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- From: pierce@lanai.cs.ucla.edu (Brad Pierce)
- Subject: Idahoan report on Gritz
- Message-ID: <1993Jan24.193949.13678@cs.ucla.edu>
- Summary: Growing Gritz visibility in and around Idaho Falls
- Sender: usenet@cs.ucla.edu (Mr Usenet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: lanai.cs.ucla.edu
- Organization: UCLA, Computer Science Department
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 93 19:39:49 GMT
- Lines: 186
-
- ------------------ FORWARDED POSTING -------------------------------
- From: dyurman@igc.apc.org (Dan Yurman)
- Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
- Subject: Report on Gritz from Idaho
- Message-ID: <1299600161@igc.apc.org>
- Date: 24 Jan 93 06:01:00 GMT
-
- There have been numerous postings on the net about the Populist
- Party, James "Bo" Gritz, and their neo-Nazi connections. Some
- people don't believe Gritiz is real or that his affiliations make
- sense. Since I live in Eastern Idaho I thought I'd present some
- facts for readers on this subject.
-
- There is a growing visibility in the 10 county area surrounding
- Idaho Falls, ID, for the political campaigns of James "Bo" Gritz
- in Eastern Idaho. Evidence of this is shown by numerous roadside
- signs and flyers delivered door-to-door. Gritz is a neo-Nazi
- hiding behind an ultra conservative campaign platform promoted by
- the Populist Party. Also, he previously campaigned with
- Louisiana's David Duke. Gritz is a former US Army Green Beret Lt.
- Colonel, now about age 50.
-
- In addition to his previous association with Duke, Gritz has
- attracted some strange supporters who include "new age" believers
- deeply into alien / UFO conspiracy theories. They think the US
- government has a secret military base in New Mexico which is the
- site of visits from hostile aliens from another planet. I am not
- making any of this up.
-
- More than a Nut Case
-
- Gritz is regarded by some in the local political establishment as
- a nut case, but his supporters are noisy. In July 1992 about a
- dozen Gritz supporters showed up at and disrupted a outdoor
- charity event for the local greenbelt in Idaho Falls soliciting
- donations for Gritiz's presidential campaign. Also, they have
- the funds to rent the civic auditorium, which seats 900, four-six
- times a year for programs.
-
- A lot of people don't know who he is, and assume he is just one
- of many fringe candidates running on a soapbox for president.
- However, Eastern Idaho as a rural, agricultural community is very
- conservative, and there are places where Gritz finds fertile
- ground. Readers are a referred to the Washington Post for
- 10/27/92, Pg. C1, which contains a first-hand report by reporter
- Paul Hendrickson on the extent of the activities of the Arayan
- Nation in Idaho.
-
- Opposition to Gritz
-
- Opposition to Gritz includes a August 1992 editorial which
- appeared in the Twin Falls, Idaho Times-News. It was reprinted
- by the Idaho Falls Post-Register. The editorial is significant
- because it identifies the code words used by Gritz and his
- supporters for their anti-semitic views. These code words are
- attacks on the "new world order" and on the "power" of the
- Federal Reserve System.
-
- Gritz and the Weaver Siege
-
- Events taking place in the "Panhandle" region of Idaho near the
- Canadian Border in September 1992 had echoes in the pages of the
- local newspaper -- the Idaho Falls Post Register. Hayden Lake is
- the home of the Arayan Nation. One neo-Nazi living in the rugged
- area of nearby Naples was wanted as a fugitive on gun charges by
- Federal Marshals who surrounded his home. In the ensuing gun
- fire, a Federal Marshal, Randy Weaver's wife, and Weaver's
- 13-year old son were killed. Three others were wounded. Bo
- Grtiz was instrumental in convincing Weaver to give up his
- weapons. The siege and arrest of Randy Weaver in Naples, Idaho,
- was the subject of enormous media coverage.
-
- Newspaper Editorials: Pro & Con
-
- Yet, Post Register reporter Stuart Engler wrote that Bo Gritz,
- "picked up political mileage out of the national exposure he
- received in convincing fugitive Randy Weaver to put down his
- weapons." However, when Gritz return to meet with a group a
- Weaver supporters he gave them a Nazi salute. This event was
- photographed by a reporter from a Seattle, WA, TV station. This
- single act, more than any other, galvanized the Post Register to
- write an a flaming editorial that, "no presiential candiate, from
- any party, has any business giving a Nazi salute to anyone for
- any reason."
-
- An extraordinary guest editorial 9/13/92, by Chip Berlet, of
- Political Research Associates, Boston, MA, thoroughly documented
- Gritz's ties through his Christian Identity Movement to neo-Nazi
- political figures. This was an answer to criticism of the
- newspaper by members of the Mormon Church that attacks on Gritz
- were attacks on Mormonism. More on this in a moment. The
- Christian Identity Movement specifically attacks Jews as "agents
- of satan," and accuses them of controlling the Federal Reserve
- Board to the detriment of white America.
-
- Another guest editorial in the Post Register in early September
- by an Ammon, Idaho, Weaver supporter, Paul Bunnell, appeared in
- the Post Register on 9/3/92. It contained an unusual amount of
- first-hand details about Weaver's standoff against Federal
- Marshals. It suggests the writer is linked to a support group
- for the Weaver's located near Naples, Idaho. Ammon is a small
- town adjacent to Idaho Falls. This is the first evidence of
- neo-Nazi supporters going public in print in the Idaho Falls
- area. Ammon and Naples are at opposite ends of the state more
- than 600 miles apart.
-
- Mormon Church Answers Gritz
-
- Gritz claimed that his "Christian Identity Movement" is not a
- Nazi front but really a branch of the Mormon Church. His
- supporters flooded the Post Register with angry accusations that
- attacks on Gritz were forms of religious intolerance against the
- Mormon Church.
-
- However, in December 1992 Mormon Church leaders in Salt Lake
- City, UT, warned their members that adhering to Gritz's teachings
- about impending government collapse and the Second Coming are out
- of line with Church teachings. Articles appearing in the Salt
- Lake City Tribune and the Idaho Falls Post Register on 12/1/92
- report that Church leaders are counseling their members to avoid
- "way out standards and practices." Willis Yost, the Church's
- regional representative in Idaho Falls, ID, said, "Members ...
- have been cautioned to avoid crusaders and those that promote
- kooky things."
-
- Gritz issued a statement to the Idaho Falls Post Register saying
- he has "been warned to be careful" what he teaches or face Church
- discipline. Gritz says he joined the Mormon Church in 1984, and
- has attended services in Sandy Valley, NV, about 50 miles south
- of Las Vegas.
-
- Readers not familar with the Mormon Church should understand that
- it is very influential in Idaho Falls and the surrounding 10
- county area. More than 50% of the population subscribe to the
- Mormon faith. Relations between Mormons and Jews in Eastern
- Idaho are quiet and uneventful.
-
- Gritz's Political Future?
-
- In related news Gritz said he is considering moving permanently
- to Idaho, perhaps St. Anthony, about 30 miles north of Idaho
- Falls, in order to run for Governor. In the presidential race in
- Idaho Gritz got 10,300 votes in Idaho and over 28,000 votes in
- Utah. Nearly 40% of the votes received by Gritz in Idaho were
- cast in the 10 county region surrounding Idaho Falls. By
- comparison, in the same 10 county region over 80,000 people voted
- in the Congressional election. In the Presidential race it was
- Bush first, Perot second, and Clinton third.
-
- Church & State in Eastern Idaho
-
- Religious controversy in the region has centered on prayer in the
- school suits brought by the ALCU out of Boise. Also, the ACLU
- has sued the Bannock County [Pocatello] Commissioners for having
- a stone tablet inscribed with the Ten Commandments in front of
- the county building on the basis of the principle of separation
- of church and state. The Jewish Community of Eastern Idaho is
- not a party to these suits, and has made no public statements
- about them. The only political figure who has sought to exploit
- these tensions is U.S. Senator Larry Craig (R-ID). The response
- to his interference was a statement by the Madison County Board
- of Education which in effect told him to get lost.
-
- Summary
-
- While Gritz has not yet shown the political strength to win
- statewide office, his supporters are noisy and visible in this
- area. Their program preys upon the fears of people with
- fundamentalist views who feel threatened by big government and
- economic forces beyond their control. Facts printed in newspaper
- articles about Gritz's connections to neo-Nazi movements do not
- persuade his supporters. Gritz's attempts to hide behind the
- Mormon Church and gain legitimacy from it have been rejected by
- its leadership.
-
- Postscript
-
- I will post further reports as events warrant.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------
- Dan Yurman | dyurman@igc.apc.org | Honor
- PO Box 1569 | MCI Mail: 364-1277 | Before
- Idaho Falls, ID 83403 | 43N28 112W02 -7 GMT | Elegance
-
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