A very good success? Billy Roper鈥檚 protest in Arkansas drew less interest than Walmart Museum
If you鈥檙e visiting Bentonville, Arkansas, one of the first things locals will direct you to is the听.
The storefront in the city鈥檚 town square is home to the first Walmart ever, Walton鈥檚 5 & 10, which now pays homage to the multinational business behemoth鈥檚 humble origins.
Visitors learn about founder Sam Walton and view photos of his dog, they can print out stickers with their name written as a bar code and purchase vintage candies or various iterations of Walmart schwag. It鈥檚 an experience not to be missed if you鈥檙e a Walmart fan.
Except last Saturday it was an experience dozens of people missed, including a group of teenagers eager to show their out-of-town guest the heart of Walmart country.
The teens strode up to the door and pulled on the handle impatiently until noticing the 鈥淭emporarily Closed鈥 sign. Police officers standing by tried to comfort them. 鈥淵ou can come back tomorrow,鈥 they offered. The teens were having none of it. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe they are closed! And for 鈥 this?鈥 a young woman asked rhetorically, gesturing toward the street.
Just as she didn鈥檛 notice the closed sign on the glass door, she may have missed the snipers perched on the Museum鈥檚 roof and the facing court house, paid no mind to the small cluster of black and camo-clad neo-Nazis the police were surveilling about 10 feet away from her on the sidewalk, nor the 450 or so peaceful protestors amassed behind barricades in the town square park.
The scene in Bentonville, a town of about 45,000 people in northwest corner of the Natural State, was part of the nationwide March for our Lives protests against gun violence, and the Walmart Museum wasn鈥檛 the only business to close that Saturday; nearly all of those facing the square decided not to open. And not out of fear that the crowd of mostly teenagers and their parents 鈥 who would close the event singing 鈥淲e Shall Overcome鈥 in unison 鈥 would become unruly, it was mostly out of concern for the counter-protesters which would count among them washed up, wannabe neo-Nazi leader Billy Roper and nine of his 鈥渨hite nationalist prepper鈥 ShieldWall Network followers.
Yes, there was a pair of middle-aged women with a 2nd Amendment sign, a gaggle of NRA members and a posse of III%ers called the Freedom Crew among the 40 or so counter-protesters (who all kept their distance from the racists), but it was Roper鈥檚 group that law enforcement, drones and the media were focused on.
Two hours before the protest was set to begin, Bentonville鈥檚 town square was like it is most Saturdays, with people milling around chatting, parents taking toddlers out for a stroll and dogs of all sizes and temperaments being walked. The only scuffle of the day would be two yippy terriers getting into it on the corner.
The square itself, anchored by a Confederate monument and shade trees, saw a steady trickle of young people with handmade signs as the morning went on. Surrounded it, plastered to lightposts and benches, were notecards bearing Bible verses, such as 鈥淟ove your neighbor as you love yourself.鈥
Friends met up with each other and chatted, law enforcement was vigilant but relaxed as one officer made his way around the periphery of the metal barriers distributing photocopied maps of the square to his colleagues.
鈥淲hat is this about?鈥 a passerby asked him. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the second amendment,鈥 he explained. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not against it, just that maybe we could make it better.鈥
听鈥淚 heard there are bikers coming in from Fayetteville,鈥 a 19-year-old man seated on the steps in front of the Blue Moon boutique posited. 鈥淚 hear antifa are supposed to show up, too. I don鈥檛 think they will let them though. This is Walmart country.鈥
Just before 11 a.m. the first of two drones began buzzing the square as a man in a Hiwaymen shirt and six people in blue shirts emblazoned with Freedom Crew and bearing a III% logo on their sleeves arrived with flags. They were told by police that the tiny wooden flag poles attached to the flags they were carrying 鈥 鈥 would need to be removed before they could enter the square. They snapped off the tiny dowels and strutted into the park. One of the members draped a Gadsden flag over her shoulders like a cape while a little girl nearby did cartwheels in the grass.
A man wearing an 鈥淎ll Rifles Matter鈥 tee shirt who would later join up with Roper鈥檚 uniformed ShieldWall members, led a member of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan named Marshall to a spot in front of the closed museum. Marshall pulled an antiquated video camera from a large blue duffel bag and placed it on a tripod. He would film Roper鈥檚 crew for altrighttv.com, pausing at the end of the day to pose with Roper鈥檚 men, before retreating to the shade where he removed and inspected his teeth.
Shortly after 11, Roper and his ShieldWall Network arrived wearing mostly matching black uniforms with khaki pants and black boots. Roper, a former deputy membership director of the National Alliance sported red laces, an odd choice for a man who refers to skinheads (who historically earn red laces by spilling blood) as 鈥渇eatherless bipeds.鈥 The young men carried an inventory of hand-written, two-sided signs with witticisms like 鈥淢y AR-15 self identifies as a NERF听gun. Don鈥檛 judge!!,鈥 and 鈥淭he NRA doesn鈥檛 sell arms鈥 Planned Parenthood does!! (and LEGS and other baby parts)鈥
Roper鈥檚 crew assembled in front of the Museum where Marshall was filming and raised their signs, standing in silence for the moment as people inside the park鈥檚 barriers looked at them quizzically, if at all.
And when the rally finally began to loud cheers, the onlookers turned their backs on Roper, leaving law enforcement as his only audience. That didn鈥檛 sit well with Roper, who is notorious for attention-seeking behavior and self-aggrandizement, and considers himself in the 鈥渢op tier鈥 of American racists.
The truth is, Roper is not a charismatic leader and has trouble recruiting followers. After leaving the National Alliance in 2002 he tried to form a group called White Revolution which eventually fizzled out. In 2011 Roper announced that White Revolution was over, admitting failure after nine years. He would go on to affiliate himself with a Klan group. 鈥淭hey are saying what America needs to hear, in a way that more white Americans are willing to hear it,鈥 Roper wrote. 鈥淭hat is why, as a Christian Identist, I will be applying for association in the Knights Party led by Pastor Thomas Robb,鈥 he said at the time.
Most recently, Roper declared himself leader of the ShieldWall Network, a last-ditch effort to remain relevant as a white nationalist.
Hence his determination to seek out media coverage, which led him and his crew to constantly change positions, trying to get television and print media to pay attention. As they relocated around the square, so did police and sheriff鈥檚 deputies inside and on the periphery of the park, as well as the drone buzzing overhead.
Roper gave interview after interview, and eventually, realizing people were more interested in what the protesters had to say about gun violence than a rag tag group of costumed racists, he pulled out his bullhorn which he put in police siren mode, a deafening cacophony. 鈥淲hat you are doing is pushing us toward civil war,鈥 he shouted at the disinterested crowd, then led his group in a weak round of chanting 鈥淪hall not be infringed!鈥 before starting back up with the police siren.
Local reporters knew him by name, and when Roper left most of his crew unattended as he walked down the sidewalk for an interview, the hapless racists began getting tough questions from a man in the crowd.
鈥淲hat is hoplophobia?鈥 a man asked, referencing one of their signs which reads 鈥淗oplophobia is a mental illness.鈥澨
鈥淲hat is Craig鈥檚 List?鈥 one of Roper鈥檚 men shouted back incongruously, then hid his face behind a sign and consulted with his comrades.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 that word mean?鈥 he asked anxiously. 听
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know! I didn鈥檛 write the sign!鈥 the man responded in a hushed tone.
鈥淗ow about we just pretend like we know what the f--- that is.鈥
As things wound down, Klan leader Robb and his daughter Rachel attempted to blend in with the protesters rather than stand in support of their old friend and associate Roper, but Robb did make it a point to congratulate them in front of the cameras. 鈥淵ou guys are doing a good job, can I shake your hand?鈥 he said before inviting Roper to a racist conference on his compound in April.
The rally ended without incident, the police barriers were removed and the streets opened to traffic. The Walmart museum, too, returned to normal operation.
Prone to magical thinking, Roper was quite pleased with his group鈥檚 performance and particularly his own manipulation of the press.
鈥淲e went over there to defend the Second Amendment,鈥 Roper later explained on Stormfront radio. 鈥淲e had a really good opportunity to speak with the media. We got good coverage. I gave interviews to all of them that were there. 鈥 It was a very good success all around鈥
This post has been updated
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