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  • Whigger kid kills niggers

    14 May 2022
    ____________________________
    I am The Librarian
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
    http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

  • #2
    Accused Buffalo gunman followed a long trail to terror, officials say

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/natio...falo-shooting/


    -----------
    CONKLIN, N.Y. — By his own account, the suspected Buffalo supermarket gunman became a racist killer while bored online. According to a lengthy screed authorities believe Payton Gendron posted before allegedly killing 10 people on Saturday, the 18-year-old was drawn to hateful rhetoric from a mass murderer on the other side of the world.

    As investigators unpack the disturbing details of Gendron’s alleged crimes, current and former law enforcement officials said he apparently hoped his shocking violence would draw attention from well beyond this small town in Upstate New York.

    “He’s telling us he wants to feel important. He wants to be remembered. He wants to be relevant in life, but he won’t be. He’s not relevant,” said Katherine Schweit, a former federal agent who started the FBI’s active-shooter program.

    Stupid FiBbIe skank, if the nigger-shooter isn't relevant then turn him loose.

    At the end of his senior year, someone called the state police to report that Gendron had made alarming comments threatening to shoot up graduation-related events, according to officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing the ongoing investigation.

    Gendron’s statements were enough of a concern to authorities on June 8, 2021, that they took him into custody and then to a nearby hospital for a mental health evaluation, officials said.

    One person familiar with the investigation said the teen had been asked at school about his future plans, and replied “murder-suicide.” It was enough to raise concerns, this person said, but not enough to take further as an investigation.

    The incident now stands out as a potential key in understanding his path from a seemingly quiet and unremarkable childhood to accused mass murderer.

    Law enforcement officials on Sundayoffered few details about the high school threat investigation, saying Gendron was held overnight for evaluation, and then released. It was unclear whether, following the incident, he received further treatment.

    “From what I have, it was a generalized threat; not a specific threat directed at a specific place or person,” said Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia, who added that there was not anything explicitly racist about the alleged threat, andthat it did not so far appear that authorities mishandled the situation. “The state police did their job to the fullest they could at that time,” he said.



    In a rambling, 180-page declaration that authorities believe Gendron wrote and posted online, he proudly labels himself a white supremacist and his planned attack an act of terrorism, adding that he supports neo-Nazism, and revels in antisemitism.

    A long-winded love letter to racism and racist violence, the document describes months of planning leading up to the attack, including a lengthy discussion of weapons, what appears to be his legal purchase of a Bushmaster rifle months earlier, and lengthy recommendations on weaponry and body armor.

    Investigators continue to examine the document, but they believe Gendron wrote it, according to people familiar with the investigation that includes local, state and federal law enforcement agencies. An initial review of Gendron’s weapon purchase did not reveal anythingthat appeared unlawful, these people said, though investigators continue to scrutinize other aspects of his life, including the high school incident a year earlier, to see if there was anything authorities missed that should have barred him from purchasing a weapon.

    FBI agents have searched the suburban house here in Conklin where Gendron lived with his parents and two brothers, gathering evidence for two distinct but vital parts of the investigation.

    First, agents and local police are assembling a detailed timeline of his moves leading up to the attack — everything he did in the days just before the shooting, to build what they hope is an unshakable case proving his guilt. Already facing a state murder charge, Gendron also is being investigated for possible federal crimes, and in similar cases in the past, federal prosecutors have sought the death penalty. In the lengthy written account authorities believe he wrote before the attack, Gendron allegedly claimed that he planned to plead guilty in the hopes of drawing more attention to his white supremacist cause.

    Key to the investigation is understanding his online behavior, and any computer he used will be of particular interest to investigators, according to current and former law enforcement officials.

    Buffalo rampage survivor describes terror: ‘Something told me to get up and run’

    That information will feed the other important prong of the FBI’s investigation: understanding the long-simmering psychological impulses that allegedly drove Gendron to commit the most deadly mass shooting so far this year.

    “The answers to the most important questions aren’t in Buffalo, they’re 200 miles away in Conklin,” said Peter Ahearn, former head of the FBI’s Buffalo field office. “The motivation is hate, but what drove him to this? What was his upbringing like, to be that horrible of an individual, to do this and kill 10 innocent people? They need to understand that. Right now this is a wide open wound. Those answers will help with understanding, but it will take time.”

    On Sunday, residents in Conklin, a town whose welcome sign declares it “a great place to live and raise a family,” seemed at a complete loss to explain how the boy they knew as a quiet kid is now accused of committing such a hateful atrocity, allegedly firing dozens of lethal rifle rounds at senior citizens, grocery store workers and a security guard with a weapon that had a racial slur written on it.

    “I’m heartbroken,” said Mary Cappello,who lives here. “I always think of it as safe and cozy and warm, and to hear something like this happened, it just blew me away
    .”

    State police kept reporters away from the blue house where the Gendron family lives on a quiet cul-de-sac, with a basketball hoop in the front driveway and a pool in the backyard. A woman who answered a phone registered to Gendron’s mother declined to speak to a Washington Post reporter Saturday, saying she hadn’t heard anything yet and didn’t want to “speculate.”

    The details about the suspect that have emerged so far fit with grim patterns seen in past mass killings.

    Researchers and experts studying mass violence have found a series of common elements, many of which appear to have recurred in Buffalo. Active shooters are usually male, researchers have found, and were fueled by some kind of grievance.

    Rather than snapping seemingly without any warning, most attackers often spent time plotting beforehand, the FBI found in a 2018 study examining active shooters. These attackers also tended to alarm people around them before opening fire, the FBI study found, and more than half had made clear in some fashion that they intended to commit violence.

    The online screed investigators believe was posted by Gendron also fit another unnerving pattern, in which mass killers often research or draw inspiration from their predecessors.

    The document posted online cites the names of several other convicted or accused mass killers, including the avowed white supremacist convicted of killing nine Black parishioners in Charleston, S.C., in 2015, and the man charged with killing 23 people at a Walmart in El Paso in 2019. Police in El Paso say that man confessed to the shooting and said he was targeting “Mexicans,” and officials believe he wrote an online statement ranting about a “Hispanic invasion of Texas.”

    And in carrying out Saturday’s attack in Buffalo, the gunman made sure to leave as much of a record as possible. Besides the lengthy written record, authorities said he live-streamed the killing on social media, so that others could watch.
    ____________________________
    I am The Librarian
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
    http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

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    • #3
      'White supremacy is a poison,' Biden says as he calls for ending hate speech and curbing guns


      https://buffalonews.com/news/local/w...f18e5a701.html

      he calls for change rang loudly Tuesday through the Delevan-Grider Community Center on Buffalo's East Side.

      Not just from the man behind the lectern bearing the seal of the president of the United States, nor from the Senate majority leader, nor the governor of New York.

      For sure, President Biden, Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer and Gov. Kathy Hochul all called for tighter controls on military-style weapons and hate on the internet as they consoled a city still grieving over the Saturday massacre of 10 people in the Tops Market on Jefferson Avenue.

      But the families of those gunned down in a racist rampage by an 18-year-old Broome County resident, affected by Saturday's events more than any living persons, echoed the idea, too. After meeting with the president and first lady Jill Biden, and expressing their appreciation for their empathy, the Buffalonians called for an end to racism, curbing guns and ending hate speech.

      "He showed empathy about our situation, and assured us there will be change after this," said Ebony Thomas, whose uncle – Deacon Heyward Patterson – was gunned down Saturday. "I think there should be stricter gun control laws and making sure that people with mental health issues should not have access to guns."

      Indeed, Biden delivered the same message in the strongest terms, at one point his voice breaking.

      "What happened here is simple and straightforward: terrorism," he said. "Violence inflicted in the service of hate and a vicious thirst for power that defines one group of people being inherently inferior to any other group."

      Hate stemming from the media, politicians and the internet have combined to radicalize those like Saturday's shooter, the president said. He especially noted those targeting minorities in the false belief that they aim to replace whites as voters.

      "I call on all Americans to reject this lie," he said. "I condemn those who spread the lie for power, political gain and for profit."

      Biden seemed intent on delivering a definitive speech about opposing the notion that one race is better than another. He recognized that hate at Charlottesville in 2015, he said, and resolved then to run for president in 2020. He pleaded for its end, offering that America is better than those chanting at Charlottesville or the shootings in the Tops on Jefferson Avenue.

      "White supremacy is a poison," he said. "We need to say as clearly and forcefully as we can that the ideology of white supremacy has no place in America.

      "This venom, this violence, cannot be the story of our time," he added.

      The president said Americans can keep off the streets weapons like the one that killed 10 Buffalonians Saturday.

      "We've done it before," he said, referring to the 1994 assault weapons ban that slowed their spread until the law expired in 2004.

      But the president and Schumer, who authored the House version of the 1994 law, offered no real optimism on such legislation gaining approval from Republicans in Congress. Biden told national reporters before departure from Buffalo Niagara International Airport he would have "to convince Congress to go back to what I passed years ago."

      "It’s going to be very difficult. But I’m not going to give up trying," he added.

      Schumer, meanwhile, acknowledged to The Buffalo News on Tuesday that "we keep fighting," but also offered no predictions of success.

      "We need 60 votes. We need some Republicans to come over," he said. "They've been intransigent, but maybe this will change their minds."

      Schumer also referred to his Monday speech on the Senate floor, in which he said, "I called out Murdoch, Fox News and what's his name, Tucker Carlson." The senator said on Tuesday he wrote to Fox News about Carlson and his espousal of the idea that immigrants and minorities are attempting to "replace" white voters.

      "I said speaking out is not enough, you've got to stop this guy," Schumer said, "because of this vicious, bigoted conspiratorial replacement theory."

      Dee Davis, sister-in-law of victim Celestine Chaney, expressed the same thoughts from a different perspective. She received Facebook messages of the shooter standing over her sister-in-law, then video of the shooting.

      Facebook allowed it to be up for hours.

      "That should have been shut down," she added. “The video I didn't want to watch – I wake up seeing the shooting, of him shooting her in the head and finishing her off.”

      Hochul, meanwhile, reiterated the strong language she has employed since Saturday calling for a curb on "military-style weapons" and hate speech permeating the internet.

      "You could have that hate in your heart and you can sit in your house and ferment these evil thoughts, but you can't act on it unless you have a weapon," she said. "And that's the intersection of these two crises in our nation right now; the mainstreaming of the hate speech and the racism and everything else that brought that person to this point, but also the access to military-style weapons and magazines. It is that lethal combination that resulted in the loss of 10 decent, good people."

      Jill Biden, Sen. Kirsten E. Gillibrand, Rep. Brian Higgins and Mayor Byron W. Brown also delivered remarks before a room full of about 100 people – mostly families of victims. They, too, called for change, echoing the final words of Hochul's speech.

      "God give us the strength to forge ahead with the strength and conviction that justice must be done, but also changes must be made," she said. "We'll all remember that it started here in Buffalo, New York."

      After Much [s]Election Fraudulency Ah Finally Got Inniggerated #46

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      • #4
        Joe Biden Condemns White Supremacy In Buffalo


        https://occidentaldissent.com/2022/0...cy-in-buffalo/

        The mass shooting in Buffalo was worse than what happened to George Floyd and was on par with Charleston, but it is not going to have the same impact and that is largely thanks to the Biden administration which sees tragic mass shootings through the lens of Wokeism.

        Newsweek:

        “Back when another tragedy struck the community of Waukesha, Wisconsin, Biden did not travel to visit the site of the massacre. In November 2021, an SUV drove into a Christmas parade in Waukesha, killing six people and injuring another 61. Darrell E. Brooks, 39, was arrested and charged with six counts of first-degree murder, 61 counts of reckless endangerment, six counts of hit and run resulting in death, two counts of felony bail jumping, and two counts of misdemeanor battery. …

        Former White House press secretary Jen Psaki said at the time that there was no plan for Biden to visit Waukesha, explaining that “any president going to visit a community requires a lot of assets” and requires “taking their resources.” …”



        Everyone knows that what matters is that Buffalo fits the narrative. It is useful and can be used to foment hatred against Whites. In fact, the shooter Payton Gendron anticipated how the media would react in his manifesto. Gendron was counting on the “journalists” to ratchet up racial tensions.


        The quality of people I am reaching is much higher than I ever did with a forum.
        I'm now at the top of the racialist intellectual community in the United States.
        I was a nobody when I ran The Phora.

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        • #5
          The case of a lifetime

          For a nigger Buffalo lawyer, the investigation of one mass shooting leads him back to another in which his nigger daddy was shot when he was just a niglet.

          https://www.washingtonpost.com/natio...-olean-elmore/

          =============

          BUFFALO — John Elmore’s newest clients had come to his law office in the last weeks to review their relatives’ autopsy reports, plan funerals and meet with investigators from the FBI, but lately they had also started showing up sometimes for seemingly no reason at all. Andrea Beckman parked outside a quiet strip mall, walked in a partially vacant office building, and knocked on her attorney’s door.

          “Is it okay if I sit in here for a while?” she asked, and Elmore, 65, looked up from his computer and motioned to the chair across from his desk.

          “Of course,” he said. “Do you need anything?”

          “Just distraction. Just noise,” she said. “I’m still not doing that well when I’m at home by myself.”

          It had been almost two months since her father went to buy a birthday cake for his 3-year-old son at a Tops grocery store and was shot and killed along with nine others, forcing Andrea to begin looking for a lawyer for the first time in her life. Her family knew of only one attorney in the Black community of East Buffalo — the one whose billboard towered above a gas station near Tops and whose slogan repeated in radio advertisements. “When they hurt you, I got you,” Elmore said. His personal injury practice consisted mostly of filing lawsuits for car accidents, dog bites, and slip-and-falls, and now he’d also come to represent several families of victims in a white supremacist terrorist attack that he considered the “most personal case of my career.”

          He’d often shopped at that same Tops. He knew several of the victims from church or from his children’s youth sports leagues. And he had some idea of what it might be like for his clients to sort through the rage and the trauma of a mass shooting, because even four decades after another long-forgotten shooting, he was still doing that, too.

          “How’s your family?” he asked. “How’s everyone holding together?”

          “You know,” she said. “We’re all kind of spiraling.”

          “What’s going on with your uncle? He called me last night at 1:30 in the morning, and he sounded a little confused.”

          “Yeah, sorry about that. He’s in the hospital. They’re saying he basically had a mental breakdown from all of this.”

          “Ugh. Poor guy,” Elmore said, as he reached into his desk for a yellow legal pad to take notes, because this was now the fulcrum of his work: to make a full accounting of the ever-expanding damages caused by yet another American mass shooting and then decide where and how to assign blame beyond the alleged shooter, Payton Gendron. Elmore had begun to explore potential lawsuits against social media websites, where the shooter had published racist diatribes and live-streamed a video of the attack; and against a body armor company that marketed its gear directly to civilians and sold the shooter a steel-plated vest that protected him from a security guard’s return fire; and against the manufacturer of his Bushmaster XM-15, which had been used to fire 30 shots in the first 20 seconds of the attack, and which the shooter wrote that he’d selected as his weapon of choice because it was a “dreaded military grade assault rifle” and “very deadly.”

          Elmore had decided to partner on the case with the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence and with Josh Koskoff, a Connecticut lawyer who’d won a $73 million settlement against gun manufacturer Remington Arms after the same style of semiautomatic weapon was used in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. Koskoff had argued that Remington marketed its semiautomatic rifle specifically to impressionable young men, but the resolution of that case had taken almost a decade, and Elmore had cautioned his clients that their own lawsuit — if they even had one — would likely drag on for several years.

          “Did you see Tops is reopening this week?” Andrea said. “They replaced the broken windows and redesigned it. It’s going back to being a regular grocery store.”

          “Some people are lucky enough to move on,” Elmore said.

          “It’s feels like nobody even talks about what happened in Buffalo anymore. It was a big deal for a few weeks, and now it’s gone.”

          “I actually have some experience with that,” Elmore said, and he paused for a moment, trying to decide how much further to go. “Let me ask you something,” he said. “Did you ever hear about a mass shooting in Olean, New York?”

          A nigger lawyer recollects how his father a nigger fire-fighter was shot in the head by one of the first mass shooters.

          Last edited by PastorLindstedt; 08-08-2022, 03:14 AM.
          ____________________________
          I am The Librarian
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
          http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/forum/

          Comment


          • #6
            Mad Dog Musings 15 Feb 2023 -- Weaker White Supremacy Pled Guilty

            http://whitenationalist.xyz/forum/fo...8614#post38614
            .
            https://gab.com/PastorLindstedt/post...78431957080843
            .
            https://odysee.com/@PastorLindstedt:...yton-Gendron:a
            .




            .
            .

            .


            ​​​
            .When this item cum out ZOG was just gloating about its latest belated "win" against White Supremacy, i.e. getting young White Men who shoot niggers, beaners and other sub-animal primates to beg for theys' lifes in a cage with other ZOGling animals.

            The whiggress judge gave a speech against "white supremacy" common to ZOGling regime criminals rightfully cooncerned that soon theys' Satanic regime is at an end given that it has no legitimacy amongst theys' whigger herd animals and scared another Holohoax -- this time for real -- is about to strike.

            So given this limited information I decided to make a quick video.


            Video Link:
            https://player.odycdn.com/api/v4/str...7f19956/5f14fd

            Hail Victory !!!

            Pastor Martin Lindstedt
            Church of Jesus Christ Christian / Aryan Nations of Missouri
            338 Rabbit Track Road
            P.O. Box 666
            Granby, Missouri 64844

            For more notes and content go to:

            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/
            https://gab.com/PastorLindstedt
            https://twitter.com/PastorLindstedt/

            https://www.facebook.com/pastor.lindstedt/
            Attached Files

            Pastor Lindstedt's Web Page
            Pastor Lindstedt's Archive Page & Christian Nationalist Forum

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