Summary
April Gaede has an unusual approach to teaching the alphabet to three-year-old daughter Dresden (don't get excited, she's named, charmingly, after the German city flattened by bombs in the Second World War, not the Stoke-on-Trent suburb). "Let's do ABC," she tells her. "A is for Aryan, B is for blood, as in our ancestors fought and spilt their blood for our freedom . . ."
April, a woman who you'd be best not getting into conversation with while hanging your washing out, has two other daughters, Lamb and Lynx. Together (and April must be so proud) they have become the poster girls of American neo-Nazism. They perform pleasant little ditties about immigration - "this one's called Victory Day - it's about a war between the races with the whites coming out on top" - under the name of Prussian Blue, a chemical residue that Holocaust deniers claim proves that the gas chambers weren't used for killing.See the full content of this document
Extract
Twins Fuel Nazi Hatred
To call April and her family dysfunctional would be an insult to the dysfunctional. Not only is ther...
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