National Socialist Liberation Front
The National Socialist Liberation Front was originally established as a youth wing of the National Socialist White People's Party in 1969. In 1974 it was reconstituted as a separate National Socialist organization after its leader Joseph Tommasi had been expelled by NSWPP leader Matt Koehl.
History
The NSLF was established in 1969 by Tommasi, with the backing of William Luther Pierce, as a campus based revolutionary organization to compete with militant New Left militant groups. Ideological as well as personal differences began to develop between Tommassi and Koehl. At the Partys second congress in 1970, Tommasi denounced the conservative old guard of the party and called for immediate revolution. Koehl expelled him from the Party in 1973, claiming that he was smoking marijuana and entertaining young women at party headquarters, as well as misuse of party funds.[1] One of the NSLFs recruits during this period was Louisiana State University student David Duke.[2]
The NSLF was reconstituted as a new organization on March 2, 1974 "in the presence of 43 National Socialist revolutionaries" in El Monte, California. The NSLF broke with established National Socialist tradition, eschewing browshirt uniforms and abandoning attempts to raise a "mass movement" of supporters to win power legalistically. Instead, Tommasi argued that it was best for small bands of "National Socialist revolutionaries" to arm themselves and conduct guerrilla warfare.[3][4] The new organization was structured as a two tiered entity, with a legal "aboveground" membership - which at most included forty members - and a smaller "underground" that was dedicated to violent, revolutionary action. This group included Tommasi, Karl Hand, David Rust and James Mason, the latter of whom was not an official member of the NSLF.[5]
Joseph Tommasi was killed at the El Monte headquarters of the NSWPP in August 1975 and was succeeded by Lt. David Rust, who was soon arrested on a weapons charge.[6] Units of the group formed in Cincinnati, Buffalo, Wilmington, Delaware and Louisiana. James Mason would take part of the following in Ohio out in 1982 to form the Universal Order, a group that promoted the ideas of Charles Manson as a continuation of National Socialism, and took with them the periodical Siege!, though the parting was reportedly amicable. By that time Karl Hand headed the group and published Defiance. Under Hand the NSLF went back to the earlier model of uniformed political demonstrations and legality. However, the organization would come to an end with Hand's arrest on a weapons charge in the mid-1980s.[7]
Publications
- Tommasi, Joseph Building the revolutionary party Chillicothe, Ohio: National Socialist Liberation Front, 1974
- Alessi, Carl Carl Alessi's Underground N.S.L.F. Comics Chillicothe, Ohio: National Socialist Liberation Front,
- The future belongs to the few of us still willing to get out hands dirty NSLF poster
Periodicals
- The National Socialist liberator Arlington, Va. : National Socialist Liberation Front, May 1969-mid 1970s?
- National Socialist review. Panorama City, Calif. : NSLF Jan 1975-?
- Defiance Buffalo, N.Y. : M. Stachowski 1980-
- Siege Chillicothe, Ohio : National Socialist Liberation Front, mid-1970s - 1982 (became publication of Universal Order)
- National Socialist observer. Kenner, LA : NSLF, Sept. 1984 -?
References
- ↑ Jeffrey Kaplan ed. Encyclopedia of white power: a sourcebook on the radical racist right Walnut Creek AltaMira Press 2000 p.302
- ↑ Kaplan p.98-9
- ↑ Kaplan p.222
- ↑ Tommasi, Joseph Building the revolutionary party Chillicothe, Ohio: National Socialist Liberation Front, 1974 p.1-2
- ↑ Kaplan p.303
- ↑ Kaplan p.303
- ↑ Kaplan pp.195, 222-3
External links
- Terrorist incidents ascribed to the NSLF on the START terrorism database