Rocky Mountain Rendezvous (1992)

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Rocky Mountain Rendezvous
Pete Peters, Scriptures for America Ministries
Participants150–175
OutcomeTransition of American right-wing terrorism to leaderless resistance

The Rocky Mountain Rendezvous was an October 1992 meeting in

Ruby Ridge standoff two months prior.[3][4][5] Concerns included that the United States federal government was a police state engaged in systematic over taxation, wrongful imprisonment and murder of its citizens, described by the meeting as "genocide."[6][7][8][9]

The meeting was critical in influencing the young American militia movement and sparking the transition in radical right and

white supremacist violence in the United States towards leaderless resistance.[10][11][12]

Attendance

Peters described the meeting as a gathering of "

neo-Nazi Aryan Nations and National Alliance, and the Ku Klux Klan.[2][13] Some attendees identified themselves as "100 percent bigot."[11]

Peters himself was a prolific

Richard G. Butler, founder of Aryan Nations, and Louis Beam, an Aryan Nations spokesman and former Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon.[10]

Proceedings

The Rendezvous lasted for three days. The proceedings were audio-recorded and compiled into a "Special Report" by Peters.[2][14]

Events included meetings in multiple subject-matter committees. Proposals ranged from circulating petitions to holding unofficial citizen grand juries.[9] In particular, the "SWAT" ("Sacred Warfare Action Tactics") committee was responsible for hearing the essay on methods of leaderless violence presented by Beam. In Beam's explanation, "leaderless resistance" is an avenue where "a thousand different small phantom cells" could effectively overwhelm Federal forces in place of a vulnerable pyramidal hierarchy.[8][15][16] The essay was reproduced in whole in the meeting report.[10]

The attendees of the Rocky Mountain Rendezvous also drafted and sent an open letter to the family of Vicki and Samuel Weaver, the civilian casualties of Ruby Ridge, that acknowledged their "mortal sacrifices."[8]

Religious underpinnings

The Rendezvous placed a special emphasis on Christian theology.

Jesus Christ.[8] The introduction to the Special Report by Peters quoted Book of Numbers 35:33:

So you shall not pollute the land where you are; for blood defiles the land, and no atonement can be made for the land, for the blood that is shed on it, except by the blood of him who shed it.

Attendees feared that actors of the Antichrist would force open, violent conflict and identified the need for a Christian resistance and the creation of a "Christian civil body politic."[8][9][11] Militant violence was further justified as a necessary path to resist the conspiracy theories of a Zionist Occupation Government (ZOG) or New World Order.[11][16]

Paradoxically, some attendees criticized the meeting's support for Randy Weaver, widower and father of Vicki and Samuel Weaver, for having "a poor reputation as a Christian man." This criticism was disregarded as irrelevant.[9]

Legacy

The Rocky Mountain Rendezvous was a "watershed" in right-wing extremism.[10] The Rendezvous placed leaderless resistance at the forefront of right-wing extremist strategy and provided a blueprint for future violent action—in part a brainchild of Beam. Leaderless resistance shifted violence away from the "robes of the KKK and the uniforms of the Aryan Nations."[1][4] Thus, lone wolves and small, secret cells are relied on.[10]

Four months after the meeting, the 1993 Waco siege at the Mount Carmel Center of the Branch Davidians fueled significant animosity against the United States federal government, and gave sympathy to the American militia movement espoused at the Rendezvous.[8][12] The promotion of antigovernmental extremism and small-cell violence by the Rendezvous has been credited in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing committed by Timothy McVeigh less than three years after.[6][17]

Since 2001 and the advent of the

internet age, informal online communities and mass media have become the loci of radicalization for leaderless actors once fostered in extremist groups.[2][18]

References

  1. ^ a b Perlmutter, Dawn (2001). "Skandalon 2001: The Religious Practices of Modern Satanists and Terrorists". Anthropoetics. 7 (2).
  2. ^ a b c d Hagen, Lisa (October 13, 2020). "The Original No Compromisers No Compromise". NPR.org (Podcast). Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  3. ^ Potok, Mark. "Timeline: Land Use and the 'Patriots'". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
  4. ^ . Retrieved December 27, 2022.
  5. .
  6. ^ a b Newsweek Staff (2010-03-11). "The Roots of the Modern-Day Militia Movement". Newsweek. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
  7. ^ Graefe, Alisha (December 2018). American Hatred: Wild West Myths, Color-Coded Rhetoric, and the Shaping of the Aryan Nations (Thesis). Boise State University. pp. 70–71.
  8. ^ .
  9. ^ .
  10. ^ a b c d e "Peter J. "Pete" Peters". Anti-Defamation League. Archived from the original on June 28, 2008. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c d e Markham-Cameron, Julia (June 2019). "Firearm Stockpiling as a Symptom of the White Patriot Identity, or: How Whites Learned to Start Worrying and Love The Gun" (PDF). Social Justice & Equity Law Journal. 2 (2): 178–80.
  12. ^ a b Winter, Aaron (2010). "American Terror: From Oklahoma City to 9/11 and After". In Brecher, B.; Devenney, M.; Winter, A. (eds.). Discourses and Practices of Terrorism: Interrogating Terror (PDF). Oxford, England: Routledge.
  13. ^ Conner, Chance. "The Oklahoma City Bombing Trial: The Denver Post Online". extras.denverpost.com. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
  14. ^ Peters, Peter J. Special Report on the Meeting of Christian Men Held in Estes Park, Colorado October 23, 24, 25, 1992 Concerning the Killing of Vickie and Samuel Weaver by the United States Government (PDF). LaPorte, Colorado: Scriptures for America Ministries.
  15. ^ Brister, Paul D. (September 2011). Ku Klux Rising: Toward an Understanding of American Right Wing Terrorist Campaigns (PDF) (Dissertation). Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School. p. 235.
  16. ^ .
  17. ^ Dees, Morris; Cocoran, James (June 16, 1996). "The Nazilink with militias White racists play down their politics to recruit from the middle class". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
  18. ^ Spaaj, Hamm; Ramon, Mark S. (February 2015). Lone Wolf Terrorism in America: Using Knowledge of Radicalization Pathways to Forge Prevention Strategies (PDF). Retrieved December 28, 2022.