Man Stabs Father in Church Claiming Pastor’s Sermon as Inspiration – Is He Guilty by Association?

Eric Striker
Daily Stormer
April 4, 2017

According to the system, people who have dissident political opinions must be exempt from protection by the First Amendment because a mentally unhinged war veteran stabbed a black guy in New York City.

In a futile attempt to portray white males as the most dangerous group in America, James Jackson is being charged with an act of terrorism for his alleged attack on Timothy Caughman.

The inference here is that because Jackson claims to have acted out of revulsion at interracial relationships, and he himself may have read some “alt-right” platforms, anyone who disagrees with the assertion that miscegenation is a good thing for humanity is liable to be considered a terrorist or terrorist-enabler.

The (((New York City judicial establishment))) willfully misusing local terrorism statutes in this case is nothing more than a publicity stunt to try and cram this into the headlines as a purely political attack on President Trump and his alt-right supporters. It is meant to provide fodder and a tee for pre-packaged headlines of “Are White men The Real Terrorists?”

But where does this end? Was Jodie Foster to blame for John Hinckley trying to assassinate Reagan?

How about the case of a man hearing a sermon at a Kentucky Baptist church, and then proceeding to start stabbing his father right in the pews? He cited the Pastor’s words as his inspiration, but because of the lack of a political angle for Jews to exploit, this is being used as an example of him being crazy rather than guilt on the clerics part.

People:

A Kentucky man was sentenced to 10 years in prison after he pleaded guilty but mentally ill to stabbing his father during a church service last year, PEOPLE confirms.

Ethan Buckley, 21, reportedly told officials he was “moved by the message” before stabbing his father in the neck. He was charged with first-degree assault.

On August 14, Buckley was arrested after a church pastor told police he was standing at the altar and heard a “weird noise,” according to the Bowling Green Daily News.

According to the paper, the pastor heard Buckley’s father say, “Don’t let him kill me, don’t let him kill me.”

Another pastor heard the disturbance and jumped over chairs to get Buckley off his father. Buckley’s father was taken to the hospital and treated for his injuries.

In the milieu of American Judeo-Bolshevism, guilt by association is the new normal. If you’re a member of the political opposition, and somebody who commits a crime retweets you, you’re held – officially or unofficially – as responsible.

So far, they haven’t been able to hold someone fully liable for the actions of another, although the set up of Matt Hale is a step in the direction they want to drag us in. The goal is to chill speech and debate for people who hold ideologies or worldviews that Jews find threatening to their power and privilege.

If James Jackson’s actions are “terrorism” and Trump/the alt-right are at fault, then such logic would indict the Kentucky pastor who “inspired” Ethan Buckley.