Breaking News

KKK grand wizard comes out and speaks on Supporting Donald Trump

An NBC news exclusive profiled the leadership of a Virginia chapter of the Ku Klux Klan, Friday (April 29th), following a study that cites 32 organizations in the south Atlantic state alone, among what it identifies as a rise in the number of hate groups across the nation.  African-American news anchor, Chris Thomas of NBC 12, was invited to meet with the Imperial Wizard of the Rebel Brigade Knights at a remote location in Jefferson National Forrest, where in an interview overseen by local deputies he endeavored to clear the record, stating among other things, that “We are not white supremacists, we’re white separatists. We’re not the big bad hate group people think we are.”

Curiosity to investigate the popularity of the present KKK was sparked when the station was informed of a recruitment drive that had recently placed fliers reading "I want you for the KKK," in mailboxes and fences across the Richmond area.  During the one-on-one, the unidentified wizard provided that the presidency of Barack Obama has reinvigorated an interest in the 150-year-old club, but he defends that wih the times they have evolved to become a "more political than racial" entity, claiming that their disfavor of the President doesn't have to do with him being Black.  "We are not a hate group. We hate no one," he told Chris Thomas.  The Southern Poverty Law Center, the civil rights based legal advocacy organization responsible for the study, determines a 'hate group' to be any that bare "beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class of people, typically for their immutable characteristics."

When shown the anonymous klansman's representation of the group's modern direction, education chairman of the Richmond NAACP, Marty Jewell expressed distrust, stating: "To this day, they have not disavowed themselves as being domestic terrorists.  That's who they are. They are still present with us today, and they keep secret. Everything is done in secret. You don't need to be secret if you have good intentions."

While the identity of klansmen has traditionally been a taboo matter for it's members, their social positions haven't been.  Controversy loomed over Donald Trump's campaign for Presidency when back in February he hesitated to disavow an endorsement from Grandwizard David Duke.  The RBK chapter Wizard, who earlier attempted to rationalize that the old KKK turned to violence because they were afraid of change, seconded Duke's endorsement, telling Thomas, “I think Donald Trump would be best for the job. The reason a lot of Klan members like Donald Trump is because a lot of . We want our country to be safe."  



Source: youtube.com