Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
July 16, 2014
The Jew-created comic character of Archie is scheduled to die on Wednesday saving his friend, who is a homosexualist, from a gay-basher.
The hated redheaded teenager, known for staring in the most boring of all comics, was licensed to be used in an evangelical Christian capacity in 1973, given that he was viewed as representing wholesome family values. However, there was always an underlying homosexualism in the comics, which Christian parents who bought this Jew book for their children apparently failed to pick up on.
In recent years, the book has been more openly filled with all types of weird faggotry, which the Jewish people heavily enjoy marketing to young boys due to their racial nature being prone to homosexual pedophilia.
In the storyline of this latest gimmick comic by the Jewish social-destruction machine, the faggot friend of Archie, who is gay-married to one of his other friends, is lobbying for gun control when a hateful White man shoots at him as a punishment for his sick anal behaviors.
But the death of the character who made his comic book debut more than 70 years ago was not meant to be a sob story, Archie Comics publisher and co-chief executive officer Jon Goldwater said. “It’s really not sad. Actually it’s inspirational,” Goldwater said. “Because Archie does what you would want Archie to do. He takes the bullet for his friend, and he would do that for anybody.”
Archie steps in front of a shot aimed at his friend Kevin Keller, who is targeted for his “personal point of view”, according to Goldwater.
“Archie taking the bullet really is a metaphor for acceptance,” Goldwater said, adding that the assailant did not agree with Kevin’s personal life or political stance.
The original Jew creator of Archie, John Goldwater, served as National Commissioner of the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai Brith. When he died in 1999, the ADL solicited donations in his name. After his death, his son Jonathan took over the family business of corrupting children with homosexual messaging.