Young Singers
Spread Racist Hate
Duo Considered the Olsen
Twins of the White Nationalist Movement
Oct. 20, 2005 — Thirteen-year-old twins Lamb and Lynx Gaede have one album out, another on the way, a
music video, and lots of fans.
They may remind you of another famous pair of singers, the Olsen Twins, and the girls
say they like that. But unlike the Olsens, who built a media empire on their fun-loving, squeaky-clean image, Lamb and Lynx
are cultivating a much darker personna. They are white nationalists and use their talents to preach a message of hate.
Known as "Prussian Blue" — a nod to their German heritage and bright blue eyes —
the girls from Bakersfield, Calif., have been performing songs about white
nationalism before all-white crowds since they were nine.
"We're proud of being white, we want to keep being white," said Lynx. "We want our people
to stay white … we don't want to just be, you know, a big muddle. We just want to preserve our race."
Lynx and Lamb have been nurtured on racist beliefs since birth by their mother April.
"They need to have the background to understand why certain things are happening," said April, a stay-at-home mom who no longer
lives with the twins' father. "I'm going to give them, give them my opinion just like any, any parent would."
April home-schools the girls, teaching them her own unique perspective on everything from
current to historical events. In addition, April's father surrounds the family with symbols of his beliefs — specifically
the Nazi swastika. It appears on his belt buckle, on the side of his pick-up truck and he's even registered it as his cattle
brand with the Bureau of Livestock Identification.
"Because it's provocative," explains April of the cattle brand, "to him he thinks it's
important as a symbol of freedom of speech that he can use it as his cattle brand."
Teaching Hate
Songs like "Sacrifice" — a tribute to Nazi Rudolf Hess, Hitler's deputy Fuhrer —
clearly show the effect of the girls' upbringing. The lyrics praise Hess as a "man of peace who wouldn't give up."
"It really breaks my heart to see those two girls spewing out that kind of garbage," said
Ted Shaw, civil rights advocate and president of the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund — though Shaw points out that the girls
aren't espousing their own opinions but ones they're being taught.
On that point, April Gaede and Ted Shaw apparently agree.
"Well, all children pretty much espouse their parents' attitudes," she said. "We're white
nationalists and of course that's a part of our life and I'm going to share that part of my life with my children."
Since they began singing, the girls have become such a force in the white nationalist
movement, that David Duke — the former presidential candidate, one-time Ku-Klux-Klan grand wizard and outspoken white
supremacist — uses the twins to draw a crowd.
Prussian Blue supporter Erich Gliebe, operator of one of the nation's most notorious hate
music labels, Resistance Records, hopes younger performers like Lynx and Lamb will help expand the base of the White Nationalist
cause.
"Eleven and 12 years old," he said, "I think that's the perfect age to start grooming
kids and instill in them a strong racial identity."
Gliebe, who targets young, mainstream white rockers at music festivals like this past
summer's "Ozzfest," says he uses music to get his message out.
But with names like Blue-Eyed Devils and Angry Aryans, these tunes are far more extreme
than the ones sung by Lamb and Lynx.
"We give them a CD, we give them something as simple as a stick, they can go to our Web
site and see other music and download some of our music," said Gliebe. "To me, that's the best propaganda tool for our youth."
A Taste for Hate
Gliebe says he hopes that as younger racist listeners mature, so will their tastes for
harder, angrier music like that of Shawn Sugg of Max Resist.
One of Sugg's songs is a fantasy piece about a possible future racial war that goes: "Let
the cities burn, let the streets run red, if you ain't white you'll be dead."
"I'd like to compare it to gangsta rap," explained Sugg, "where they glorify, you know,
shooting n****** and pimping whores."
Sugg shrugs off criticism that music like his should not be handed out to schoolyard children,
arguing that "it's just music, it's not like you're handing out AK-47s."
Perhaps not, but Shaw says it's the ideas in the music that are dangerous.
"When you talk about people being dead if they're not white," said Shaw, "I don't think
there is much question that that is hateful."
A Place to Call Home
Despite the success of Prussian Blue and bands like Max Resist within the White Nationalism
movement, most Americans don't accept their racist message.
Like many children across the country, Lamb and Lynx decided to help the victims of Hurricane
Katrina — the white ones.
The girls' donations were handed out by a White Nationalist organization who also left
a pamphlet promoting their group and beliefs — some of the intended recipients were more than a little displeased.
After a day of trying, the supplies ended up with few takers, dumped at a local shop that
sells Confederate memorabilia.
Last month, the girls were scheduled to perform at the local county fair in their hometown.
But when some people in the community protested, Prussian Blue was removed from the line-up.
But even before that, April had decided that Bakersfield
was not "white" enough, so she sold her home, and hopes that she and the girls can find an all-white community in the Pacific Northwest.