'Part of war is terror': A new neo-Nazi group is trying to capitalize on the Moore County power grid attack


An offshoot of the now-defunct neo-Nazi terror group Atomwaffen Division is undertaking a propaganda push related to the attack on the power grid earlier this month in Moore County that resulted in widespread power outages affecting about 40,000 customers.
Neo-nazis attacking the power grid. Yeah, OK. LOL Kind of like the Russians attacking their own pipeline?

The morning after the power grid attack, which coincided with a protest against a drag show in Southern Pines, neo-Nazi accelerationists on a private Telegram channel began to speculate about the involvement of the National Socialist Resistance movement, or NSRF.

The contents of the chats in the “Uncle Ted’s Cabin” channel — named in honor of the anarcho-primitivist terrorist Ted Kaczynski — were obtained by an infiltrator, who leaked them to the White Rose Society, a volunteer research collective in Australia. The chats, which cover a period from early November through Dec. 9, were provided exclusively to Raw Story. Antifascist researchers in North Carolina who tweet under the @arelephanteau and @M1523751 accounts also helped corroborate information and develop reporting for this story.
So, the evil nazis attacked the power grid to protest a drag show and antifa groups somehow unraveled this sinister plot.

“It’s reasonable to say that individuals associated with or familiar with the NSRF in the accelerationist ecosystem are portraying Moore County as likely being perpetrated by NSRF,” said Matthew Kriner, the managing director of the Accelerationist Research Consortium and a senior research scholar at the Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism at the Middlebury Institute.

In addition to the private chats speculating aboutthe NSRF’s potential involvement in the attack, a banner was discovered on an overpass across US Highway 1 near the town of Vass in Moore County on Sunday that included a link to the group’s public Telegram channel. The banner drop in Moore County followed a vandalism incident almost 50 miles to the northeast at a senior center in Apex that hosted a Pride holiday celebration with a drag performance and a Hannukah celebration over the weekend.

Social media posts promoting the distribution of NSRF propaganda in Moore County are pushing messaging to other neo-Nazis that calls on them to “destroy the system” and “take real action.”
..“destroy the system” and “take real action.”.... That doesn't even sound in the least bit like something a glownigger would say.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world...d0294184bbb4a1