> In a reel shared to Instagram on February 14, an account identifying itself with a group called The 13th Northeast Guerillas put out a call to prospective recruits in Vermont and New Hampshire. What they advertised was fairly benign on its surface: fitness, community, preparation, survivalist training. The video was set to the tune of Kendrick Lamar’s “TV Off” and featured a rapid succession of highly edited images showing **armed men posing in the wilderness in tactical gear. They sometimes wore skeleton masks, and everyone had their faces entirely concealed or censored.** In many of the images, crucifixes are seen visibly dangling from their necks or sewn onto clothing.
> In another post from earlier this year, one of the group’s purported members shared a photo of a young man holding an assault weapon with a crucifix displayed over a plaid shirt and his face blurred out. The caption cites **Psalm 19:1: “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim his handiwork.“** That quotation is followed by a series of hashtags, including “#militia,”
> This group is part of a new guard of paramilitary activists whose youthful membership, edgy aesthetics, use of Instagram, and, in many cases, overt nods to religion points to a new brand of **anti-government Christian nationalist militias.**
> Many of these new groups, whose follower counts range from dozens to thousands, began quietly setting up shop on Instagram over the past two years.
> Over time, these groups have continued to grow their audience on Instagram, publishing slick propaganda imagery from **IRL meetups** that often shows groups of armed men with their faces covered or censored.
> Experts say that this emergent movement draws on a number of trends in the **modern extremist landscape**, including that it establishes a paramilitary wing of surging Christian nationalism in the US and reflects the sensibilities of a new generation of fitness-obsessed, “Christ-pilled” young men, some of who call themselves tradcaths.
TheRexRider on
Christians showing, once again, that Abrahamic religion is a cancer.
DarthBluntSaber on
„Christian militants“… if it was another religion, they would have said „______ extremists“.
Lord_Kinbote42 on
This is some crazy deflection from Islam. They all suck for all I care, but I see kids parroting anti semitic rhetoric regularly and that shit is not fucking normal. Nobody had zionist in their vocabulary before Oct 7. Let alone children. That is brainwashing.
lazy_phoenix on
Now a reading from the Gospel according to Luke. „Then Jesus made the AR-15 and gifted it to his followers. And Jesus said to them „Ye use the AR-15 to shoot people who disagree or minorly inconvenience you.““
throwquestions_away on
Saying “Christian Militants” is like saying “Jumbo Shrimp.” In the Bible, followers of Christ are instructed to love enemies (Matthew 5:44), turn the other cheek (Matthew 5:39), and avoid vengeance (Romans 12:19). Physical violence for advancing faith is rejected (John 18:36).
Whatever these people are it’s not real Christianity
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
6 Kommentare
> In a reel shared to Instagram on February 14, an account identifying itself with a group called The 13th Northeast Guerillas put out a call to prospective recruits in Vermont and New Hampshire. What they advertised was fairly benign on its surface: fitness, community, preparation, survivalist training. The video was set to the tune of Kendrick Lamar’s “TV Off” and featured a rapid succession of highly edited images showing **armed men posing in the wilderness in tactical gear. They sometimes wore skeleton masks, and everyone had their faces entirely concealed or censored.** In many of the images, crucifixes are seen visibly dangling from their necks or sewn onto clothing.
> In another post from earlier this year, one of the group’s purported members shared a photo of a young man holding an assault weapon with a crucifix displayed over a plaid shirt and his face blurred out. The caption cites **Psalm 19:1: “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim his handiwork.“** That quotation is followed by a series of hashtags, including “#militia,”
> This group is part of a new guard of paramilitary activists whose youthful membership, edgy aesthetics, use of Instagram, and, in many cases, overt nods to religion points to a new brand of **anti-government Christian nationalist militias.**
> Many of these new groups, whose follower counts range from dozens to thousands, began quietly setting up shop on Instagram over the past two years.
> Over time, these groups have continued to grow their audience on Instagram, publishing slick propaganda imagery from **IRL meetups** that often shows groups of armed men with their faces covered or censored.
> Experts say that this emergent movement draws on a number of trends in the **modern extremist landscape**, including that it establishes a paramilitary wing of surging Christian nationalism in the US and reflects the sensibilities of a new generation of fitness-obsessed, “Christ-pilled” young men, some of who call themselves tradcaths.
Christians showing, once again, that Abrahamic religion is a cancer.
„Christian militants“… if it was another religion, they would have said „______ extremists“.
This is some crazy deflection from Islam. They all suck for all I care, but I see kids parroting anti semitic rhetoric regularly and that shit is not fucking normal. Nobody had zionist in their vocabulary before Oct 7. Let alone children. That is brainwashing.
Now a reading from the Gospel according to Luke. „Then Jesus made the AR-15 and gifted it to his followers. And Jesus said to them „Ye use the AR-15 to shoot people who disagree or minorly inconvenience you.““
Saying “Christian Militants” is like saying “Jumbo Shrimp.” In the Bible, followers of Christ are instructed to love enemies (Matthew 5:44), turn the other cheek (Matthew 5:39), and avoid vengeance (Romans 12:19). Physical violence for advancing faith is rejected (John 18:36).
Whatever these people are it’s not real Christianity