Bozeman sidesteps new state law, adopts Pride flag

After more than five hours of debate, the city commission voted 4-1 to designate the flag as an official flag of Bozeman. Members of Bozeman’s queer community and their allies gather just after midnight on July 16, 2025, to celebrate the city adopting the Pride flag. The rainbow Pride flag can once again fly over Bozeman City Hall after commissioners voted Tuesday night to make it an official city flag, sidestepping a Montana state law targeting the controversial symbol.  Four out of five of Bozeman’s commissioners supported the Pride flag, with the lone vote of dissent made by Commissioner Douglas Fischer, who argued that the flag was divisive and threatened to “drive a wedge” into the community.  Bozeman Mayor Terry Cunningham spoke to the commission after hearing more than five hours of intense public comment on the issue, both for and against the resolution. Cunningham said it was clear to him that Bozeman had a responsibility to stand for a “safe, welcoming and diverse community,” and adopting the Pride flag sends that signal. “Everyone is welcome in Bozeman, and they are welcome under that flag,” Cunningham said.  The resolution declares “the Pride flag and its variants to be official flags of the city of Bozeman” and allows the mayor and city manager to choose when and where to fly the flags on city property. The resolution does not alter or replace the current city flag.

via montanafreepress: Bozeman sidesteps new state law, adopts Pride flag

hands joined against progress pride flag
Photo by Lisett Kruusimäe on Pexels.com

Schweizer Lehrer leitet Ferienlager auf Schloss der Anastasia-Bewegung

Pädagogik und Erziehung können Einfallstore für Extremismus sein. Besonders deutlich zeigt sich das bei der völkischen Anastasia-Bewegung. Das Schloss Ober-Neundorf wurde in den vergangenen Jahren auch mit öffentlichen Geldern saniert. Auf dem Schloss Ober-Neundorf bei Görlitz findet diese Woche eine Bildungs-Freizeit statt. Kinder und Jugendliche zwischen 9 und 17 Jahren erwarte für 350 Euro in dieser Woche «humanistische Bildung» und «bewegende Ferienerlebnisse», heisst es auf dem Flyer. Denn Fakten und Wissen seien in der heutigen Zeit im Überfluss vorhanden, was fehle, sei das «sinnliche Erleben der Lerninhalte». Kinder dürfen hier «Körper, Seele und Geist verbinden». Das Schloss Ober-Neundorf dient der völkischen Anastasia-Bewegung, die vom Verfassungsschutz 2023 als rechtsextremer Verdachtsfall eingestuft wurde, als Bildungs- und Veranstaltungsort. Die Anastasia-Anhängerin Wlada Ruggle, die in der Schweiz lebt, ist beispielsweise regelmässig Gast auf dem Schloss für russische Folklore-Veranstaltungen oder Workshops, zuletzt am Abend bevor die Bildungs-Freizeit «Sommerwoche Schule am Schloss» vom 13. bis 19. Juli begann. Auf Anfrage von FLIMMER.MEDIA wurde seitens Schloss darauf verwiesen, dass man politisch und religiös neutral sei. Die Anastasia-Bewegung hat ihren Ursprung in Russland und richtet sich nach einer Romanreihe, deren Hauptprotagonistin Anastasia, ausgestattet mit übermenschlichen Fähigkeiten, verbunden mit der Natur in der russischen Taiga lebt. Die Anastasia-Bücher enthalten antisemitische und rassistische Elemente und zeichnen ein antidemokratisches, verschwörungsideologisches, wissenschafts- und fortschrittsfeindliches Weltbild. Die Bücher propagieren den Rückzug von der angeblich verkommenen Gesellschaft ins Reaktionäre, auf die eigene Selbstversorgungs-Scholle, die «Familienlandsitz» heisst. In den Büchern kommt auch eine Schule vor, die als die ideale Schule dargestellt wird: die Tekos-Schule, an der die Schetinin-Pädagogik angewandt wird. (…) Heute arbeitet P. als Lehrer an der International School Basel, einer Privatschule in der Schweiz. Bradley Roberts, Schulleiter der International School Basel betont auf Anfrage, dass die Schule die geäusserten Vorwürfe gegen ihren Mitarbeitenden ernst nehme. «Unsere Schule verpflichtet sich zu den Werten von Weltoffenheit, Inklusivität und gegenseitigem Respekt. Von unseren Mitarbeitenden erwarten wir, dass sie diese Werte im Schulalltag aktiv vorleben und fördern», so Roberts.

via flimmer; Schweizer Lehrer leitet Ferienlager auf Schloss der Anastasia-Bewegung

https://bsky.app/profile/aushoywoj.bsky.social/post/3lu42uhowls2s

TATE ‘RAPE’ CLAIM – Alt-Right YouTuber Lauren Southern claims Andrew Tate strangled and raped her after being introduced by Tommy Robinson

Ms Southern has been refused entry to the UK after she once handed out flyers that read ‘Allah is a gay god’. ANDREW Tate has been accused of strangling and raping Alt-Right YouTuber Lauren Southern. The Canadian, 30, claims she first met the shamed Brit during a trip to Bucharest alongside EDL founder Tommy Robinson. Ms Southern alleges the self-proclaimed misogynist, who lives in the Romanian capital with his brother Tristan, refused to stop making sexual advances towards her after a night out. (…) She then recalls feeling “incredibly intoxicated” by the end of the evening and even vomited at one point. Tate then allegedly drove her back to her hotel where he carried her up to her room. Ms Southern then accuses Tate of suddenly kissing her. She alleged in the memoir: “I kissed him back briefly and then told him I wanted to sleep. “I said no, very clearly, multiple times, and tried to pull his hands off me.  “He put his arm around my neck and began strangling me unconscious.” She claims she tried to fight back but was repeatedly attacked. “I’d prefer not to share the rest. It’s pretty obvious,” she concluded.

via irish sun: TATE ‘RAPE’ CLAIM Alt-Right YouTuber Lauren Southern claims Andrew Tate strangled and raped her after being introduced by Tommy Robinson

siehe auch: Andrew Tate accused of sexual assault by former alt-right influencer Lauren Southern. Lauren Southern, a political commentator and a former alt-right influencer, has accused Andrew Tate of sexual assault. On July 15, 2025, Lauren Southern took to X to announce the release of her new book, This Is Not Real Life. On the same day, she published a Substack post offering free chapters from her book about Andrew Tate and his ongoing criminal cases. In chapter 11, titled “Confessions,” Southern detailed her alleged situation with Tate, in which he allegedly “carried her back” to a hotel room while she was “incredibly intoxicated.”

Ukraine wing of US-founded terrorist group says it was involved in killing of intelligence officer in Kyiv – #TheBase

The Base, a far-right group with suspected links to Russia, said killing of Ivan Voronych was ‘only the beginning’ The Ukrainian wing of an internationally proscribed far-right terrorist organization with suspected links to Russia is claiming involvement in the brazen assassination of an intelligence officer in Kyiv. Late last week, a masked assailant shot and killed Col Ivan Voronych of the Ukraine security service (SBU) as he walked through a Kyiv parking lot in broad daylight. Shocking footage of the assassination circulated in Ukrainian media and caused a stir among residents in the capital. For months, the Base, born in the US and with a web of cells all over the world, has been offering money to supporters or willing participants for targeted assassinations and attacks on the critical infrastructure of Ukraine, coinciding with allegations that its American founder, Rinaldo Nazzaro, was a Kremlin spy. Ukrainian authorities have also been warning in recent weeks of similar Russian intelligence operations covertly paying unknowing citizens to carry out sabotage inside their country. “The shooting of the SBU colonel is not the end, but only the beginning,” said a statement posted on a Telegram channel that appears to be linked to the the Base’s supposed Ukrainian cell. “We will continue our struggle until justice prevails.” The same post, translated from Ukrainian, added that the group’s members were “proud of our associates” who carried out the killing and said they didn’t care if naysayers thought of them as “terrorists and extremists”. In another message to subscribers, the account also threatens other Ukrainian public figures and promises: “The hunt continues!” Sources in the counter-terrorism field reviewed the posts and said they appeared credible and represented an escalation from the Base, which is now either endorsing treasonous murders inside of Ukraine, actively commissioning them, or both.

via guardian: Ukraine wing of US-founded terrorist group says it was involved in killing of intelligence officer in Kyiv

siehe auch: Neo-Nazi group with suspected Russian ties claims responsibility for assassination of Ukrainian intelligence officer — The Guardian A Ukrainian cell of the neo-Nazi group “The Base” has claimed responsibility for the July 10 assassination of Colonel Ivan Voronych, a senior official in Ukraine’s domestic intelligence agency (SBU), according to The Guardian. “The shooting of the SBU colonel is not the end, but only the beginning. We will continue our struggle until justice prevails,” read a statement published on a Telegram channel believed to be linked to the cell. The message, published in Ukrainian, also stated that members of the group are “proud of our associates” who carried out the killing, and that they don’t care if critics denounce them as “terrorists and extremists.” In another message, the group wrote: “The hunt continues!” The Guardian’s counter-terrorism sources analyzed these messages and concluded that they appear credible, representing an escalation in violence. Steven Rai, an analyst at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue who monitors The Base’s online activity, reported that the group has been active in Ukraine since March. During this time, according to Rai, The Base has carried out at least 10 arson attacks targeting infrastructure and buildings across Ukraine. “They have repeatedly threatened a variety of terrorist actions, including acts of sabotage and the assassination of Ukrainian government officials,” Rai said. While The Base’s role in Voronych’s assassination is still unverified, “this action is very much in line with what they have been threatening to do for months and shows the severity of the threat they pose,” Rai added. The founder and leader of The Base, Rinaldo Nazzaro, declined to comment on the Ukrainian cell’s activities, telling The Guardian: “I have no personal involvement in this incident and don’t know who is responsible for it.” The newspaper notes that The Base has spent months on Telegram offering cash for “volunteer operatives and recruits” to attack infrastructure and politicians in Ukraine, coinciding with allegations that Nazzaro, a “semi-defected American” who now lives in St. Petersburg, is a Kremlin spy; Ukraine wing of Russia-linked neo-Nazi group claims involvement in killing of security service colonel The Ukrainian wing of far-right terrorist organisation The Base, which is suspected of having ties to Russia, has claimed involvement in the recent killing of a top-ranking intelligence colonel in Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, The Guardian reported on Wednesday. Last Thursday, Colonel Ivan Voronych was fatally shot five times in Kyiv by an unidentified gunman who fled the scene of the killing in an SUV. On Sunday, Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) chief Vasyl Malyuk announced that two Russian FSB agents suspected of assassinating Voronych had been killed in a police raid on their place of residence in Kyiv. The Base, founded in 2018 by Rinaldo Nazzaro, a former Pentagon contractor suspected of engaging in espionage at the behest of the Kremlin, is a neo-Nazi terrorist group previously implicated in “an assassination plot, mass shootings, and other actions in Europe”, according to The Guardian. For months, the newspaper reports, The Base has been offering to pay members or voluntary collaborators to conduct “targeted assassinations” or attacks on Ukraine’s “critical infrastructure”, in a similar fashion to the sabotage operations carried out in Europe by Russia’s intelligence services. In two Telegram posts published last week, White Phoenix, the alleged Ukraine-based arm of The Base, claimed that its “activists” had carried out a “carefully planned” attack on Voronych as a “warning to the regime” of Volodymyr Zelensky; Geheimdienst-Oberst erschossen Anschlag in Kiew führt zu Gruppe aus den USA. Der Anschlag auf einen ukrainischen Geheimdienst-Offizier war offenbar das Werk von Neonazis. Auf Telegram gab es entsprechende Bekenner-Nachrichten. Eine Neonazi-Organisation mit Wurzeln in den USA ist offenbar für den tödlichen Anschlag auf einen ukrainischen Geheimdienstmitarbeiter verantwortlich. In Telegram-Kanälen haben sich mutmaßliche Mitglieder der Gruppe “The Base” zu dem Attentat bekannt, berichtet der britische “The Guardian”. Vergangene Woche war der ukrainische Oberst, Mitglied des Geheimdienstes SBU, auf einem Parkplatz in der Hauptstadt erschossen worden. Überwachungskameras hatten den Anschlag aufgezeichnet. Die Gruppe, die von dem US-Amerikaner Rinaldo Nazzaro im Juli 2018 gegründet wurde, operiert weltweit und hat einen ukrainischen Ableger. “Die Erschießung des SBU-Obersts ist nicht das Ende, sondern erst der Anfang”, heißt es in einem Beitrag auf Telegram. “Wir werden unseren Kampf fortsetzen, bis die Gerechtigkeit siegt.” Die Jagd würde weitergehen, schrieben Anhänger in einem anderen Beitrag. Gründer Nazzaro dementierte eine direkte Verbindung zu dem Anschlag in Kiew. “Ich bin nicht persönlich in diesen Vorfall eingebunden und ich weiß nicht, wer verantwortlich ist”, schrieb er auf Telegram. Die Gruppe hat aber, so der “Guardian”, seit Monaten finanzielle Unterstützung für Anschläge in der Ukraine angeboten.

Neo-Nazi ‘Fitness Clubs’ Surge in U.S., Recruiting Teens via TikTok and Telegram

Behind the guise of fitness and brotherhood, a rising network of white supremacist “Active Clubs” is luring American teens into neo-Nazi ideology, using TikTok, Telegram, and combat sports as the bait. Gila Isaacson JUL 16, 2025 13:45 2 min read Start the conversation Fitness Club (Photo: Shutterstock / Ground Picture) A growing network of neo-Nazi youth groups, disguised as fitness clubs, is recruiting American teenagers as young as 15 through social media platforms like TikTok and Telegram, spreading Adolf Hitler quotes and white supremacist ideology, according to a new investigation by the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism. The report reveals a 59% surge in “Active Clubs” across the United States since October 2023, with the number of chapters rising from 49 to 78, now operating in 42 states. The Active Clubs trace their origins to the Rise Above Movement, a violent California-based group founded in 2017 by Robert Rundo. After participating in aggressive rallies in Berkeley, Huntington Beach, and Charlottesville, Rundo fled to Eastern Europe to evade federal charges. There, he collaborated with Russian neo-Nazi Denis Kapustin to develop “White Nationalism 3.0,” a decentralized network designed to elude law enforcement. In late 2020, the pair launched the Active Club model through a podcast, offering guidance on avoiding detection, organizing street fights, and disseminating propaganda. Rundo was extradited from Romania in August 2023 and pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges, receiving a two-year sentence in December 2024 but was released immediately due to time served. Kapustin, meanwhile, remains active in Ukraine, leading the Russian Volunteer Corps against Russian forces. Members of Active Clubs engage in mixed martial arts training, military-style exercises, and public propaganda campaigns. By emphasizing fitness and community in their public messaging, the groups evade content moderation on platforms like TikTok while coordinating through Telegram. The network also hosts international mixed martial arts tournaments, drawing members from multiple countries, and generates revenue through merchandise sales under brands like Will2Rise and partnerships with other extremist groups.

via jfeed: Neo-Nazi ‘Fitness Clubs’ Surge in U.S., Recruiting Teens via TikTok and Telegram

Far-right Polish MEP faces criminal probe for calling Auschwitz gas chambers ‘fake’

Polish prosecutors have launched a criminal investigation into far-right MEP Grzegorz Braun after he questioned the historical truth of the Auschwitz concentration camp and its gas chambers, calling them “fake.” The ultra-nationalist politician, known for a history of provocative acts, stirred fresh controversy during a Thursday interview with the conservative Radio Wnet, where he dismissed the existence of gas chambers at the Nazi death camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau, southern Poland, and accused the state-run Auschwitz Museum of promoting a “pseudo-historical narrative.” Following Braun’s comments, the interviewer ended the conversation, saying: “There are certain limits.” On Monday, the Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation confirmed that it had launched proceedings against Braun for publicly and falsely denying the genocide committed by Nazi Germany at Auschwitz. The investigation falls under Article 55 of Poland’s Act on the Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), which criminalizes Holocaust denial and carries a penalty of up to three years in prison. (…) Braun leads the far-right Confederation of the Polish Crown party and ran in this year’s Polish presidential election. Despite being considered an extremist outsider, he finished fourth in what many viewed as a surprisingly strong result for the ultra-nationalist politician. Polish authorities had long sought to prosecute the controversial politician, but his election to the European Parliament in 2023 granted him immunity. In May, MEPs voted to strip him of that privilege, paving the way for Polish officials to prosecute him.

via tvpworld: Far-right Polish MEP faces criminal probe for calling Auschwitz gas chambers ‘fake’

FBI: Dropout Of White Supremacist Gang Gets 11 Years In Prison For Drug & Firearms Trafficking In Albuquerque

A key figure in a Sinaloa Cartel-linked drug and firearms trafficking ring tied to white supremacist gangs was sentenced to 11 years in prison for his role in distributing fentanyl, methamphetamine, and illegal firearms in Albuquerque. There is no parole in the federal system. According to court records, an 18-month FBI investigation initiated in 2021 targeted a drug trafficking and firearms conspiracy linked to the Sinaloa Cartel and racially motivated violent extremist groups in Albuquerque, New Mexico. James Casady Cangro, 45, a former member of the Soldiers of Aryan Culture prison gang, was previously identified as a key figure in the white supremacist network before dropping out of the gang. The investigation revealed Cangro’s involvement in trafficking methamphetamine and fentanyl sourced from Arizona, as well as illegal firearms possession and trafficking. (…) On April 19, 2022, Cangro was arrested in California, where corrections officials discovered 45 fentanyl pills and methamphetamine in his possession during a strip search. A subsequent search of his Albuquerque residence uncovered 11 firearms, including a sawed-off shotgun, additional drugs, and a ballistic vest. Cangro was subsequently charged with and pled guilty to two counts of possession of body armor by a violent felon, being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, two counts of possession of unregistered firearms, possession with intent to distribute fentanyl and possession with intent to distribute 50 grams or more of methamphetamine.

via ladailypost: FBI: Dropout Of White Supremacist Gang Gets 11 Years In Prison For Drug & Firearms Trafficking In Albuquerque