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{{Quote|Jews will not replace us!|Cantwell at the Unite the Right rally.}}
{{Quote|Jews will not replace us!|Cantwell at the Unite the Right rally.}}
'''Christopher Charles Cantwell''' is an American Neo-Nazi associated with the [[Alt-Right]]. He is best known for his appearance at the [[Unite the Right rally]] held by [[Jason Kessler]] in 2017, and the subsequent manhunt. He has also garnered criticism from other Alt-Right members for being a government informant, although he claims he only did this to get back at the notorious Left-wing terror group [[Antifa]].
'''Christopher Charles Cantwell''' is an American Neo-Nazi associated with the [[Alt-Right]]. He is best known for his appearance at the [[Unite the Right rally]] held by [[Jason Kessler]] in 2017, and the subsequent manhunt. He has also garnered criticism from other Alt-Right members for being a government informant, although he claims he only did this to get back at the notorious Left-wing terror group [[Antifa]].
== Early life ==
Cantwell grew up in Stony Brook, New York. His father was an air traffic controller and his mother a homemaker. He attended Ward Melville High School in East Setauket, New York.
In 2000, Cantwell pleaded guilty in Suffolk County, New York to driving while intoxicated (DWI), criminal possession of a weapon, and criminal possession of stolen property. He later told Hatewatch, "I was involved in so much bullshit when I was a teenager, honestly, that like what I got caught for was the least of the shit I did." He received a second DWI charge between 2000 and 2009, and when he announced his candidacy for the U.S. House of Representatives he was facing a possible felony conviction and four years in jail for receiving two DWIs in ten years in New York.
In 2012, Cantwell moved to Keene, New Hampshire.
== Views ==
Cantwell has described himself as a member of the alt-right, a fascist, and a libertarian. The Anti-Defamation League includes Cantwell in its list of alt-right figures, and the Southern Poverty Law Center has profiled Cantwell, describing him as "an anti-Semitic, Alt-Right shock jock and an unapologetic fascist, who spews white nationalist propaganda with a libertarian spin".
By Cantwell's own account, he was originally "radicalized" to libertarianism in 2009 after listening to a presentation by former Libertarian presidential candidate Michael Badnarik. In 2009 he announced he would be running as a Libertarian Party candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives in New York's 1st District, but he did not collect enough signatures to get on the ballot. He has been repeatedly kicked out of libertarian organizations for his violent and racist views.
Cantwell has held strong anti-police views, including advocating for violence against police officers. In a June 2012 Facebook post about police hypothetically attempting to pull over a driver, he said, "It is my honest opinion that this driver would be morally justified in shooting that police officer at the moment the [police car's] lights go on." He was later removed from the Free State Project and banned from their events for this and other statements the group found to violate the libertarian non-aggression principle. Cantwell has posted photographs of himself dressed as a police officer who had been shot in the forehead for a 2014 Halloween party, and later that year he applauded the man who killed two police officers in New York City.
Over time, Cantwell has focused less on anti-police and anti-government activism, saying "I have become convinced that our problems are a lot more racial than anything....the police are not my biggest problem right now." In March 2018, white supremacist and internet troll Andrew Auernheimer, known online as weev, leaked a screenshot of an online conversation with Cantwell. In reply to a message from Auernheimer condemning other people for talking to police, Cantwell is shown saying "I talked to cops too, gonna talk to the feds soon most likely". Auernheimer replied to Cantwell to say "that's fucking shitty scumbag behavior," and in the post accompanying the screenshot criticizes Cantwell for being "an admitted government informant" and describes it as incompatible with Cantwell's calls for revolt. Soon after the leak, Cantwell published a blog post confirming that he was working with the government and claiming that he was doing so in an effort to get retribution at Antifa. This confirmation that he was working with law enforcement was met with anger from some members of the far-right.
Although Cantwell endorsed Donald Trump for president in January 2016, he has said that he hoped for a leader who was "a lot more racist than Donald Trump" and who "does not give his daughter to a Jew" (referring to Ivanka Trump's marriage to Jared Kushner.)


== Unite the Right Rally and aftermath ==
== Unite the Right Rally and aftermath ==
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[[Category:Mastermind]]
[[Category:Mastermind]]
[[Category:Wrathful]]
[[Category:Wrathful]]
[[Category:Anarchist]]
[[Category:Anti-LGBT]]
[[Category:Islamophobes]]

Revision as of 21:25, 26 November 2019

Christopher Cantwell
Full Name: Christopher Charles Cantwell
Alias: The Crying Nazi
Origin: New York City
Occupation: Author, activist, pundit, podcaster, informant, shock jock, member of the Alt-Right
Hobby: Broadcasting on Radical Agenda
Goals: Prevent Jewish people from taking over the world

Get retribution against Antifa

Crimes: Hate Speech

Driving while under the influence

Illegal possession of a weapon

Possession of stolen property

Making death threats

Assault and battery

Public intoxication

Anti-Semitism

Type of Villain: Neo-Nazi


Jews will not replace us!
~ Cantwell at the Unite the Right rally.

Christopher Charles Cantwell is an American Neo-Nazi associated with the Alt-Right. He is best known for his appearance at the Unite the Right rally held by Jason Kessler in 2017, and the subsequent manhunt. He has also garnered criticism from other Alt-Right members for being a government informant, although he claims he only did this to get back at the notorious Left-wing terror group Antifa.

Early life

Cantwell grew up in Stony Brook, New York. His father was an air traffic controller and his mother a homemaker. He attended Ward Melville High School in East Setauket, New York.

In 2000, Cantwell pleaded guilty in Suffolk County, New York to driving while intoxicated (DWI), criminal possession of a weapon, and criminal possession of stolen property. He later told Hatewatch, "I was involved in so much bullshit when I was a teenager, honestly, that like what I got caught for was the least of the shit I did." He received a second DWI charge between 2000 and 2009, and when he announced his candidacy for the U.S. House of Representatives he was facing a possible felony conviction and four years in jail for receiving two DWIs in ten years in New York.

In 2012, Cantwell moved to Keene, New Hampshire.

Views

Cantwell has described himself as a member of the alt-right, a fascist, and a libertarian. The Anti-Defamation League includes Cantwell in its list of alt-right figures, and the Southern Poverty Law Center has profiled Cantwell, describing him as "an anti-Semitic, Alt-Right shock jock and an unapologetic fascist, who spews white nationalist propaganda with a libertarian spin".

By Cantwell's own account, he was originally "radicalized" to libertarianism in 2009 after listening to a presentation by former Libertarian presidential candidate Michael Badnarik. In 2009 he announced he would be running as a Libertarian Party candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives in New York's 1st District, but he did not collect enough signatures to get on the ballot. He has been repeatedly kicked out of libertarian organizations for his violent and racist views.

Cantwell has held strong anti-police views, including advocating for violence against police officers. In a June 2012 Facebook post about police hypothetically attempting to pull over a driver, he said, "It is my honest opinion that this driver would be morally justified in shooting that police officer at the moment the [police car's] lights go on." He was later removed from the Free State Project and banned from their events for this and other statements the group found to violate the libertarian non-aggression principle. Cantwell has posted photographs of himself dressed as a police officer who had been shot in the forehead for a 2014 Halloween party, and later that year he applauded the man who killed two police officers in New York City.

Over time, Cantwell has focused less on anti-police and anti-government activism, saying "I have become convinced that our problems are a lot more racial than anything....the police are not my biggest problem right now." In March 2018, white supremacist and internet troll Andrew Auernheimer, known online as weev, leaked a screenshot of an online conversation with Cantwell. In reply to a message from Auernheimer condemning other people for talking to police, Cantwell is shown saying "I talked to cops too, gonna talk to the feds soon most likely". Auernheimer replied to Cantwell to say "that's fucking shitty scumbag behavior," and in the post accompanying the screenshot criticizes Cantwell for being "an admitted government informant" and describes it as incompatible with Cantwell's calls for revolt. Soon after the leak, Cantwell published a blog post confirming that he was working with the government and claiming that he was doing so in an effort to get retribution at Antifa. This confirmation that he was working with law enforcement was met with anger from some members of the far-right.

Although Cantwell endorsed Donald Trump for president in January 2016, he has said that he hoped for a leader who was "a lot more racist than Donald Trump" and who "does not give his daughter to a Jew" (referring to Ivanka Trump's marriage to Jared Kushner.)

Unite the Right Rally and aftermath

During the rally, Cantwell was filmed shouting "Jews will not replace us!" with a crowd of other White Supremacists. He also began ranting about how the Alt-Right are not nonviolent, and threatened to kill several protestors. He also allegedly pepper-sprayed several counter-protestors. Following the rally, a warrant was put out for Cantwell's arrest due to his actions during the rally. On his podcast Radical Agenda, Cantwell published a video of him talking about the warrant during which he struggled to hold back tears, resulting in widespread mockery of Cantwell and earning him the nickname "The Crying Nazi".

Cantwell turned himself in on the 24th of August, and was indicted on counts of unlawful bodily injury, assault and battery, malicious injury with a caustic substance and public intoxication. He pleaded guilty to public intoxication, and received a fine of $116. The charges of unlawful bodily and malicious injury with a caustic substance were later dropped on the grounds that so many people at the rally had pepper spray it was impossible to tell if Cantwell was responsible. He later pleaded guilty to assault and battery, and served seven months in jail. He was also banned from entering the State of Virginia for five years.

Cantwell has also been convicted of drunk driving, illegal possession of a weapon and possession of stolen property, and is currently in a feud with Andrew Auernheimer, alleged webmaster of the Alt-Right website The Daily Stormer.