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Charleston mass murderer Dylann Roof is a homegrown American terrorist

  • Police talk to a man outside the Emanuel AME Church...

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    Police talk to a man outside the Emanuel AME Church following a shooting Wednesday, June 17, 2015, in Charleston, S.C.

  • Judge James Gosnell, inside his chambers at Charleston County Bond...

    Joe Marino/New York Daily News

    Judge James Gosnell, inside his chambers at Charleston County Bond Court, after the bond hearing for Dylan Storm Roof on June 19th 2015.

  • Raymond Smith, of Erie, PA, prays before the start of...

    James Keivom/New York Daily News

    Raymond Smith, of Erie, PA, prays before the start of Sunday prayer services at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on Sunday, June 21, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. The church has been closed since Dylann Storm Roof killed nine parishoners during a prayer meeting last week and re-opened for Sunday services.

  • Church members of the Mother Emanuel AME Church community in...

    Joe Marino/New York Daily News

    Church members of the Mother Emanuel AME Church community in downtown Charleston, South Carolina arrive for the first services since the violent shooting that claimed nine members of the church on Sunday, June 21, 2015.

  • 21-year-old suspect, Dylann Roof of Lexington, South Carolina, boards a...

    Andy McMillan/Getty Images

    21-year-old suspect, Dylann Roof of Lexington, South Carolina, boards a plane at Shelby-Cleveland County Regional Airport for extradition back to Charleston, South Carolina on June 18, 2015 in Shelby, North Carolina.

  • Dylann Storm Roof (c.) is escorted from the Shelby Police...

    Chuck Burton/AP Photo

    Dylann Storm Roof (c.) is escorted from the Shelby Police Department in Shelby, North Carolina on June 18, 2015.

  • Surreace Cox, of North Charleston, S.C., holds a sign during...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Surreace Cox, of North Charleston, S.C., holds a sign during a prayer vigil down the street from the Emanuel AME Church early on June 18, 2015, following the shooting Wednesday night in Charleston, S.C.

  • Police vehicles are seen at the street of the Emanuel...

    RANDALL HILL/Reuters

    Police vehicles are seen at the street of the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, June 18, 2015.

  • Charleston Emergency Management Director Mark Wilbert holds a flier on...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Charleston Emergency Management Director Mark Wilbert holds a flier on June 18, 2015, distributed to media with surveillance footage of a suspect wanted in connection with a shooting Wednesday at Emanuel AME Church, in Charleston, S.C.

  • Stewart Watson (r.) of Baltimore, comforts Maranda Mincey of Charleston,...

    Curtis Compton/AP Photo

    Stewart Watson (r.) of Baltimore, comforts Maranda Mincey of Charleston, as they both become emotional while visiting the sidewalk memorial at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on June 19, 2015, in Charleston, S.C.

  • Sandra Bridges lays a greeting card at a makeshift memorial...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Sandra Bridges lays a greeting card at a makeshift memorial down the street from where the tragic shooting.

  • Tarsha Moseley, Martha Watson and Toby Smith pray at a...

    Alex Sanz/AP Photo

    Tarsha Moseley, Martha Watson and Toby Smith pray at a makeshift memorial near Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C. on June 18, 2015.

  • Nadine Collier (l.) walks out of the Centralized Bond Hearing...

    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    Nadine Collier (l.) walks out of the Centralized Bond Hearing Court Preliminary Hearing Court after attending the bond hearing for Dylann Roof who is accused of killing her mother, Ethel Lance, and eight others during a shooting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on June 19, 2015 Charleston, South Carolina.

  • A law enforcement official sits in her car while blocking...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    A law enforcement official sits in her car while blocking off a section of Calhoun Street near the Emanuel AME Church early Thursday, June 18, 2015 following a shooting Wednesday night in Charleston, S.C.

  • Robin Goolfby raises his arms as church-goers who cannot fit...

    BRIAN SNYDER/Reuters

    Robin Goolfby raises his arms as church-goers who cannot fit into the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church stand in the street during a service in Charleston, South Carolina on June 21, 2015. Hundreds of people flocked to Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston on Sunday as it reopened its doors to worshipers just days after a gunman shot dead nine black church members.

  • Relatives of victims shot down by Dylann Roof (pictured) at...

    CNN

    Relatives of victims shot down by Dylann Roof (pictured) at the Charleston's Mother Emanuel AME Church told the killer they forgave him during his first official court appearance via video link at Charleston court on June 19, 2015.

  • A passing motorist looks out her window as she stops...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    A passing motorist looks out her window as she stops at an intersection down the street from the Emanuel AME Church early Thursday on June 18, 2015 following a shooting Wednesday night in Charleston, S.C.

  • Hundreds of people prayed outside the Mother Emanuel AME Church...

    Joe Marino/New York Daily News

    Hundreds of people prayed outside the Mother Emanuel AME Church as the Church re-opens since the horrible shooting on June 17, 2015.

  • Lisa Doctor joins a prayer circle early Thursday, June 18,...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Lisa Doctor joins a prayer circle early Thursday, June 18, 2015, down the street from Emanuel AME Church following a shooting Wednesday night in Charleston, S.C.

  • Sandra Barbour reacts outside Morris Brown AME Church before attending...

    BRIAN SNYDER/Reuters

    Sandra Barbour reacts outside Morris Brown AME Church before attending a vigil the day after a mass shooting in Charleston, South Carolina June 18, 2015.

  • Not from the history books

    David Goldman/AP

    Not from the history books

  • Worshippers embrace following a group prayer across the street from...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Worshippers embrace following a group prayer across the street from the scene of a shooting at Emanuel AME Church on June 17, 2015, in Charleston, S.C. A white man opened fire during a prayer meeting inside the historic black church, killing multiple people, including the pastor, in an assault that authorities described as a hate crime.

  • Reverend Richard Harkness holds hands with Reverend Jack Lewin during...

    Grace Beahm/AP

    Reverend Richard Harkness holds hands with Reverend Jack Lewin during a prayer vigil held at Morris Brown AME Church for the victims of Wednesday's shooting at Emanuel AME Church on Thursday, June 18, 2015.

  • Two women mourn outside the Mother Emanuel AME Church before...

    James Keivom/New York Daily News

    Two women mourn outside the Mother Emanuel AME Church before going inside for services on June 21, 2015.

  • Parishioners get emotional inside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church...

    DAVID GOLDMAN / POOL

    Parishioners get emotional inside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina on June 21, 2015.

  • Investigators work outside the Emanuel AME Church early Thursday, June...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Investigators work outside the Emanuel AME Church early Thursday, June 18, 2015, following a shooting Wednesday night in Charleston, S.C.

  • The lone suspect in the shooting deaths of nine parishioners...

    Chuck Burton/AP Photo

    The lone suspect in the shooting deaths of nine parishioners belonging to a black church in Charleston was granted permission by Judge Richard Gergel on Monday to represent himself in his upcoming legal proceedings. The ruling comes just three days after Gergel declared Roof, who is facing 33 charges including hate crime and murder, competent to stand trial.

  • Two women hold posters against the Confederate flag (c.) during...

    MLADEN ANTONOV/Getty Images

    Two women hold posters against the Confederate flag (c.) during a protest rally in Columbia, South, Carolina on June 20, 2015. The racially divisive Confederate battle flag flew at full-mast despite others flying at half-staff in South Carolina after the killing of nine black people in an historic African-American church in Charleston on June 17, 2015.

  • The unthinkable

    Alex Sanz/AP

    The unthinkable

  • A Church program from Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, in...

    Joe Marino/New York Daily News

    A Church program from Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, in Memoriam of Reverend Clementa Pinckney, who was one of nine people killed in the violent shooting that claimed nine members of the AME church.

  • The front from the Post and Courier newspaper sits amongst...

    Joe Marino/New York Daily News

    The front from the Post and Courier newspaper sits amongst a memorial outside the Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina on Sunday, June 21st 2015

  • People stand outside the Emanuel AME Church after a mass...

    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    People stand outside the Emanuel AME Church after a mass shooting at the church that killed nine people on June 18, 2015, in Charleston, South Carolina. A 21-year-old suspect, Dylann Roof of Lexington, South Carolina, was arrersted during a traffic stop. Emanuel AME Church is one of the oldest in the South.

  • People visit a makeshift memorial near the Emanuel AME Church...

    BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/Getty Images

    People visit a makeshift memorial near the Emanuel AME Church on June 18, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina, after a mass shooting at the Church on the evening of June 17, 2015.

  • Family members of those killed are escorted into the Centralized...

    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    Family members of those killed are escorted into the Centralized Bond Hearing Court Preliminary Hearing Court to witness the bond hearing for Dylann Roof on June 19, 2015 Charleston, South Carolina. Dylann Roof, 21, is suspected of killing nine people during a prayer meeting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, which is one of the nation's oldest black churches in Charleston.

  • Mourners gather outside the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church...

    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    Mourners gather outside the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on June 18, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. Dylann Storm Roof, 21, of Lexington, South Carolina, who allegedly attended a prayer meeting at the church for an hour before opening fire and killing three men and six women.

  • Hundreds of people gather for a protest rally against the...

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    Hundreds of people gather for a protest rally against the Confederate flag in Columbia, South Carolina on June 20, 2015.

  • State Senator Vincent Sheheen (D-Kershaw) gets emtional as he sits...

    Rainier Ehrhardt/AP Photo

    State Senator Vincent Sheheen (D-Kershaw) gets emtional as he sits next to the draped desk of state Sen. Clementa Pinckney, Thursday, June 18, 2015, at the Statehouse in Columbia, S.C.

  • A man is told to leave his sign that reads...

    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    A man is told to leave his sign that reads "Thou shall not kill" outside of the Sunday morning service at the historic Emanuel African Methodist Church June 21, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. Chruch elders decided to hold the regularly scheduled Sunday school and worship service as they continue to grieve the shooting death of nine of its members including its pastor earlier this week.

  • A police officer checks the purse of a parishioner as...

    CARLO ALLEGRI/Reuters

    A police officer checks the purse of a parishioner as she arrives for the morning service at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston June 21, 2015.

  • Charleston residents Darby Jenkins and his mother Ashley, look for...

    RANDALL HILL/Reuters

    Charleston residents Darby Jenkins and his mother Ashley, look for a spot to leave flowers for the victims of Wednesday's shootings, near a police barricade in Charleston, South Carolina on June 18, 2015.

  • Churchgoers leave the Sunday prayer service following a mass shooting...

    James Keivom/New York Daily News

    Churchgoers leave the Sunday prayer service following a mass shooting at the Mother Emanuel AME Church on Sunday, June 21, 2015.

  • Churchgoers arrive for Sunday prayer services at the Mother Emanuel...

    James Keivom/New York Daily News

    Churchgoers arrive for Sunday prayer services at the Mother Emanuel AME Church on Sunday, June 21, 2015 in Charleston, S.C. The church, closed since Dylann Storm Roof killed nine parishoners during a prayer meeting last week, re-opened for Sunday services.

  • People hug as they pay their respects in front of...

    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    People hug as they pay their respects in front of Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church after a mass shooting at the church that killed nine people on June 18, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.

  • Police lead suspected shooter Dylann Roof into the courthouse in...

    JASON MICZEK/Reuters

    Police lead suspected shooter Dylann Roof into the courthouse in Shelby, North Carolina on June 18, 2015.

  • People pay respect outside at the church four days after...

    Pool/Getty Images

    People pay respect outside at the church four days after a mass shooting that claimed the lives of nine people at the historic Emanuel African Methodist Church June 21, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. Chruch elders decided to hold the regularly scheduled Sunday school and worship service as they continue to grieve the shooting death of nine of its members including its pastor earlier this week.

  • Mourners raise hands outside Morris Brown AME Church before attending...

    BRIAN SNYDER/Reuters

    Mourners raise hands outside Morris Brown AME Church before attending a vigil the day after a mass shooting in Charleston, South Carolina on June 18, 2015

  • Churchgoers leave the Sunday prayer service following a mass shooting...

    James Keivom/New York Daily News

    Churchgoers leave the Sunday prayer service following a mass shooting at the Mother Emanuel AME Church on Sunday, June 21, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.

  • Charleston Police Chief Gregory Mullen addresses the media while joined...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Charleston Police Chief Gregory Mullen addresses the media while joined by Mayor Joseph Riley, right, down the street from the Emanuel AME Church early Thursday, June 18, 2015 following a shooting Wednesday night in Charleston, S.C.

  • The Rev. Sidney Davis and other area pastors pray together...

    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    The Rev. Sidney Davis and other area pastors pray together outside the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church June 18, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.

  • Worshippers gather to pray in a hotel parking lot across...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    Worshippers gather to pray in a hotel parking lot across the street from the scene of a shooting on June 17, 2015, in Charleston.

  • Church member Kevin Polite (r.) helps members into the Emanuel...

    DAVID GOLDMAN / POOL

    Church member Kevin Polite (r.) helps members into the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina on Sunday morning, June 21, 2015.

  • The Rev. Norvel Goff prays at the empty seat of...

    DAVID GOLDMAN / POOL

    The Rev. Norvel Goff prays at the empty seat of shooting victim Rev. Clementa Pinckney inside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina on June 21, 2015.

  • Photographs of the nine victims killed at the Emanuel African...

    Win McNamee/Getty Images

    Photographs of the nine victims killed at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina are held up by congregants during a prayer vigil at the the Metropolitan AME Church on June 19, 2015 in Washington, DC.

  • A Charleston police officer searches for a shooting suspect outside...

    Matthew Fortner/AP

    A Charleston police officer searches for a shooting suspect outside the Emanuel AME Church, in downtown Charleston, S.C. on Wednesday, June 17, 2015.

  • A man leans against a light pole as he visits...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    A man leans against a light pole as he visits a makeshift memorial down the street from where a white man opened fire Wednesday night during a prayer meeting inside Emanuel AME Church.

  • A police officer uses a flashlight while searching the area...

    David Goldman/AP Photo

    A police officer uses a flashlight while searching the area following a shooting Wednesday, June 17, 2015, in Charleston, S.C.

  • Police respond to a shooting at the Emanuel AME Church...

    RANDALL HILL/Reuters

    Police respond to a shooting at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina June 17, 2015. A gunman opened fire on Wednesday evening at the historic African-American church in downtown Charleston, a U.S. police official said.

  • Rev. Sandy Drayton, reacts during a prayer vigil held at...

    Grace Beahm/AP

    Rev. Sandy Drayton, reacts during a prayer vigil held at Morris Brown AME Church for the victims of Wednesday's shooting at Emanuel AME Church on June 18, 2015 in Charleston, S.C.

  • About 1,000 people participated in the 'March for Black Lives'...

    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    About 1,000 people participated in the 'March for Black Lives' in support of the nine people shot to death at the historic Emanuel African Methodist Church earlier this week and for others killed by police violence June 20, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.

  • People mourn outside the church at a makeshift memorial where...

    Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    People mourn outside the church at a makeshift memorial where nine people were killed on June 17, 2015.

  • The Rev. Al Sharpton wipes away a tear after praying...

    Allen G. Breed/AP Photo

    The Rev. Al Sharpton wipes away a tear after praying outside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C. on Thursday, June 18, 2015.

  • Retired elder Alonzo Middleton greets Retired AME Bishop Zedekiah Grady...

    Grace Beahm/AP

    Retired elder Alonzo Middleton greets Retired AME Bishop Zedekiah Grady prior to a prayer vigil held at Morris Brown AME Church for the victims of Wednesday's shooting at Emanuel AME Church on June 18, 2015

  • People gather in front of Mother Emanuel AME Church during...

    James Keivom/ New York Daily News

    People gather in front of Mother Emanuel AME Church during Sunday prayer services on Sunday, June 21, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina.

  • Rev. Jeannie Smalls cries during a prayer vigil held at...

    Grace Beahm/AP

    Rev. Jeannie Smalls cries during a prayer vigil held at Morris Brown AME Church for the victims of Wednesday's shooting at Emanuel AME Church on June 18, 2015 in Charleston, S.C.

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The massacre of nine black women and men in Charleston’s Emanuel AME church was an act of terrorism by a white, born-in-the-U.S.A. racist armed with a gun — and magazine after magazine after magazine of ammunition.

While racial hatred gives the mass shooting the feel of an abomination from the history books, the bloodshed was an expression of two virulent cultural strains: anti-black hatred and Second Amendment extremism.

DYLANN ROOF BRAGGED ABOUT PLANS TO KILL A BUNCH OF PEOPLE

This is the America of now, a nation where suspect Dylann Storm Roof is among the thousands of whites who passionately revile African Americans, the form of group loathing that remains the nation’s most common brand of bigotry.

Roof entered the church, asked for the pastor and spent an hour in a Bible study among a dozen or so parishioners, taking advantage of the open hearts of his hosts.

The unthinkable
The unthinkable

According to witnesses, he then stood up, said he was there “to shoot black people” and fired his weapon, reloading five different times and stealing the lives of six women and three men, including the pastor, Rev. Clementa Pinckney.

REV. CLEMENTA PINCKNEY KILLED IN CHARLESTON CHURCH MASSACRE

A survivor quoted Roof as voicing a psychopathology that has haunted America from slavery through the Ku Klux Klan, that of the black man as a sexual predator.

“I have to do it. You rape our women and you’re taking over our country. And you have to go,” said the gunman, recounted one survivor.

Domestic terrorist
Domestic terrorist

Roof’s Facebook page features at least one expression of white supremacism. In a photo, he wears a jacket with the flags of apartheid-era South Africa and white-ruled neighboring Rhodesia before it became Zimbabwe.

Those who took no action after hearing Roof say that he wanted to kill blacks to start a civil war, as a former roommate has admitted, are complicit members of a cancerous culture.

According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, the number of active hate groups in America more than doubled to over 1,000 between 1999 and 2011, before falling to just under 800 since. While these groups are concentrated in the South, they plague states across America.

FULL COVERAGE OF CHARLESTON CHURCH MASSACRE

At the same time, blacks suffer the most hate crimes per capita, by far; in 2012, 50 out of every 1 million black citizens were victims of racially motivated crime, according to the FBI.

From its very birth, Charleston’s Emanuel AME Church, one of the nation’s oldest black congregations, has had to fight to pray in peace.

Founded in 1816, after white congregations made clear, in increasingly odious ways, how unwelcome blacks were in their midst, the church saw its original structure burned to the ground by white supremacists.

TWITTER USERS SEEK JUSTICE AFTER CHARLESTON CHURCH SHOOTING

It was rebuilt — but in 1834, all-black churches were banned in Charleston. The congregation met in secret for a generation.

During America’s great civil rights movement, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke there about voting rights, and Coretta Scott King led a march from its steps.

“This is a sacred place in the history of Charleston and in the history of America,” said President Obama, who knew the Rev. Pinckney and his wife.

For the 14th time delivering remarks about a mass shooting, Obama also said with accuracy and in seeming despair about the plague of guns: “At some point, we as a country will have to reckon with the fact that this type of mass violence does not happen in other advanced countries. It doesn’t happen in other places with this kind of frequency.”

June 17, 2015: Nine people murdered at prayer in a church dedicated to freedom and the Christian faith, nine people taken in a crime that evokes the racial warfare of the 19th and early 20th centuries and the church bombings of the 1960s.

This is America. This is now.

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