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There is no such thing as a White Supremacist and this is libelous. He is a White Separatist.
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{{Neo-Fascism}}
{{Neo-Fascism}}


'''Jamie Kelso''' (June 8, 1948) is a [[white supremacist]] activist. He hosts daily web radio programs, including The Jamie Kelso Show on the Voice of Reason Broadcast Network.
'''Jamie Kelso''' (June 8, 1948) is a [[white supremacist]] activist. {{Dubious}}He hosts daily web radio programs, including The Jamie Kelso Show on the Voice of Reason Broadcast Network.


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Revision as of 16:01, 14 February 2012

Jamie Kelso (June 8, 1948) is a white supremacist activist. [dubiousdiscuss]He hosts daily web radio programs, including The Jamie Kelso Show on the Voice of Reason Broadcast Network.

Public life

Kelso first came to national attention when he was featured in a 1960s Time Magazine article on teenagers in the suburbs of Los Angeles.[1]

He was featured in the chapter entitled "The Idealist" in the 1976 book What Really Happened to the Class of '65? by Michael Medved and David Wallechinsky, both former high school classmates of Kelso's. When interviewed for the book, Kelso was an ardent member of the John Birch Society.[2]

He was also featured in Right Turns, Medved's 2005 autobiography. He has appeared on Irish Radio in Dublin, Ireland, on The Political Cesspool, and on Fox TV in South Carolina.

He was the chairman of the May 2004 and May 2005 New Orleans conferences attended by a number of white nationalists, including Nick Griffin, chair of the British National Party; Jean-Michel Girard, Directeur de cabinet des affaires etrangeres of the Front National of France; and Lady Michele Renouf from the UK. Kelso lived at David Duke's headquarters in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana during this time. He also organized an April 2004 international revisionist conference in Sacramento attended by attorney Edgar J. Steele, author of Defensive Racism; Paul Fromm, chair of the Canadian Association for Free Expression; and April Gaede and her daughters Lamb and Lynx, twin members of the band Prussian Blue.

References

  1. ^ T.K. Kim. "Electronic Storm: Stormfront grows a thriving neo-nazi community". Southern Poverty Law Center.
  2. ^ What Really Happened to the Class of '65? by Michael Medved and David Wallechinsky, Random House Inc; 1st ed edition (September 1976).

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