Mark Thiessen May 27, 2021 - 5:33 PM
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) â A tall, thin man wearing a hood and a mask was caught on a security camera plastering Nazi stickers on a Jewish museum in Alaskaâs largest city early Tuesday.
He drove a scooter to the Alaska Jewish Museum, placed one sticker on the door and jumped to place three more symbols of hate on windows before driving off, Rabbi Yosef Greenberg, the president of the museumâs board of directors, said of what their video cameras showed happening at 2 a.m. Tuesday.
About 45 minutes later, another sticker was placed on the main entrance door to Mad Myrnaâs, a gay bar in downtown Anchorage.
Stickers put up in Anchorage include the text 'WE ARE EVERYWHERE'; rabbi says perpetrator 'is dealing with the wrong people. We are not the people that fear'
Print article Free speech isn’t under attack when people speak out against the use of Nazi symbolism on government-issued license plates. That’s not a sentence one should have to write, but we live in the idiocratic year 2021, when feigned ignorance masquerades as honest journalism and public officials find themselves doing rhetorical goose-steps to defend people who wear their love of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich like a prized lapel pin. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, let me catch you up. On Friday afternoon, I was at a stoplight in Downtown Anchorage when I spotted a jaw-dropping license plate on the back of the jet-black Hummer in front of me: “3REICH.”