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| | JDL: Nazi Alert: Sing A Song of Hate: A Primer of Neo-Nazi Hate Music |
 | | To a large degree, the emergence of modern hate music can be attributed to British singer Ian Stuart Donaldson (often referred to by white supremacists as Ian Stuart), who began as a punk rocker in England, but by the 1980s had transformed himself and his band, Skrewdriver, into explicit promoters of racism and white supremacy. |
 | | Stuart or Donaldson, depending on whom you ask, found an audience in the emerging skinhead subculture in Great Britain (and later in the U.S.). |
 | | But Stuart provided energy and direction for a growing number of racist skinheads (certainly not all skinheads are racist skinheads), who, following in Stuart's footsteps, formed bands of their own. |
| www.jdl.org /enemies/nazi/hate_music.shtml (1593 words) |
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