Story Published:
Jul 3, 2006 at 12:48 PM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 7:30 AM PST
OLYMPIA - Hundreds of demonstrators sang, danced and
traded insults Monday with a small group of neo-Nazis who gathered
on the Capitol steps in the third such rally this year in this
liberal college town.
About 12 members of the National Socialist Movement stood in a
row outside the Capitol, wearing their signature brown shirts, red
swastika armbands and black boots. They held aloft two swastika
flags and railed against gays, Jews, nonwhites and communists over
a public address system.
The group, which is based in Minneapolis and claims chapters
around the country, said it hoped to draw attention and find new
recruits with the rally.
"We're going to come with more storm troopers every year, and
every month we're going to double in size," Seattle-area neo-Nazi
Justin Boyer told the crowd.
Similar National Socialist Movement demonstrations have turned
violent elsewhere in the country, but the State Patrol reported no
arrests or incidents during the rally and protests, which lasted
about two hours.
"We're really proud of the community and the way they handled
themselves," patrol Sgt. Monica Hunter said. "We couldn't have
asked for any better than we got."
The larger group of Nazi protesters was separated from the
Capitol steps by a chain-link fence, heavy barricades and scores of
police in riot gear spread out over a buffer of about 50 yards.
The State Patrol had about 275 troopers on hand for security,
and authorities estimated the anti-Nazi crowd at more than 500 at
its peak.
The protesters played drums, blew whistles, chanted and made
their own speeches over another loudspeaker and bullhorns. At one
point, they turned their backs on the neo-Nazis.
Among the protesters was Robert Guerrero, 42, of Tacoma, who
wore a traditional Tlingit cedar headband and a cape decorated with
the image of a raven as he beat an elk-hide drum. Guerrero said he
was at the protest to represent indigenous people.
"These folks need to know that they are immigrants," he said,
gesturing toward the neo-Nazis. "They want to get rid of
immigrants? Well, go ahead."
Justin B. Wright, 37, of Tumwater, dressed in the polka-dot
shirt, heart-shaped sunglasses and face paint he dons when
performing as Jusby the Clown. He also brought his son, 2-year-old
Orion, to the protest.
"Humor relaxes people," he said as a half-dozen other clowns
marched in mock goose-steps, carrying signs that razzed the
neo-Nazis. "I think showing nonsense is the sanest way to cope
with it."
Experts say the National Socialist Movement, or NSM, has become
the leading group of its kind in the country following the deaths
and incarcerations of other top white supremacists and neo-Nazis.
The group billed the Olympia rally as a gathering of white
supremacists from several western states, but drew fewer than half
the people they projected in interviews last week.
After the rally, the neo-Nazis were escorted to a city bus and
driven away from the Capitol while state troopers in riot gear kept
a surge of protesters from getting too close.
'I Just Ignore Them'
By: John Sharify
It's something someone said the other day: Ignore them.
That's what Ellamae Austin is doing. And Kathleen Jackson.
"I just ignore them. I'm going to go on with my life and not think about it," says Kathleen.
She feels like so many -- that if you ignore the Neo Nazis: "You don't show them they're of any importance," says Erin Carlstrom.
Caitline Eswothy says you can't.
"Hate speech should not be ignored!"
Paul says he won't: "Oh, I don't plan to ignore them. I'm a supporter."
The Neo Nazis chose Olympia because it's our capitol, because of the reaction they could get.
Or not get.