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  1. James Nolan Mason (born July 25, 1952) [1] is an American neo-Nazi. [2] Mason is an ideologue for the Atomwaffen Division, a neo-Nazi terrorist organization. [2] [3] [4] [5] After growing disillusioned with the mass movement approach of neo-Nazi movements, he began advocating for a white supremacist revolution through terrorism.

  2. James Mason has been an active neo-Nazi since he was 14 years old, when he joined the youth group of the American Nazi Party in 1966. He was with them for ten years before joining the National Socialist Liberation Front in 1976, a group that advocated armed revolution to overthrow the “system” and establish a neo-Nazi government.

  3. Mar 28, 2024 · Hatewatch reviewed a cache of letters from 2001-03 between James Mason, a prominent neo-Nazi writer and advocate for revolutionary racial violence, and two white supremacist activists affiliated with the Foundation for Human Understanding (FHU), a Georgia-based nonprofit founded by proponents of racist pseudoscience in 1973.

  4. Sep 6, 2019 · IMPACT: James Mason is a neo-Nazi who advocates violent revolution against the United States government. He believes that chaos caused by white supremacist violence will lead to the collapse of the government and the rise of Nazism by way of a “race war.”

  5. Feb 22, 2018 · UO is the terroristic neo-Nazi philosophy Mason launched in 1982 under the tutelage of Manson. As Mason describes in SIEGE and elsewhere, the ideas behind the Universal Order would not have been possible without his years of correspondence with Manson, who suggested the UO name and logo.

  6. Siege (sometimes stylised as SIEGE) is an anthology of essays first published as a single volume in 1992, written in 1980s by James Mason, a neo-Nazi and associate of the cult leader Charles Manson. After growing disillusioned with the mass movement approach of neo-Nazi movements, he began advocating for white revolution through terrorism.

  7. Jun 1, 2023 · June 1, 2023. Authored by: Jon Lewis. PDF Version. This study analyzes the leadership style, impact, and enduring legacies of three crucial leaders in the white supremacist and neo-Nazi movements: Louis Beam, William Luther Pierce, and James Mason.

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