Nazi Girls

 

 

WITH their angelic smiles, blue eyes and straight blonde hair, Prussian Blue look like any other teenybop girl band.

But sweet-looking Lamb and Lynx Gaede don't sing about young love and heartache.

The 13-ear-old twins' lyrics are filled with racial hatred and preach white supremacist views.

The girls, now America's most controversial pop act, have been performing their sickening hits since they were aged just nine.

Walking on to the stage, which usually has a giant swastika as a backdrop,, guitarist Lamb and violinist Lynx often give Nazi Sieg Heil salutes to the crowd.

Then they belt out lyrics such as: "A holy creed of racial purpose/A mighty race to defend/And when we fly our holy flag/Their oppres­sive reign shall end."

 

After first appear­ing at Holo­caust denial events, such

as Folk The System which are sponsored by neo-Nazi groups, they signed a con­tract with white suprema­dist label Resis­tance Records. Other bands signed to the label include the Angry Aryans.

 

Their first album, which describes a world "where freedom exists for only those with darker skin," featured songs Road To Valhalla and Aryan Man Awake.

 

To date their big­gest hits include Sac­rifice, a tribute to Adolf Hitler's number three Rudolf Hess. It describes him as, "a man of peace" who "wouldn't cease to give his loyalty to our cause." Their song Victory Day predicts a great war, calling it: "A bloody and holy day" which will end the tough times "the white man is suffering from."

 

With their cute All­-American looks the girls from the farming town of Bakersfield, California, are, worryingly, gaining a reasonable following across the States.

One reviewer said recently: "Despite the racist - though often subtle - content, their music isn't half bad."

Civil rights' campaigners are appalled and believe the girls have been brainwashed by their parents.

 

The twins' mother April, 38, took them out of main­stream schools and educated them at home. Using text books from the Fifties and her own opinions, she has taught them her own version of cur­l rent affairs and history. A former member of the Nat­ional Alliance, whose website calls white people that have adopted non-white children "abysmally stupid," she defends her children.

 

She said: "They need to have the background to understand why certain things are happening. I'm going to give them my opin­ion, just like any parent would. We are proud of - being white, we want to keep being white." She added: "The girls simply want to perform songs about the Vikings and German history."

 

Her daughter Lynx told America's ABC News: "We want to stay white. We don't want to be, you know, a big muddle. We want to preserve our race."

 

When asked by a US maga­zine what the most impor­tant social issue facing Amer­ica was, Lynx said: "Not hav­ing enough white babies born to replace ourselves and generally not having good quality white people being born." The twin’s father also has a love of the swastika that borders on an obsession.

Although he no longer lives with April, it is known he wears the sick symbol on his belt buckle and has them plastered on the side of his pick- up. He even brands his cattle with it.

 

Sadly, the girls have taken a leaf out of their parents book and already spew out their hate-filled views.

Recently they came under fire after demanding that the money they donated to the Hurricane Katrina vic­tims went to whites only.

 

They were also blasted for modelling T-shirts for an Aryan clothing company with smiley Hitler faces on them.

Prussian Blue have their own website and while it appears inno­cent enough, it does have links to other far more sinister web­sites for white supremacy, neo-Nazi and other race hate groups.

 

One of them, Stormfront, is crammed with vile hate­filled postings from neo­ Nazis across the globe, including those from members of the BNP in this country.

 

Ted Shaw, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People's Legal Defence Fund, said: "It breaks my heart to see those girls spewing out that kind of garbage.But they're only repeating the beliefs they have been taught by their parents.”