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School for Scoundrels: Online 'Patriot' University Opens Doors

Attention, students and lovers of learning: If you鈥檝e been seeking an education with a 鈥渕oral and nationalist perspective,鈥 unencumbered by government censorship and 鈥減olitical correctness,鈥 your search is finally over. The Roger Sherman Institute (RSI), a new and unusual institute of higher learning that presents a 鈥溾榮pin鈥 on America鈥 that 鈥渋s distinctly nationalist, patriotic, biblical, and constitutional,鈥 this week marked its 鈥渋naugural semester,鈥 opening its virtual doors to aspiring scholars everywhere.

Founded in 2012 by an encyclopedia salesman, a movie stuntman, and a building inspector, RSI doesn鈥檛 teach 鈥渢heoretical physics, double-entry accounting, or Freudian voodoo.鈥 Instead, it offers courses on conspiracy theories, farm science and aquaculture, and 鈥渢he sociotheosphere, where you can learn about historical battles between dominant religions and government.鈥

RSI was named after Roger Sherman, a Connecticut lawyer who served in the U.S. Senate in the 1790s and signed both the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution. According to the school鈥檚 website, Sherman was 鈥渁 man of impeccable moral fibre鈥 with an 鈥渁bsolute hatred of paper money,鈥 who 鈥渨alked to the beat of a vastly different drummer than those who occupy modern Wall Street and Washington, D.C.鈥

(Prospective theology students who fear the name of the institute is 鈥渟ome form of man-centric idolatry鈥 are told to 鈥渢ake heart. He can be an example to others, in much the same way as any of the Apostles or Reformers now have Seminaries named for their achievements. We do not think him a 鈥榮aint鈥 in any way. Those decisions are left to the Ultimate Judge of us all.鈥)

Such caveats are not the only thing that sets the online-only Sherman Institute apart from its competitors. As RSI co-founder Aaron Bollinger, a former Encyclopedia Britannica salesman who signs E-mails 鈥淒isciple Aaron,鈥 explains in an online video promoting the school, 鈥淭his is not a higher learning institution that will politically correct historical fact to protect someone鈥檚 feelings.鈥

What鈥檚 more, he says, 鈥淥ur instructors don鈥檛 follow the script written by state and federal governments or specific organized religions about education in the realms of political science, theology, or general studies.鈥 Instead, 鈥渨e allow you to research down whatever rabbit-holes you choose.鈥

Bollinger knows a thing or two about rabbit holes. A pale, bearded character who appears in the promotional video clad in a black suit, narrow black tie and broad-brimmed black hat of the kind favored by traveling preachers of yesteryear, 鈥淒isciple Aaron鈥 is a longtime radical-right activist who has mingled and worked with the some of founding fathers of the antigovernment 鈥淧atriot鈥 movement.

In 1981, fresh out of high school, he joined the 鈥淐ommittee to Restore the Constitution,鈥 a Colorado-based operation run by the late , a retired Army lieutenant colonel who despised the United Nations and who once wrote that 鈥渕en of unbalanced and dangerous brilliance鈥 鈥 presumably Jews 鈥 had 鈥減erfected a sophisticated and systematized plan, incorporating brainwashing and genetic prostitution, to achieve soviet-style control over the American social order.鈥

Bollinger has worked for Liberty Lobby, an anti-Semitic organization founded by infamous Holocaust denier , and as a researcher for the far-right Gun Owners of America, whose founder, gun rights absolutist , played a crucial role in introducing the concept of citizen militias to the radical right. In the mid-2000s, Bollinger became involved with , a fundamentalist effort to take control of South Carolina and, 鈥渋f necessary,鈥 declare it a sovereign republic that would enforce 鈥淐hristian鈥 morality through the power of government.

(The Christian Exodus movement still exists online, where website administrator Keith Humphrey 鈥 who also manages one of the Sherman Institute鈥檚 websites 鈥 rails against birth control and abortion and 鈥減romotes the preservation of Christian culture for generations to come, through disentanglement from the flesh-hooks of imperial servitude, and a return to the fundamentals of Christian living.鈥)

These days, Bollinger works as legislative director for (RTR), a conspiracy-minded Patriot group that wants to eliminate the Federal Reserve and the IRS, end globalization, and make it illegal to implant microchips in people (no signs that is happening, but according to RTR, plans are in the works). Bollinger also serves on the advisory board for Committees of Safety, another Patriot group, along with lawyer and radical-right thinker , under whom he studied 鈥渃onstitutional law鈥 in the early 1980s.

Though he is its most visible representative, Bollinger did not found the Sherman Institute alone. One of his partners is David Irons, an antigovernment activist who in 2008 mounted a failed campaign for the Michigan House of Representatives on a platform of abolishing the income tax. Irons also owned a building inspection business, which 鈥 ironically, given his disdain for government 鈥 is accredited by the Federal Housing Administration, the agency that insures mortgages.

RSI鈥檚 other co-founder is David Schied, a former movie stuntman who claims to be working with longtime radical tax protestor to establish 鈥淐onstitutional Lobbies鈥 in each state.

The rest of the school鈥檚 faculty is similarly credentialed. Its dean of theology is , a pastor who says churches should help arm and train people in self-defense. Whitney is chaplain to the Maryland , a neo-Confederate and theocratic hate group that advocates a second Southern secession and the creation of a 鈥済odly鈥 nation run by 鈥淎nglo-Celtic鈥 (white) elites.

Serving as dean of justice studies is , a militia sympathizer and former Kansas state trooper whose essays and radio broadcasts are widely disseminated on apocalyptic Christian and militia websites and who, following the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, suggested that 鈥渁lien hybrids鈥 pretending to be U.S. troops would enforce the evacuation of up to 40 million people from the Gulf Coast area.

Every online university needs a dean of distance learning 鈥 and at RSI, that title belongs to Veronica Ann Hannevig (or 鈥淰eronica Ann; Hannevig,鈥 as she spells it in court documents), an apparent adherent of the radical antigovernment movement (whose followers believe they are exempt from most federal laws and taxes and who often indicate their movement affiliation by into their names). Hannevig maintains a personal website, The Truth Store, which features prominently a notice to the government that she was 鈥渂orn in the United States of diplomatic representatives by hereditary succession of the Kingdom of Heaven鈥 and that she claims 鈥渢he property, rights, privileges and immunities granted to me and my heirs by hereditary succession by Our Father, Y'hw(v)'h, the Creator and sovereign ruler of the heavens and the earth and all that is in them.鈥

Also teaching classes at RSI are , a League of the South member who was the far-right 2004 presidential candidate; Mark Anderson, editor of the , a conspiracist, anti-Semitic weekly that bills itself as 鈥淎merica鈥檚 Last Real Newspaper;鈥 and Karen Ruff, a South Carolina tea party activist whose course on conspiracies in contemporary politics will cover, among other things, 鈥渢he well documented forgery of the birth certificate and selective service documents of Barack Obama.鈥

According to its website, enrollment at RSI is still open. Course standards are rigorous, but students will learn to think for themselves. As Bollinger notes in his video advertisement, 鈥淚f you are going to spend your money for an education, shouldn鈥檛 you get the most for it 鈥 without political correctness getting in the way of learning, and without the censorship or preconceived notions of government and organized religion influencing what you can learn?鈥

RSI, which according to Bollinger has the 鈥渕ost cost-efficient program in America,鈥 prefers that students pay in silver (Bollinger, for instance, charges seven troy ounces of 鈥淧re 1965 silver coin鈥 for undergraduate courses and nine troy ounces for graduate courses) but will accept 鈥淔ederal Reserve Notes鈥 (cash) and postal money orders as well.

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