Regarding this analysis of a BBC article on Iron March founder Alexander Slavros.
https://meduza.io/en/feature/2020/02/04/how-a-moscow-man-from-an-uzbek-family-started-the-world-s-biggest-neo-nazi-forum
Well, the real legacy of Iron March is James Mason and Siege honestly. Not even so much Atomwaffen. So maybe less Slavros than Zeiger. Dunno who first introduced it over there. I do think it likely that revolutionaries will use Siege as an instruction manual given where America is going. It would be far less important if mainstream politics were not enmeshed in civil war anticipation. But in times of tension violent fanatics can become key. Think Princip. Think John Brown.
I didn't think much of the place a few years ago. But I think I mentioned before it feels like having been at the birth of al Qaeda. All of these Sieger accelerationist terrorists ultimately have their origin on Iron March - and I think as Democrats get total power due to demographics, if they do, this stuff is just going to keep getting stronger.
So not to worry you. But I doubt it is all going away. It speaks to modernity and where our society is going in an important way. Like Marx did with the new industrial society I'd even go so far as to say.
I guess in that sense you can take some solace in knowing you were part of something in some way that may end up being immensely important.
Joe_McCarthy ago
I posted on the Iron March edition of Siege edited by Zeiger the other day. By now that cover is very familiar. It is Euromaidan in Ukraine a few years ago.
https://archive.org/details/JamesMasonSIEGE3rdEdition/mode/2up