I like to ski, I like astronomy, I like rural living and children and animals and I love my wife. I'm not a complicated man, but I live on a very screwy planet, people wise. I am beset with a brain that comes up with outside-the-box observations, and ideas about improving things, and, if I have a "mission" in life, it is to share these, which typically show up after a good night's sleep.
Rebane's blog's right wing regulars go strangely silent when it is revealed the company they keep:
"Authorities said they were treating the attack as an act of domestic
terrorism. American Sikhs said they have often been singled out for
harassment, and occasionally violent attack, since the September 11,
2001, attacks because of their colorful turbans and beards.
U.S. military sources said Page had been discharged from the Army in
1998 for "patterns of misconduct" and had been cited for being drunk on
duty.
Page had served in the military for six years but was never posted
overseas. He was a psychological operations specialist and missile
repairman who was last stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, the
sources said.
In June 1998 he was disciplined for being drunk on duty and had his
rank reduced to specialist from sergeant. He was not eligible to
re-enlist.
Page had been a member of the racist skinhead band End Apathy, based
in Fayetteville, North Carolina, in 2010, said Heidi Beirich, director
of the intelligence project at the Southern Poverty Law Center in
Montgomery, Alabama.
Page also tried to buy goods from the National Alliance, a neo-Nazi
group, in 2000, she said. The SPLC describes the National Alliance on
its website as "perhaps the most dangerous and best organized neo-Nazi
formation in America."
In a 2010 online interview with End Apathy's record label Label56,
Page said he had founded the band in 2005 because "I realized ... that
if we could figure out how to end people's apathetic ways it would be
the start towards moving forward.""
"Authorities said they were treating the attack as an act of domestic terrorism. American Sikhs said they have often been singled out for harassment, and occasionally violent attack, since the September 11, 2001, attacks because of their colorful turbans and beards.
U.S. military sources said Page had been discharged from the Army in 1998 for "patterns of misconduct" and had been cited for being drunk on duty.
Page had served in the military for six years but was never posted overseas. He was a psychological operations specialist and missile repairman who was last stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, the sources said.
In June 1998 he was disciplined for being drunk on duty and had his rank reduced to specialist from sergeant. He was not eligible to re-enlist.
Page had been a member of the racist skinhead band End Apathy, based in Fayetteville, North Carolina, in 2010, said Heidi Beirich, director of the intelligence project at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama.
Page also tried to buy goods from the National Alliance, a neo-Nazi group, in 2000, she said. The SPLC describes the National Alliance on its website as "perhaps the most dangerous and best organized neo-Nazi formation in America."
In a 2010 online interview with End Apathy's record label Label56, Page said he had founded the band in 2005 because "I realized ... that if we could figure out how to end people's apathetic ways it would be the start towards moving forward.""