Now, let the fun begin.



Hitler's skull fragment was reportedly used by Stalin as an ashtray.
Okay, even we're a bit embarrassed by that last one.





It was only a matter of days before a Creator calling himself "Exterminance" took a trick out of Matt Hale's old playbook [we should mention that Noble, who not long ago was posting online as "Exterminance" was not a member of the Creativity Movement]. He posted an address, cell and telephone number for an Anthony Evola outside Chicago, "In Case Anyone Wants To Say Hi." Within hours, threatening messages had started to pop up on Anthony Evola's answering machine.
Just one problem: It was the wrong Anthony Evola.
Given this reality, we have to wonder what Billy means when he writes, "only if they taste their own medicine can they be made to leave decent human beings alone." What medicine did Mr. Evola have to taste, Billy?
We had mentioned some time ago that Craig Cobb was currently living in Vancouver after having been deported from Estonia where he had resided for a few years. Cobb is infamous for a few reasons, including his vitriolic hatred towards minorities on the Internet, his habit of attending events where he records the reaction of participants to his hateful rhetoric (something he did recently in Vancouver, though apparently without the commentary) and, most significantly, his creation and participation on Podblanc, a site that glorifies violence and murder committed against minorities.On April 17, a gay woman was attacked and seriously injured in Edmonton by a group of young men hurling homophobic slurs. Still more disturbing is the fact that police waited five days before opening a case file on the assault and launching a formal investigation.
EDMONTON — The Edmonton Police Service Hate Unit is investigating after an Edmonton woman says she was kicked in the face when she and her friends refused the advances of a group of young men.
The Saturday night encounter turned violent after one of the women said they weren’t interested because they are gay.
The young men began to badger the women using homophobic slurs.
Shannon Barry and her friend Meghan Fox confronted the group. Barry says she was drunk and doesn’t remember much — just stepping out of a cab to walk the last few blocks to her friend’s Ritchie-area home after last call at Buddy’s, a gay bar on Jasper Avenue.
Fox remembers Barry stumbling to the pavement.
“When she went down to one knee, the one man wound up and kicked her square in the face,” Fox says. “It was enough to knock her out. I thought her neck was broken. I thought she was dead.”
The force of the blow broke Barry’s jaw and the bone below one eye socket.
“The impact pushed it into my face and collapsed my cheekbone,” Barry says.
The 31-year-old has since undergone reconstructive surgery. Two metal plates were placed in her face and she was told she may have permanent nerve damage.
“I screamed: ‘What are you doing. You just kicked a girl.’” Fox says. “The fact is that I’m still convinced that the one guy thought Shannon was a man.”
Barry was wearing short hair and baggy clothing that night.
The young men fled as Fox called 9-1-1.
As of Thursday there was no word of any arrests in the attack. The women describe the group of three or four as younger, perhaps in their teens.
“It’s a lot to process. It doesn’t really compute. I’m absolutely shocked by the brutality of it, that he kicked me when I was on my knees, that he took a running start like he was trying to make a field goal with my head,” Barry says. “Even with as much hate as I have in me right now, if I met him on the street today, I would never treat somebody … (she trails off). It’s just not in me to be capable of that kind of violence.”
Barry is upset at the police response to the attack. She says she had little contact with police until Thursday.
Barry wonders why such a serious assault file wasn’t dealt with sooner.
“I didn’t even interact with the police the next day. I didn’t even get a case file until (Thursday) evening,” she says. “They wanted to assure me that everything was being done that could be done to find these boys, that the case is being taken seriously, that it’s being treated as a hate crime, and I appreciate that, I do,” Barry says. “But as far as the way I was treated up until now, it’s inexcusable.”
Police Chief Mike Boyd would not confirm reports that the investigation into the incident actually began Thursday — five days after the alleged incident took place.
“Our Hate Crime Unit is interviewing all of the people who were involved,” Boyd said. “I’m doing a review of the details and when I get all of the facts and circumstances then I’ll be able to say more about what happened.”
Emerging details about the attack are revealing troubling information about the way the Edmonton Police Service responded, reportedly disregarding standard procedure:
“Police confirmed they began investigating the incident only after a CBC News report came out Wednesday. It detailed how the officer who responded to the women's 911 call had not followed the standard police practice of calling in a dog team or helicopter to search for the attackers, who had fled after the assault.
The officer also did not interview any of the witnesses and had not filed a report, a breach of police policy.”
An internal investigation into the police response is being conducted. The woman’s attackers are still being sought.
Additional Links:
• Victim says Edmonton cops delayed hate crime probeCross-burning victims moving from Hants County
The interracial couple targeted in a cross burning in February are leaving Hants County — saying their car being burnt to its frame last weekend was the final straw.
Michelle Lyon said the move was prompted by fear for the safety of her family after her car was fire bombed early Saturday morning. The RCMP have made no arrests in relation to the incident and are asking anyone with information to contact police.
“For safety reasons, I think it’s just best that we just leave,” said Lyon, who is white. “And for piece of mind.”
In February, a cross was burned outside Lyon’s residence, where she lives with her partner Shayne Howe, who is black. The incident brought national attention to the question of race relations in Nova Scotia.
Two distant relatives of Lyon’s have been charged with committing a hate crime in relation to the incident.
Justin Rehberg, 19, will be going to trial Oct. 18 in provincial court in Windsor after pleading not guilty this week to the charges he faces.
His brother, Nathan Rehberg, 20, will enter a plea May 18.
“When they were caught, we thought, ‘We can get over this,’” said Lyon, referring to the arrests of Justin and Nathan Rehberg. “It gradually started going back to the routine of things, and to a normalcy ... Tensions were going down, at a low. Then my car gets burned, and then boom — we’re right back where we were when this all started.”
Lyon is not sure where her family will re-locate, but has certainly ruled out one area.
“It will not be in Hants County. We will not re-locate in Hants County,” she proclaimed. “We will be going away.”
And within hours of the news that the couple’s car had been torched, what does Justin Rehberg do? Why, he does what any person facing serious charges for hate-related arson would do – he joins a Facebook group created by a mysterious “John Smith” that instructs the couple to “STFU” and includes the taunting description, “Adding fuel to the fire”:
Police are currently investigating the car burning. Perhaps some of the Rehberg brothers’ friends deserve a closer look.
Victoria lawyer Doug Christie has lost another appeal of a decision by the Law Society of B.C. that he committed professional misconduct and should pay a fine of $2,500, plus costs of $20,000.
The B.C. Court of Appeal dismissed Christie's appeal in a judgment released this week. The matter stems from a 2006 complaint against Christie, lodged by another lawyer, in connection with three subpoenas the society said Christie issued improperly in 2003.
In its original December 2007 decision, a society panel found Christie altered a subpoena so it appeared to compel the recipients to provide documents. Christie said the document had been typed up by his client's husband because Christie's wife, who was also his secretary, was ill. Christie said he saw the error in the document but did not change it. He argued the error was inadvertent and the result of severe stress he was going through.
Regardless, the law society ruled in 2007 that Christie acted unprofessionally. Christie paid the $2,500 fine but appealed the costs. In 2009, the society reviewed the decision and confirmed it. He then appealed to the B.C. Court of Appeal.


Oliver Moore
Halifax — From Tuesday's Globe and Mail Published on Monday, Apr. 19, 2010 8:28PM EDTLast updated on Monday, Apr. 19, 2010 8:52PM EDT
A mixed-race couple nearly driven from their Nova Scotia community when a cross was burned on their lawn is sick of living in fear and looking to leave after their car was found in flames on the weekend.
“This is strike two, we’re not waiting for strike three,” Michelle Lyon said Monday in a telephone interview from her home near Windsor. “When those two were arrested, we thought that was it. But now this.”
Ms. Lyon spoke shortly after returning from court, where one of the men charged in the cross-burning entered a plea of not guilty.
The lawyer for 19-year-old Justin Rehberg pleaded not guilty on his behalf, The Canadian Press reported, and his trial was set for October. His brother, 20-year-old Nathan Rehberg, will enter a plea next month. The men, who share a great-grandparent with Ms. Lyon, remain free on bail.
Defence counsel for the brothers could not be reached after court for comment.
RCMP spokeswoman Sergeant Brigdit Leger said that the vehicle fire on Saturday is being probed as suspicious. Investigators have not ruled out the possibility of a hate crime.
“At this point in time, we have not eliminated any possible motivation for this incident,” she said.
Ms. Lyon, who is white, and her fiancé, Shayne Howe, the only black man in tiny Poplar Grove, say they were awakened in February by shouts of “die nigger die.” They say a noose was dangling from a flaming cross on their lawn, but whoever did it was gone by the time Mr. Howe could get outside.
The incident shocked many in the province, as did the reaction of some prominent members of the black community who said they were not surprised at such overt hostility. One academic called it tangible evidence of the attitudes that cause some black people to call the province “the Mississippi of the North.”
It’s a legacy Nova Scotia is trying to shake. In February, Halifax apologized for the destruction of Africville, a black community in the city’s north end. And last week, the province offered a rare free pardon to Viola Desmond, who was arrested in 1946 and is sometimes called Canada’s Rosa Parks.
Mr. Howe and Ms. Lyon received a wave of support in person and through social media. The outpouring helped persuade them to stay in the town, but the second incident has renewed their desire to move to protect their children.
“You shouldn’t have to live in fear, the fear [of] what’s next” Ms. Lyon said Monday. “I built this house, so I have real emotional attachment. To make the decision to leave, I had to do that for the kids’ safety.”
She stressed that she didn’t want “to point fingers” at the alleged perpetrators of the earlier incident. But she can’t help but notice similarities.
“It’s hard to think it couldn’t be connected,” she said.
Ms. Lyons said that her Toyota Echo was being worked on to make it road-worthy and was parked in a relative’s driveway near her house. No one local could fail to know it was her car, she added, being the only such vehicle around and bearing a personalized licence plate.
“The family member called me and said, ‘your car’s on fire, you’d better get down here right away,’ ” she said. “The gas tank blew, it could’ve been potentially a very dangerous situation.”
That was in the early hours of Saturday. The car was burned so badly, she said, that firefighters were asking her what model it was.
And how do the, "White Pride not hate" crowd on Stormfront react? We think you've played this game long enough that you really don't need to guess:
As before, if anyone has any information, we would ask that it be reported to the authorities.







We don't think for a moment that these clowns would be able to overthrow a school board meeting, but given the pipe bomb incident in November 2009, as well as the assaults that Aryan Guard members have engaged in, we can't exactly say that these people weren't dangerous to individuals.