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| | SPLCenter.org: The Nazi International |
 | | The party, based in a shabby Arlington, Va., house that came to be known as "Hatemonger Hill," was not particularly successful. |
 | | Second, he became "the first postwar American neo-Nazi to appreciate the strategic necessity of Holocaust denial," and, in fact, succeeded in popularizing the idea that Jews had pulled off a "monstrous and profitable fraud" long before Willis Carto, commonly seen as the father of American denial. |
 | | Third, based on a cynical understanding of Americans' persistent religiosity, Rockwell married the generally atheistic ideology of orthodox Nazism to Christian Identity, a grossly heretical reading of the Bible that describes Jews as biologically satanic and people of color as soulless. |
| www.splcenter.org /intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=192 (918 words) |
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