白人ナショナリスト、オルトライト運動スペンサー氏には入国禁止とし

アメリカではトランプ氏に感化された、38歳のリチャード・スペンサーなる者が、白色人種は有色人種より遺伝子において優勢であり、有色人種を排除した白人種のみで国家社会を形成しなければならないとする、ネオNACHISUホロコーストを提唱し、全米各地でその手下の様々な暴行を含む犯罪が起きているとABCニュースで報道されています。

当のトランプ氏は、「ハイルトランプ万歳と叫び」NACHISU式敬礼をするスペンサーの思想と行動「アメリカは私たちと子孫のために創られた白人の国です。人種差別を一般のものにするのです。ヒスパニック系とアフリカ系のアメリカ人は白人よりも知能指数は低く、遺伝子的に犯罪に及びやすい。世界中で知能を研究すると一貫して同じ答えがでるのです。遺伝的な原因に目を向けざるをえません。」は是認しないと言っています。

日本外務省はヨーロッパの大半の諸国同様に、オルト・ライト運動賛同者の入国禁止を、公表するべきです。

CHURCH MASSACRE TRIAL

サウスカロライナ州チャールストンの教会では、聖書研究会に招きいれてもらった、22歳の彼の支持者ディラン・ルーフ容疑者(自称、白人至上主義者)が、出席者13人の内のアフリカ系アメリカ人9名を45口径拳銃で射殺し、刑事裁判が始まっています。
彼は聖書の代わりに護身用の45口径の拳銃を持参したものです。

リチャードソン連邦検事は「あの日は蒸し暑かった。招いた13人は被告がいかに冷酷な人間かを知らなかった。the afternoone was hot and muggy.welcomed a thirteen person at Bible study.but little did they know how cold a heart he had. insted of a Bible to study,thedefendant chose to bring a 45 caliber pistol. ATTACK COLD AND CALCULATED.」 と語っています。

被告の主張は

「白人女性がレイプされている。それが世界中に渡っている」

と言うもので

また弁護士は、「彼を死刑には値しない」と言っています。

Richard B. Spencer
For other individuals called Richard Spencer, see Richard Spencer
Richard B. Spencer
Born Richard Bertrand Spencer
May 11, 1978 (age・38)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.[1]
Residence Whitefish, Montana, U.S.
Nationality American
Citizenship United States
Education St. Mark's School of Texas
Alma・mater University of Virginia
University of Chicago
Occupation Author
Publisher
Known・for President & Director
The National Policy Institute
Executive Director
Washington Summit Publishers
Spouse(s) Nina Kouprianova (separated)
Parent(s) William B. Spencer
Sherry Spencer
Richard Bertrand Spencer (born May 11, 1978) is an American white nationalist, known for promoting white supremacist views.[2][3][4] He is president of the National Policy Institute, a white nationalist think-tank, and Washington Summit Publishers, an independent publishing firm. Spencer has stated that he rejects the description of white supremacist, and describes himself as an identitarian.[5][6]
Spencer and others have said that he created the term "alt-right",[7] a term he considers a movement about white identity.[8][9][10]
Spencer has repeatedly quoted from Nazi propaganda and spoken critically of the Jewish people,[10][11] although he has denied being a neo-Nazi. Spencer and his organization drew considerable media attention in the weeks following the 2016 presidential election, where, in response to his cry "Hail Trump, hail our people, hail victory!", a number of his supporters gave the Nazi salute similar to the Sieg Heil chant used at the Nazis' mass rallies. Spencer has defended their conduct, stating that the Nazi salute was given in a spirit of "irony and exuberance".[12]
Early life Spencer grew up in Dallas, Texas. He was born to William B. Spencer, an ophthalmologist.[13] In 1997, Spencer graduated from St. Mark's School of Texas and Sherry Spencer. In 2001, he received a B.A. with High Distinction in English Literature and Music from the University of Virginia and, in 2003, an M.A. in the Humanities from the University of Chicago. He spent the summer of 2005 and 2006 at the Vienna International Summer University.[14] From 2005 to 2007, he was a doctoral student at Duke University studying modern European intellectual history, where he was a member of the Duke Conservative Union. He left Duke "to pursue a life of thought-crime."[13][15]
Career From March 2007 to December 2007, Spencer was an Assistant Editor at The American Conservative magazine. According to founding editor Scott McConnell, Spencer was fired from The American Conservative because his views were considered too extreme.[13] From January 2008 to December 2009, he was executive editor of Taki's Magazine.[16]
In March 2010, Spencer founded AlternativeRight.com, a website he edited until 2012. He says he created the term alt-right.[10][17]
In January 2011, Spencer became Executive Director of Washington Summit Publishers. In 2012, Spencer founded Radix Journal as a biannual publication of Washington Summit Publishers. Contributors have included Kevin B. MacDonald, Alex Kurtagi・, Samuel T. Francis, and Derek Turner. He also hosts a weekly podcast, Vanguard Radio (a successor to AltRight Radio).[citation needed]
In January 2011, Spencer also became President and Director of The National Policy Institute, a think tank previously based in Virginia and Montana.[18]
Spencer has been published at Right Now!, American Renaissance, Peter Brimelow's VDare.com, The Occidental Observer, and other publications.[citation needed]
Groups and events Spencer has spoken to include the Property and Freedom Society,[19] the American Renaissance conference,[20] and the HL Mencken Club.[21] In November 2016, an online petition was signed by "thousands of students, employees, and alumni" to prevent Spencer from speaking at Texas A&M University on December 6, 2016.[22] While the event took place on the grounds of the 1st amendment because Texas A&M is a public university, a protest and "a large counter-event" were held at the same time.[23]
Views According to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), Spencer advocates for a white homeland for a "dispossessed white race" and calls for "peaceful ethnic cleansing" to halt the "deconstruction" of European culture.[16][24][25] According to a 2010 article by Alex Knepper on David Frum's FrumForum.com, Spencer is an admirer of Friedrich Nietzsche, based upon "a hideously poor reading" of his works.[26]
In 2013, the Anti-Defamation League recognized Spencer as a leader in white supremacist circles, saying that since his time at The American Conservative, he has rejected conservatism, because according to Spencer, its adherents "can't or won't represent explicitly white interests."[27]
In a 2016 interview for Time magazine, Spencer said that he rejected white supremacy and slavery of nonwhites, preferring to establish America as a white ethnostate.[10][28]
Spencer opposes same-sex marriage,[29] which he described as "unnatural", a "non-issue," and that "very few gay men will find the idea of monogamy to their liking".[30] Matthew Heimbach of the Traditionalist Youth Network (TYN) was reportedly disinvited from the event for his anti-gay views, while Jack Donovan, an openly gay alt-right author, was a key speaker.[31] In August 2016, when asked during a Reddit "Ask Me Anything" about how he feels about his large following in the gay community, he stated that "The gays love me."[32]
Spencer openly supports American president-elect Donald Trump and called Trump's presidential victory as the "the victory of will", a phrase akin to the Leni Riefenstahl's Nazi-era propaganda film.[10] Upon Trump's appointment of Steve Bannon as his chief of staff, Spencer said Bannon would be in "the best possible position" to influence policy. This echoed similar remarks from David Duke, former Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, who said Bannon's appointment was “excellent” and had created “the ideological aspects of where we’re going.”[33]
Controversies In 2014, Spencer was deported from Budapest, Hungary, and via the Schengen Agreement, is banned from 26 countries in Europe for three years, after trying to organize National Policy Institute Conference, a conference for white nationalists.[4][34]
In mid-November 2016, excerpts of Spencer giving a speech at an alt-right conference attended by approximately 200 people in Washington, D.C., showed audience members cheering and making the Nazi salute when he said, “Hail Trump, hail our people, hail victory!”[10][35]
Montana In January 2013, according to multiple news outlets, as well as an accounting of the event himself,[36] Spencer got into an unpleasant exchange with Randy Scheunemann, John McCain's former foreign policy aide during his 2008 bid for the presidency. The two men were on a ski lift at a private ski resort called The Big Mountain Club. Then months later, at the club's New Year's Eve Party that next winter, the two men again exchanged heated words. Scheunemann complained about Spencer and wanted him kicked out of the club. The club decided that instead Scheuneman would lose his membership privileges. Spencer eventually resigned his membership. The event, because it was covered widely in the American press, increased local public awareness of Spencer, that he and his work were at least partially based in Whitefish some of the year. This resulted in rallies and local anti-racist efforts against Spencer and his company.[37]
The National Policy Institute think tank has a mailing address in Whitefish, Montana, which shares an address with the Alternative Right/Radix online forum. In 2013, Rachel Maddow reported a link between the Montana-based National Policy Institute and The Heritage Foundation's report, written by their Senior Policy Analyst, Jason Richwine, that was critical of the U.S. Senate's 2013 Immigration Act.[38]
Spencer had published the same report on his AltRight website, and defended both reports as it related to his views on nationalism.[39] Spencer responded by seeing the Maddow segment as helping to raise his and his organization's profile.[40][41]