Far-Right Student Group Building Ties to Right-Wing European Extremists
Taylor Rose, with the Liberty University chapter of the far-right campus student organization , is at an international anti-Islamic demonstration called the "March for Freedom" in Cologne, Germany, on May 7, where he has pledged to give a speech.
The Cologne march is a yearly event sponsored by , a coalition of various far-right groups, some of whose members have been officially declared extremist by European governments. Its members regard Islam as a quasi-fascist ideology and claim that Europe is in danger of being overrun by Muslims. They argue that European civilization is in danger of extinction through mass immigration, multiculturalism, and Islamization. The march in Cologne has led to violent clashes in the past between marchers and protestors. The group has also held protests in European cities against the Park51 mosque project in Lower Manhattan.
In early April, Rose (above, far right) also met in Antwerp with members of the far-right Belgian political party at one of the party's congresses. He was photographed there with members of PRO NRW (NRW means North Rhineland-Westphalia, a German state) and PRO K枚ln (City of Cologne), both of which are classified as "right-wing extremist" by German authorities. Members of the far-right anti-immigration and anti-Islamic German Pro-Bewegung (Pro-Motion) movement were also in attendance.
The Vlaams Belang advocates for the independence of Flanders from Belgium, strict limits on immigration, and also opposes multiculturalism. In 2004, the party, then known as Vlaams Blok, was found to be in violation of laws against racism and xenophobia. It disbanded and re-formed as Vlaams Belang, changing its platform to comply with the law. Members of Vlaams Belang have in the past to meet with American hate groups, including the Federation for American Immigration Reform.
The March for Freedom blog referred to Rose as a "representative of the Tea Party" (he has appeared at one known Tea Party protest, in 2010) and "chapter chairman of Youth for Western Civilization." Issues discussed at the Antwerp meeting included immigration policy, Islamization, and what the European attendees considered their threatened freedom of expression because of anti-racism laws in Europe.
Youth for Western Civilization, a student group that opposes multiculturalism and "political correctness" on campus and claims immigration will destroy America, says its mission is to "preserve the values of Western civilization." Founded in 2006, it has since grown to include chapters at several U.S. universities, including Liberty, American, University of North Carolina, Washington State, Vanderbilt, and the University of Connecticut-Storrs. The Providence College chapter was denied official recognition from the campus, but it is active. The Boise State chapter is in the process of getting official recognition.
In October 2010, the Vanderbilt chapter hosted Richard Spencer, the director of the white nationalist , to discuss how affirmative action hurts whites. Spencer is also the editor of the white nationalist webzine Alternative Right. Also in October 2010, national YWC president and founder Kevin DeAnna spoke at a workshop sponsored by the white nationalist . In 2009, at the gathering, co-sponsored by Fitzgerald-Griffin Foundation, which the Southern Poverty Law Center lists as a white nationalist hate group.
is fluent in German and is currently pursuing a B.A. at the Jerry Falwell-founded Liberty University in international relations with a minor in strategic intelligence. He blogs about the dangers of Islam at the YWC site, and he protested the Park51 mosque in Lower Manhattan on Sept. 11, 2010.