How being a Pagan police officer helps me spot right wing extremists and occultists

14 comments
  1. He says this while choosing to spend his life enforcing the policy of a far right government.

    This article is about 11 layers of defective thinking.

  2. People really need educating. I’ve seen someone accused of Nazism for having an Iron Cross on their bike and another guy for using a standard skull and crossbones clipart pic for their display picture

  3. Slightly overweight dancing with a chicken in one hand next to a fire.

    Not far off from the pagans I know. Just we drink from horns not stick em on helmets

  4. There’s no escape from them. No refuge. They have delegates in every community, every niche gathering you think will be safe from the orthodoxy. They infiltrate everything. Doesn’t matter what lifestyle you try to adopt, thinking it’ll give you some independence, some freedom from them. They’ll simply dispatch one of their goons who will promptly “identify” as being one of you. They have eyes and ears everywhere. They will never stop trying to bring you to heel. There’s no place for dissent in the world that’s coming.

  5. Rather good read that, I think people forget / don’t realise just how much pagan iconography is misused

    >Pardy’s religion has, much to his surprise, become a big part of his police work. He, and members of the Police Pagan Association he founded in 2009, are increasingly involved in investigations that involve the occult, Satanism and right-wing extremism.
    >
    >Modern Paganism is none of those things, but right-wing supremacists in the UK and the US often misappropriate Pagan iconography for their own agendas, and, as with any religion, there are people who become radicalised and dangerous.

    ..

    >Many Norse symbols were appropriated by the Nazi party, and Jake Angeli, also known as the QAnon Shaman who stormed Capitol Hill just over a year ago, has three huge Pagan symbol tattoos on his chest.
    >
    >Pardy created a document called Extremism and Paganism, a 60-page report endorsed by the National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) and the Home Office, on the topic, and has also provided training to the SO15 Counter Terrorism Command and the SO18 Aviation Security as well as the prison service, intelligence agencies and the Home Office.

  6. This thick boy should not be anywhere near a police uniform with those kind of convictions. But i’d find it hard to avoid saying the same to anyone who is religious in any way.

  7. It really doesn’t help, if anything it hinders. This guy would probably write-off the young teen that’s drawing certain symbols as being interested in paganism, not realizing they’re reading something produced by something like the Order of Nine Angles. Seems extremely counter intuitive to me.

  8. Could do with a bit of that in Leicester right now eh? It’s a bit embarrassing all those videos of police unable to see right wing cultists smashing up Hindu temples.

  9. As a Satanist, I’m glad that the fuzz has someone aware of what’s going on outside the mainstream. The UK has a severely unfortunate case of Satanist neonazis promoting far right nonsense under the guise of “quick occultism” and generally being edgelords. It’s important to be able to understand nuance and to spot Nazis. The Nazis also try to infiltrate the police all the time.

  10. Ehhhh, when I ran in pagan circles back in the day there was *quite* a lot of sex and naked dancing. And every Asatru I’ve ever met has been a white supremacist twatbag.

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