From Billings group wants to change image of white supremacists:
Kyle Anderson blends in with the crowd of businessmen and students sitting in a Billings coffee shop recently. His dark hair is cropped short. He wears a burgundy dress shirt and dark slacks.
The only thing that distinguishes him as a “Creator,” a member of a group advocating an all-white society, is the pin with a large “W” on his black silk tie. The W stands for white.
Presenting himself as professional is part of being a member of the elite white race, said the 19-year-old Anderson.
Anderson had jotted some notes for his interview with the Billings Gazette, his first encounter with the news media as a member of the Montana Creators Assembly. On one notebook page, with a few black-ink doodles around the edges, Anderson had written a reminder of how Creators are trying to change the image of the white supremacist.
“People used to think of a guy with a beer belly spitting out tobacco and missing a few teeth,” he said. “Now we think of people who are determined, energetic leaders, educated and idealistic, we're the best Creators. We're the elite.”
Creators believe “our race is our religion,” he said, and they view loyalty to the race as the greatest of honors, and racial treason as the worst of crimes.
“Much information is being kept from white people and we want to wake everyone up,” he said. “Without the facts, white people cannot make decisions about the world around them.”
Those facts, according to MCA literature, include Jewish- and Christian-controlled financial centers that work against the white race and crimes against white people that are not investigated as race crimes.
Although Anderson declined to give membership numbers, he insists MCA is growing. Other MCA members contacted by the Gazette declined to be identified, fearing job loss or other retaliation. One tenet of the Creativity Movement is to “show preferential treatment in business dealings to members of your own race” and not to have dealings with Jews or people of color.
One of the group's fliers was recently slipped under the doormat at the Billings Unitarian Universalist Fellowship. In half-inch tall, all capital letters, the flyer stated “White people awake! Save the white race!”
The church believes it was targeted because of its all-inclusive nature and its work locally on social justice issues, including a meeting it hosted to promote racial and cultural diversity in Billings.
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