Upstaging the SPLC: Communist Shapeshifters

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In part:

The True Non-Believers

The SPLC’s demonization of right-wing and nationalist circles in the U.S. and EU feels like a reenactment of quasi-judicial proceedings in former communist Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Whether other anti-hate think tanks or agencies will now come under the Trump administration’s scrutiny remains to be seen. One may gloat over the SPLC’s sudden fall from grace, but questions remain as to whether there will be similar legal efforts and comparable media outcry if other domestic, self-proclaimed anti-hate, anti-fascist organizations come onto the DOJ’s radar screen. The powerful Jewish ADL uses a far more refined name-calling when it comes to vilifying right-wing and nationalist dissenters. Why not examine its sources of funding as well as the methods of its demonology courses it presents at schools and police department? It is, however, very significant that over the past year the ADL and AIPAC have toned down their demonological rhetoric against so-called White supremacists while fully backing Trump’s rhetoric about bombing Iran to oblivion. A raw deal? A quid pro quo? Everybody can take a wild guess.

Nor are right-wing Christians in the U.S. and nationalist figureheads in Europe lagging behind in their sycophancy, as recently shown by the ‘discreet visit’ of French nationalist leader Marine Le Pen to the Israeli Embassy in Paris. The age of mutual Euro-right-wing and Israeli brownnosing is dawning.

The buck doesn’t stop with the SPLC though. Hundreds of other NGOs, especially in the EU—as noted in my previous pieces—are non-governmental in name only, yet depend on substantial state funding, draping themselves in the romantic attire of love, peace, and multiracial tolerance. Their public posturing, much like that of the SPLC, is a carbon copy of earlier Bolshevik agencies in the early Soviet Union. One must repeat, time and again, that some of the most zealous communist henchmen in the Soviet Union and Europe—such as Genrikh Yagoda, Nikolai Yezhov, Lavrentiy Beria, and Béla Kun, along with thousands of their leftist sidekicks—were put to death by their former trusted comrades-in-arms. In Czechoslovakia in 1952, a dozen communist Jews, the early masters of the post-WWII Czech totalitarian system, were executed on charges of treason by their former comrades in arms.  The same upstaging scenario may have been brewing among jealous rank-and-file SPLC members, where everyone thought they could run the money side best on their own..

Historically, the more exotic titles these virtue-signaling agencies carry—such as the lavishly funded SPLC or the UK-based NGO Hope Not Hate—the more prone they are not just to violent proscriptions of right-wing wrong-thinkers but also to constant purges of their own kind. In passing, one should mention the case of Hans-Georg Maaßen, who headed Germany’s powerful domestic intelligence service—euphemistically known as the “Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution “ (Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz)—and who was removed from his post in 2018 by Chancellor Angela Merkel following disagreements over the agency’s inquisitorial practices against the manufactured right-wing menace.

I have already written and provided references to the rise of the totalitarian spirit, also suggesting that it is part and parcel of absolute democracy—not its opposite, as many scholars claim. As a brainchild of post-communist multiracial pathology, the SPLC operates in a manner similar to the former intel agency Securitate in communist Romania, the Stasi in ex-East Germany, or the UDBA in communist ex-Yugoslavia. All of those secret service outlets kept hunting down anticommunist wrong-thinkers even if there were none in sight. Ultimately, the paranoid mindset of communist cutthroats  made them terminate each other. The SPLC would have finished the same way, one way or another, regardless of the recent Trump clamp-down.

Read full article at link below:

https://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2026/04/23/upstaging-the-splc-communist-shapeshifters/

Otto Dix, “Portrait of the (“new woman”, “anti-Nazi”) journalist Sylvia von Harden”, 1926

 

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