Store the crystals wet until ready for use. Allow them to dry
|
|
completely before using them. R.D.X. is not stable enough to use alone
|
|
as an explosive.
|
|
|
|
A composition C-1 can be made to desensitize the explosive by mixing the
|
|
following ingredients. (measure by weight)
|
|
|
|
Material Percent
|
|
-------- -------
|
|
R.D.X. 88%
|
|
mineral oil 11%
|
|
lecithin 1%
|
|
|
|
Knead these material together in a plastic bag. This is one way to
|
|
desensitize it. There are other ways, but not always as simple.
|
|
|
|
A neat extra thing to do to RDX is to create HMX, a mix of RDX and TNT;
|
|
the ratio is 50/50, by weight. (Keep reading for the recipe for T.N.T.)
|
|
It is not as sensitive as unadultered RDX and it is almost as powerful
|
|
as straight RDX. By adding ammonium nitrate to the crystals of RDX
|
|
produced in step 5, it is possible to desensitize the R.D.X. and
|
|
increase its power, since ammonium nitrate is very insensitive and
|
|
powerful. Sodium or potassium nitrate could also be added; a small
|
|
quantity is sufficient to stabilize the RDX.
|
|
|
|
Ammonium Nitrate
|
|
|
|
There are two ways to procure Ammonium Nitrate: making it, or stealing
|
|
it. You can usually swipe it from any construction site, and if you've
|
|
got plenty of money to play with, just buy Instant Cold-Paks. A rather
|
|
powerful priming charge must be used, or a booster charge must be added.
|
|
The primer explodes, detonating the T.N.T., which detonates, sending
|
|
a tremendous shockwave through the ammonium nitrate, detonating it.
|
|
|
|
To make ammonium nitrate the hard way, follow these easy instructions:
|
|
Ammonium Nitrate - Fuel Oil Solution, also known as ANFO solves one of
|
|
the major problems with ammonium nitrate: its tendency to pick up water
|
|
vapor from the air. This absorption results in the explosive failing
|
|
to detonate when fired. This is less of a problem with ANFO because it
|
|
consists of 94% (by weight) ammonium nitrate mixed with 6% fuel oil
|
|
(kerosene). The kerosene helps keep the ammonium nitrate from absorbing
|
|
moisture from the air. This mixture, like straight ammonium nitrate, is
|
|
very insensitive to shock. It requires a very powerful shockwave to
|
|
detonate it, and is not very effective in small quantities. Usually a
|
|
booster charge, consisting of dynamite or a commercial cast charge, is
|
|
used for reliable detonation. Some commercial ANFO explosives have a
|
|
small amount of aluminum added, increasing the power and sensitivity.
|
|
These forms can often be reliably initiated by a No. 8 blasting cap.
|
|
These disadvantages are outweighed by two important advantages of
|
|
ammonium nitrate explosives- cost, and safety. In industrial blasting
|
|
these factors are much more important than in recreational activities,
|
|
and this has contributed to the popularity of these explosives. If the
|
|
explosive is initiated without confinement it not propagate well, and
|
|
most of the ammonium nitrate will burn and scatter, rather than
|
|
detonation as most other high explosives would. Ammonium nitrate
|
|
explosives are much cheaper per pound than most other explosives, with
|
|
the price per pound at about 1/10 that of dynamite. Straight ammonium
|
|
nitrate can be transported to the blasting site without the extract
|
|
expenses incurred when transporting high explosives. At the site, the
|
|
ammonium nitrate, in the form of small pellets, or prills, can be mixed
|
|
with the fuel oil just prior to blasting. If too much oil is added, the
|
|
power of the mixture will decrease, because the extra oil will absorb
|
|
some of the energy from the ammonium nitrate, and it tends to slow
|
|
propagation. If commercial fertilizer is used to provide the ammonium
|
|
nitrate, it must be crushed to be effective. This is because fertilizer
|
|
grade ammonium nitrate is coated with a water resistant substance which
|
|
helps keep moisture from decomposing the material. This material also
|
|
keeps the fuel oil from soaking into the ammonium nitrate. If
|
|
fertilizer grade material is poured into a vat of warm, liquified wax,
|
|
the coating will be displaced by the wax, which can also serve as fuel
|
|
for the ammonium nitrate.
|
|
|
|
T.N.T. (Tri Nitro Toluene)
|
|
|
|
T.N.T is simply, at the molecule level, a benzene ring with three
|
|
nitrogens attached and the toluene characteristics. In industrial
|
|
production TNT is made by a three step nitration process that is
|
|
designed to conserve the nitric and sulfuric acids, so that the only
|
|
resource consumed in quantity is the toluene. A person with limited
|
|
funds, however, should probably opt for the less economical two step
|
|
method. This process is performed by treating toluene with very strong
|
|
(fuming) sulfuric acid. Then, the sulfated toluene is treated with very
|
|
strong (fuming) nitric acid in an ice bath. Cold water is added to the
|
|
solution, and the T.N.T. is filtered out.
|
|
|
|
Potassium Chlorate (KClO3)
|
|
|
|
Potassium chlorate itself cannot be made in the home, but it can be
|
|
obtained from labs and chemical supply houses. It is moderately water
|
|
soluble, and will explode if brought into contact with sulfuric acid. It
|
|
is toxic and should not be brought into contact with organic matter,
|
|
including human skin. If potassium chlorate is mixed with a small
|
|
amount of vaseline, or other petroleum jelly, and a shockwave is passed
|
|
through it, the material will detonate, however it is not very powerful,
|
|
and it must be confined to explode it in this manner. The procedure for
|
|
making such an explosive is outlined below:
|
|
|
|
MATERIALS
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
- potassium chlorate -
|
|
- zip-lock plastic bag -
|
|
- wooden spoon -
|
|
- petroleum jelly -
|
|
- grinding bowl -
|
|
- wooden bowl -
|
|
|
|
1.) Grind the potassium chlorate in the grinding bowl carefully and
|
|
slowly, until the potassium chlorate is a very fine powder. The finer
|
|
the powder, the faster it will detonate, but it will also decompose more
|
|
quickly.
|
|
|
|
2.) Place the powder into the plastic bag. Put the petroleum jelly into
|
|
the plastic bag, getting as little on the sides of the bag as possible,
|
|
i.e. put the vaseline on the potassium chlorate powder.
|
|
|
|
3.) Close the bag, and knead the materials together until none of the
|
|
potassium chlorate is dry powder that does not stick to the main glob.
|
|
If necessary, add a bit more petroleum jelly to the bag.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Napalm
|
|
|
|
Well, most people know that the basic way to make napalm is: gasoline +
|
|
soap + fire = Chaos. But for a more indepth look, keep reading. Take a
|
|
bucket or a small bowl and fill it about 1/2 way with gasoline. Leave
|
|
it out in the sun to heat up. Also, it is possible to use a double
|
|
boiler and a hot water bath to heat it. Then take a bar of soap
|
|
(depending on how much gas you used you will need more soap so have
|
|
plenty) and using a knife with teeth scrape the soap into shreds and dump
|
|
into the gas. after every bar of soap stir it slowly and keep adding
|
|
soap until it becomes a thick sludge. Dont add too much or you'll either
|
|
ruin it, or cause an explosion. Always make sure there is a little x-tra
|
|
gasoline in it. However, do NOT touch it. It is highly corrosive. You
|
|
can also simply take the hot gasoline, and place a piece of styrofoam
|
|
in it. The styrofoam will burn up, and the gasoline will turn to napalm.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHEMICAL WEAPONS
|
|
|
|
Chlorine Bomb
|
|
|
|
Wrap some chlorine up in a paper towel and tie it up tight. Next, tape
|
|
it high on the inside of a Mayonnaise Jar (See illus). Fill the
|
|
bottom of the jar up (don't touch the paper!) with PineSol. Screw the
|
|
top back on and place it on the ground. When ready, knock the jar over
|
|
and run. It will explode, and release a lot of chlorine gas, which is
|
|
poisonous, and if ingested, is deadly.
|
|
|
|
A variant idea, is to do the same with a balloon instead of the
|
|
Mayonnaise Jar. Just send a few balloons to a reputed communist leader,
|
|
and either stretch em so they pop very soon after being delivered, or
|
|
poke small holes in them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
/========\ <- Lid
|
|
| *| <- Chlorine
|
|
| *| <-
|
|
| |
|
|
|'.'.'.'.| <- PineSol
|
|
|.'.'.'.'| <-
|
|
\________/ <-
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tear Gas
|
|
|
|
First, get some red pepper seeds, you can find them in a food
|
|
store or in a nursery for plants. You will need 4 ounces of them.
|
|
The next step is to grind them up in a blender or in a mortar.
|
|
|
|
Put the seeds into a coffe percolator with 16 ounces of distilled
|
|
alcohol and percolate for 1/2 hour.
|
|
|
|
After the 1/2 hour is up, you remove the alcohol liquid and what you
|
|
have left if a couple table spoons of red liquid. The red liquid is
|
|
added to 1/2 pint of mineral oil. You can get mineral oil at any drug
|
|
store. Once mixed, you have one nasty eye irritant and an effective
|
|
chemical crowd deterrent.
|
|
|
|
The way you use it is to put in a spray bottle and spray it at your
|
|
enemy. You could use the top from a Windex bottle, cut the tube short
|
|
enough and put it in a medicine bottle, to form a type of Mace tube.
|
|
That way it is smaller. If you have a pump sprinkler, you can make a
|
|
mass attack weapon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
V. The Enemies of the Right Wing
|
|
|
|
The following rendition of the Bill of Rights for a modern America was
|
|
found anonymously over internet.
|
|
|
|
"As we approach the 21st Century, it's time to bring the wording up to
|
|
date showing what we are and who we are.
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT I
|
|
|
|
Congress shall make no law establishing religion, but shall act as if
|
|
it did; and shall make no laws abridging the freedom of speech, unless
|
|
such speech can be construed as "commercial speech" or "irresponsible
|
|
speech" or "offensive speech;" or shall abridge the right of the
|
|
people to peaceably assemble where and when permitted; or shall
|
|
abridge the right to petition the government for a redress of
|
|
grievances, under proper procedures.
|
|
|
|
It shall be unlawful to cry "Fire!" in a theater occupied by three or
|
|
more persons, unless such persons shall belong to a class declared
|
|
Protected by one or more divisions of Federal, State or Local
|
|
government, in which case the number of persons shall be one or more.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT II
|
|
|
|
A well-regulated military force shall be maintained under control of
|
|
the President, and no political entity within the United States shall
|
|
maintain a military force beyond Presidential control. The right of
|
|
the people to keep and bear arms shall be determined by the Congress
|
|
and the States and the Cities and the Counties and the Towns (and
|
|
someone named Fred.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT III
|
|
|
|
No soldier shall, in time of peace, be quartered in any house without
|
|
the consent of the owner, unless such house is believed to have been
|
|
used, or believed may be used, for some purpose contrary to law or
|
|
public policy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT IV
|
|
|
|
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
|
|
and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures may not be
|
|
suspended except to protect public welfare. Any place or conveyance
|
|
shall be subject to search by law enforcement forces of any political
|
|
entity, and any such places or conveyances, or any property within
|
|
them, may be confiscated without judicial proceeding if believed to be
|
|
used in a manner contrary to law.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT V
|
|
|
|
Any person may be held to answer for a crime of any kind upon any
|
|
suspicion whatever; and may be put in jeopardy of life or liberty by
|
|
the state courts, by the federal judiciary, and while incarcerated;
|
|
and may be compelled to be a witness against himself by the forced
|
|
submission of his body or any portion thereof, and by testimony in
|
|
proceedings excluding actual trial. Private property forfeited under
|
|
judicial process shall become the exclusive property of the judicial
|
|
authority and shall be immune from seizure by injured parties.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT VI
|
|
|
|
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to
|
|
avoid prosecution by exhausting the legal process and its
|
|
practitioners. Failure to succeed shall result in speedy
|
|
plea-bargaining resulting in lesser charges. Convicted persons shall
|
|
be entitled to appeal until sentence is completed. It shall be
|
|
unlawful to bar or deter an incompetent person from service on a jury.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT VII
|
|
|
|
In civil suits, where a contesting party is a person whose private
|
|
life may interest the public, the right of trial in the Press shall
|
|
not be abridged.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT VIII
|
|
|
|
Sufficient bail may be required to ensure that dangerous persons
|
|
remain in custody pending trial. There shall be no right of the public
|
|
to be afforded protection from dangerous persons, and such protection
|
|
shall be dependent upon incarceration facilities available.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT IX
|
|
|
|
The enumeration in The Constitution of certain rights shall be
|
|
construed to deny or discourage others which may from time to time be
|
|
extended by the branches of Federal, State or Local government, unless
|
|
such rights shall themselves become enacted by Amendment.
|
|
|
|
AMENDMENT X
|
|
|
|
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution
|
|
shall be deemed to be powers residing in persons holding appointment
|
|
therein through the Civil Service, and may be delegated to the States
|
|
and local Governments as determined by the public interest. The
|
|
public interest shall be determined by the Civil Service."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The following is a question taken from the Combat Arms Survey given to
|
|
Marines at 29 Palms in California:
|
|
|
|
"I would fire upon U.S. citizens who refuse or resist confiscation
|
|
of firearms banned by the U.S. Government"
|
|
|
|
Further information can be found in Conservative Chronicle, Vol 9, No
|
|
44, Nov 2, 1994, page 11. "What became of liberal's devotion to
|
|
privacy?" by Phyllis Schlafly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are several groups that right wingers must take extreme caution
|
|
around, and must be willing to act against. They are not listed in
|
|
any specific order, but you can tell which are more virulent than
|
|
others. To begin with, you must realize that the NRA description
|
|
of federal agents as "jackbooted thugs" isnt so far off...
|
|
|
|
ATF - Does anyone ever remember the creation of the ATF? Why?
|
|
Because the ATF is nothing better than the Gestapo. It was
|
|
designed to be used as a violent military squad against
|
|
individuals who refuse to follow Big Brother into Armageddon.
|
|
There is nothing wrong with shooting ATF agents. (Keep in
|
|
mind, i'm not sanctioning violence, i'm stating personal
|
|
opinion.) Have no regrets about this. They are responsible
|
|
for the massacre at Waco, the killing of Randall Weaver's
|
|
wife, and various other episodes. The ATF would better be called
|
|
the KGB. If our founding fathers saw the ATF, they'd ask where
|
|
their red coats were. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and
|
|
Firearms has no business meddling in anything but officework.
|
|
|
|
|
|
FBI - The Minutemen once suggested that the FBI be renamed the FIB,
|
|
Federal Investigation Bureau. The FBI are very similar to the
|
|
ATF, and cannot be trusted. They were also parts of the
|
|
debacles involving the ATF, and are at least guilty by
|
|
association. The F.B.I. was the agency also responsible at
|
|
Waco, the Weaver case, and various other episodes. They are
|
|
essentially a National Police Force, something that is fundamental
|
|
to undermining a popular uprising or anti-government feeling.
|
|
And they are certainly well described as "jackbooted thugs", as
|
|
the NRA called it, and called it well.
|
|
|
|
ATTU - These are individuals that are suspiciously hired by the
|
|
Treasury Department (since when did political extremism be
|
|
involved with the Treasury?) are there for the sole purpose
|
|
of conducting espionage activities against right-wing groups
|
|
and entrap people to convict in an unjust trial.
|
|
|
|
Secret Service - There is but one thing to say. It is not only by
|
|
coincidence that their initials are SS. They are
|
|
currently protected a socialist/communist dictator
|
|
who intends on extending the corrupting force of
|
|
liberal politics on us. The Secret Service is meant
|
|
to shoot anyone who may threaten that evil individual.
|
|
Therefore, it is easy to see how they are the enemy.
|
|
|
|
CPUSA - The communist party of the United States of America has not
|
|
only been proved to be a blatantly subversive espionage ring,
|
|
but it has been proved so by its own documents! The Yale Press,
|
|
a notoriously liberal college printing group, even released a
|
|
number of documents taken from CPUSA archives in Moscow directly
|
|
indicating sabotage and espionage on the part of CPUSA members.
|
|
These documents also indicate that much of the so-called "red
|
|
paranoia" in the 50's and 60's was "EXTREMELY WELL FOUNDED."
|
|
|
|
CIA - This agency is basically the GRU of the United States of America.
|
|
The government has expressed public doubt at times that the CIA
|
|
even really answers to them. Most believe that much of the info
|
|
that the CIA collects, it keeps for its own uses. The CIA is a
|
|
corrupt government institution that is literally independent from
|
|
the normal corrupted bureaucracy. In times of strife, it could
|
|
be very well used against the honest citizens of the United States.
|
|
|
|
United Nations - The following was taken from a John Birch Society
|
|
Pamphlet titled "A Dozen Good Reasons to Get Us Out of
|
|
the United Nations"
|
|
|
|
"More and more Americans are coming to the chilling
|
|
realization that U.S. membership in the United Nations
|
|
poses a very real threat to our survival as a free
|
|
and independent nation. Here are some good reasons to
|
|
be concerned:
|
|
|
|
1.) The UN's basic philosophy is both anti-American and
|
|
pro-totalitarian. Our Declaration of Independence
|
|
proclaims the 'self-evident' truth that 'men ... are
|
|
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
|
|
rights.' But, in its Covenant on Civil and Political
|
|
Rights, the UN ignores God's existence, implies that it
|
|
grants rights, and then repeatedly claims power 'as
|
|
provided by law' to cancel them out of existence. If
|
|
any government can place restrictions on such
|
|
fundamental rights as freedom of speech, the right to
|
|
keep and bear arms, freedoms of the press, association
|
|
movement, and religion, soon there will be no such
|
|
freedoms.
|
|
|
|
2.) The UN was founded by Communists and CFR members
|
|
whose common goal was a socialist world government.
|
|
Sixteen key U.S. officials who shaped the policies
|
|
leading to the creation of the UN were later exposed in
|
|
sworn testimony as secret communists. These included
|
|
Alger Hiss, chief planner of the 1945 founding
|
|
conference, and the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
|
|
Harry Dexter White. The Soviet Union under Stalin and
|
|
the entire CPUSA apparatus worked tirelessly to launch
|
|
the UN. Since its beginning in 1921, the Council on
|
|
Foreign Relations (CFR) has always worked for world
|
|
government. The key CFR founder, Edward Mandell House,
|
|
in his book, Philip Dru:Administrator, called for
|
|
'Socialism as dreamed of by Karl Marx...' The CFR was
|
|
an early promoter of the UN, and 43 members of the U.S.
|
|
delegation at the UN founding conference were or would
|
|
become CFR members.
|
|
|
|
3.) The UN has always chosen socialist one-worlders for
|
|
leaders. The Secretary-General at the UN founding
|
|
conference was Soviet Spy Alger Hiss. He was followed
|
|
as Secretary-General by Norwegian socialist Trygve Lie,
|
|
Swedish socialist Dag Hammarskjold, Burmese Marxist U
|
|
Thant, Austrian former Nazi Kurt Waldheim, Peruvian
|
|
socialist Javier Perez deCuellar, and Egyptian Socialist
|
|
Boutros Boutros-Ghali. Each has consistently used the
|
|
full resources of the UN to promote Communist and
|
|
socialist causes around the world. The Socialist
|
|
International (which proudly traces its origins to the
|
|
First International headed by Karl Marx) today claims
|
|
tens of millions of members in 54 countries. At its
|
|
1962 Congress, it declared: 'The ultimate objective of
|
|
the parties of the Socialist International is nothing
|
|
less than world government... Membership of the United
|
|
Nations must be made universal...' Almost all of the
|
|
UN's 'independent' commissions for the last thirty years
|
|
have been headed by members of the Socialist
|
|
International.
|
|
|
|
4.) The UN seeks power to control the environment,
|
|
population, children... the world. Both the 1972 UN
|
|
Environmental Program and the 1992 UN Conference on
|
|
Environment and Development laid plans to whip up
|
|
widespread environmental concerns (some exaggerated,
|
|
many completely fabricated). These concerns would then
|
|
be used as justification for increasing UN authority on
|
|
environmental issues. The statements and publications
|
|
of these UN programs leave little doubt that their goal
|
|
is a world government with the power to cancel national
|
|
sovereignty, regulate economic activity, and control the
|
|
human race -- all, of course, under the banner of
|
|
'protecting the environment.' In late 1994, UN planners
|
|
meeting in Egypt approved a 20-year, $17 billion plan to
|
|
'stabilize' the world's population. The UN's goal is to
|
|
reduce population selectively by encouraging abortion,
|
|
sterilization, and controlled human breeding. The UN
|
|
Convention on the Rights of the Child also claims power
|
|
not only to grant rights but also to cancel them 'as
|
|
provided by law.' It claims that governments must
|
|
guarantee children 'freedom of expression... freedom to
|
|
seek, receive, and impart information... freedom of
|
|
thought, conscience, and religion,' regardless of the
|
|
wishes of their parents.
|
|
|
|
5.) The UN Charter outlines the path to world tyranny.
|
|
After giving lip service about not intervening 'in
|
|
matters which are essentially within the domestic
|
|
jurisdiction of any state...', the UN Charter continues
|
|
'but this principle shall not prejudice the application
|
|
of enforcement measures under Chapter VII.' Chapter
|
|
VII discusses sanctions and boycotts, but if these are
|
|
decided to "be inadequate, it may take such action by
|
|
air, sea, or land forces as may be necessary to maintain
|
|
or restore international peace and security.' The UN
|
|
used this broad assertion of authority as the pretext
|
|
for its armed intervention in the domestic turmoil in
|
|
Somalia and Haiti.
|
|
|
|
6.) The UN is building its own army to enforce its will.
|
|
In 1992, UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali,
|
|
fulfilling a directive from the UN Security Council,
|
|
unveiled An Agenda For Peace, a plan to strengthen UN
|
|
'peackeeping' capabilities. The plan calls for armed
|
|
forces to be made available to the UN 'on a permanent
|
|
basis.' It ominously warns, 'The time of absolute and
|
|
exclusive sovereignty has passed' and proceeds to name
|
|
a long list of 'risks for stability' that would be used
|
|
to justify use of the 'permanent' UN army to enforce
|
|
its will. Incredibly, U.S. leaders are using America's
|
|
military to pave the way for this UN army. In Bosnia,
|
|
Somalia, Haiti, and elsewhere, foreign UN commanders
|
|
have controlled our troops. When 15 Americans were
|
|
killed over Iraq in mid-1994, Vice-President Gore
|
|
extended condolences 'to the families of those who died
|
|
in the service of the United Nations.' Even more
|
|
incredibly, it has been the official policy of the U.S.
|
|
government since 1961 to disarm America and create a UN
|
|
army. This policy concludes: 'progressive controlled
|
|
disarmament would proceed to the point where no nation
|
|
would have the military power to challenge the
|
|
progressively strengthened UN Peace Force.' (See State
|
|
Department publication 7277: Freedom from War.)
|
|
|
|
7.) The UN doesn't settle disputes -- it makes them
|
|
worse! Our ambassador to the UN in 1982, although a UN
|
|
supporter, admitted, 'The UN has become an arena in
|
|
which countries are drawn into problems they might never
|
|
have become involved in.' Ask yourself: Should
|
|
Seychelles or Benin or Guyana or Barbados have to take
|
|
sides in a clash that breaks out on the opposite side
|
|
of the world? When centuries-old animosities erupt in
|
|
the former Yugoslavia, why does the UN inject its
|
|
presence with troops, blockades, bombing, and a parade
|
|
of speeches? American troops serving as globocops for
|
|
the UN become targets for criminals and terrorists. In
|
|
1983, 241 U.S. Marines were blown to bits at the Beirut
|
|
Airport. Five years later, a U.S. Marine Lieutenant
|
|
Colonel was kidnapped and eventually murdered by Arab
|
|
terrorists while in a UN unit in Lebanon (he was unarmed
|
|
as required by the UN). The UN 'peacekeeping mission'
|
|
in Somalia cost the lives of another 36 Americans in
|
|
1993.
|
|
|
|
8.) The UN ignores Communist atrocities but targets
|
|
non-communist nations and leaders. When Soviet tanks
|
|
rolled into Hungary in the 1950's, when the Chinese
|
|
communists were murdering Tibetans in the 1960's, when
|
|
the Soviets were butchering civilians in Afghanistan in
|
|
the 1970's and 80's, when Chechnya was brutalized by
|
|
the Russians in the 1990's, the UN did nothing! But
|
|
the UN declared tiny Rhodesia 'a threat to international
|
|
peace' in the 1960's, enabling pro-communist terrorist
|
|
Robert Mugabe to seize power. And it was a UN-led
|
|
campaign that brought self-described communist and
|
|
convicted terrorist Nelson Mandela to power in South
|
|
Africa in the 1990's.
|
|
|
|
9.) The UN embraces communist China -- history's most
|
|
murderous criminal regime. In 1949, anti-communist
|
|
Nationalist China, one of the UN's founding members, was
|
|
forced from the mainland to Taiwan by the Communists.
|
|
In 1971, the UN expelled Taiwan and embraced the brutal
|
|
Red Chinese government -- a government responsible for
|
|
over 35 million murders. When the vote admitting Red
|
|
China was announced, UN delegates danced in the aisles
|
|
to show their contempt for America and their joy at the
|
|
triumph of Red China.
|
|
|
|
10.) The UN is an amoral cesspool filled with perverts
|
|
and fat cats. In 1993, the UN Economic and Social
|
|
Council granted consultant status to the International
|
|
Gay and Lesbian Association which includes the North
|
|
American Man/Boy Love Association (advocates child
|
|
molestation) and the Dutch group Vereniging Martijn
|
|
(which also promotes use of children as sex objects).
|
|
In 1988, the top Belgian UN Children's Fund (UNICEF)
|
|
official was one of a group convicted of running a child
|
|
sex right. Moral bankruptcy is commonplace in UN
|
|
operations. In Zimbabwe, UNICEF-donated equipment
|
|
helped terrorists seize power. In Vietnam, the
|
|
Communists received $13 million from UNICEF while untold
|
|
thousands of boat people fled for their lives. Fat
|
|
Cats? UN employees are paid 40% more than comparable
|
|
U.S. workers, have subsidized rent, take extravagant
|
|
vacations, are exempt from income taxes, avoid sales
|
|
taxes in UN stores, eat in discounted UN restaurants,
|
|
and park in discounted UN garages. An ex-UNICEF
|
|
official confirmed that 'pampered and cosseted staffs'
|
|
of various aid agencies 'absorb 80% of all UN
|
|
expenditures.'
|
|
|
|
11.) America supplies the money, the UN then finances
|
|
tyrants and assorted enemies of the U.S., and conditions
|
|
in the nations 'aided' grow worse. U.S. taxpayers pay
|
|
25% of the UN budget plus 31% of the UN special-agency
|
|
budgets. Additional billions of our dollars go to the
|
|
IMF, World Bank, and other UN-related lending agencies
|
|
where they have been used for incredibly wasteful and
|
|
subversive UN projects. (Not suprising since these
|
|
agencies were designed by Soviety agent Harry Dexter
|
|
White and Fabian Socialist John Maynard Keynes.)
|
|
Socialist International spokesman Hilary Marquand aptly
|
|
described the IMF as 'in essence a Socialist
|
|
conception.' World Bank 'aid' funds went to brutal
|
|
Marxist dictator Mengistu while he was causing large-
|
|
scale starvation and death in Ethiopia; to Tanzanian
|
|
dictator Julius Nyerere as he drove peasants off their
|
|
land and burned their huts; and to the Vietnamese
|
|
Communists, sending thousands of boat people into the
|
|
sea. Even Newsweek Magazine concluded that the UN's
|
|
foreign aid programs tend 'to prop up incompetent
|
|
governments or subsidize economies so they can never
|
|
stand on their own.'
|
|
|
|
12.) The UN is a war organization, NOT a peace
|
|
organization. Article 42 of the UN Charter claims
|
|
authority to 'take such action by air, sea or land
|
|
forces as may be necessary to maintain or restore
|
|
international peace and security.' But the UN
|
|
definition of 'peace' is never given. Tyrannical
|
|
regimes throughout history have defined 'peace' as the
|
|
absence of all opposition. To achieve 'peace' in
|
|
Katanga in 1961, UN planes bombed hospitals, schools,
|
|
administrative buildings, and private homes. Katanga
|
|
was an anti-communist province of the Belgian Congo
|
|
seeking freedom from the Communist-controlled central
|
|
government. The UN is not now, and has never been, a
|
|
peace organization. It will use whatever military
|
|
power it is given to force all nations of the world to
|
|
submit."
|
|
|
|
Government - Government bureaucracy agencies are in general enemies of
|
|
the right and of freedom. They restrict Americans unfairly
|
|
and they steal our tax dollars and waste them. Civil
|
|
service employees are people that have ridden in on the
|
|
coattails of corrupt politicians, and are therefore to be
|
|
considered the enemy as well.
|
|
|
|
|
|
WHO IS NOT THE ENEMY?
|
|
|
|
The National Guard - Never shoot a National Guardsman. The National
|
|
Guard is made up of almost completely civilians,
|
|
A Minutemen bulletin in New Jersey instructed
|
|
the following:
|
|
|
|
"UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES TRY ANY DOORSTEP HEROICS
|
|
BY SHOOTING IT OUT WITH THOSE WHO COME FOR YOUR
|
|
WEAPON! Most likely the National Guard will be
|
|
the unlucky ones selected for gun roundup. DON'T
|
|
SHOOT NATIONAL GUARDSMEN. Many of them are
|
|
already in our organization and many others are
|
|
fully sympathetic with our position..."
|
|
|
|
The Armed Forces - Again, for the most part, our Armed Forces are
|
|
friendly to the right-wing. The high command tends
|
|
to stick with the government, but lower officers
|
|
and GI's are either friendly to the right wing, or
|
|
very pliable to the position. Even divisions such
|
|
as the Green Berets who are supposed to be die hard
|
|
government warriors are friends to the right.
|
|
|
|
Local Police - To take an old addage from the right, "Support Your
|
|
Local Police." No matter what group you are considering,
|
|
almost all of them condemn violence against local police
|
|
forces. The Police and local law enforcement in general
|
|
can be a valuable tool to have on our side.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
PRISONER OF WAR
|
|
|
|
If you should get caught by these government thugs, you must know what to
|
|
do. Just state your name, rank (if in a militia, but not the militia
|
|
name), or social security number. According to Minutemen tests with truth
|
|
serums, for the most part, they dont work. You must be able to withstand
|
|
heavy questioning. According to Minutemen testing data, a person will
|
|
tell more under 1 hour of grueling interrogation than under 5 hours of
|
|
truth serum.
|
|
|
|
What happens if they give you a lie detector test? Well, there are
|
|
several easy ways to beat it. To the extent that the polygraph works at
|
|
all, it works because people believe it does. Many criminals confess
|
|
during polygraph examinations. Many employees are more honest for fear
|
|
of periodic screenings. But a dummy polygraph that hummed and scribbled
|
|
preprogrammed tracings would be no less effective in these instances.
|
|
David Thoreson Lykken estimates that lie-control polygraph tests are about
|
|
70 percent accurate. (Remember, though, that choosing "heads" or "tails"
|
|
of a flipped coin can be accurate 50 percent of the time.) Accuracy of
|
|
70 percent is not impressive, but it is high enough to talk meaningfully
|
|
of beating a polygraph test. Just by having read this far, you stand
|
|
a greater chance of beating a polygraph test. You won't be wowed by the
|
|
fancy dials and pretests. You realize that the polygraph's powers are
|
|
limited. There are two additional techniques for beating the polygraph.
|
|
The more obvious is to learn how to repress psychological responses to
|
|
stressful questions. Some people are good at this; others are not. Most
|
|
people can get better by practicing with a polygraph. Of course, this
|
|
training requires a polygraph, and polygraphs are expensive. The opposite
|
|
approach is to pick out the control questions in the pretest discussion
|
|
and exaggerate reactions to these questions during the test. When the
|
|
control-question responses are greater than the relevant-question
|
|
responses, the polygrapher must acquit the subject. Because breathing is
|
|
one of the parameters measured, taking a deep breath and holding it will
|
|
record as an abnormal response. Flexing the arm muscles under the cuff
|
|
distorts the blood-pressure reading. But a suspicious polygrapher may
|
|
spot either ruse. A more subtle method is to hide a tack in one shoe.
|
|
Stepping on the tack during the control questions produces stress
|
|
reactions with no outward signs of fidgeting. Biting the tongue
|
|
forcefully also works.
|
|
|
|
Finally, do not answer any questions, or submit to any tests without your
|
|
lawyer present. This is very important. There are several Patriot
|
|
Defense Funds out there in many militia groups that help support legal
|
|
fees for defendants belonging to the right wing if they have trouble
|
|
paying for top class legal support.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VI. Final Notes
|
|
|
|
For any additional information, there are several sources to receive data
|
|
for technical, ideological, or other subjects. Rush Limbaugh has a
|
|
fairly good show on Sunday mornings. Gordon Liddy has an excellent right
|
|
wing radio show, that is very worth listening to. (Liddy was one of the
|
|
men involved with the actual Watergate breakin). The Anarchists Cookbook
|
|
can be purchased from many mail-order stores and bookstores. There are
|
|
other manuals which are very valuable for technical support: The
|
|
Renegade Cookbook, the Big Book of Mischief, the Home Defense Guide,
|
|
Kitchen Improved Explosives, etc. Remember: the key to freedom is
|
|
information... get informed!
|
|
|
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
|
|
|
Well, i'm sad to say this is the end. But, with your continued support and
|
|
interest, further versions of this manual will be published. If we get a
|
|
big enough correspondence, perhaps a bound and illustrated version can be
|
|
produced. Until then, if you have any articles for consideration, comments,
|
|
or questions regarding this manual, please email polaris@np.newpower.com.
|
|
|
|
Hopefully, we shall soon establish a page for this document and other DiP
|
|
productions. If you want to post this file on any pages, or whatever, go
|
|
ahead, so long as you inform me where it is, and i can make sure it is being
|
|
used properly. Keep an eye out, and happy hunting!
|
|
|
|
And always remember the words of Martin Luther King Jr.:
|
|
|
|
"We shall overcome, we shall overcome..."
|
|
|