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Home»Entertainment»Sure, Orange County has at all times had a neo-Nazi downside. A brand new deeply reported e-book explains why
Entertainment

Sure, Orange County has at all times had a neo-Nazi downside. A brand new deeply reported e-book explains why

dramabreakBy dramabreakJanuary 5, 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
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Sure, Orange County has at all times had a neo-Nazi downside. A brand new deeply reported e-book explains why
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On the Shelf

American Reich: A Homicide in Orange County, Neo-Nazis, and a New Age of Hate

By Eric Lichtblau
Little Brown and Firm: 352 pages, $30

For those who purchase books linked on our website, The Instances might earn a fee from Bookshop.org, whose charges assist unbiased bookstores.

Have you ever heard of Orange County? It’s the place the nice Republicans go earlier than they die.

It ought to come as no shock that Orange County, a beloved county for the grandfather of recent American conservatism, Ronald Reagan, could be the fertile panorama for far-right ideology and white supremacy. Reaganomics apart, the O.C. has lengthy since held a particular if not barely off-putting place, of oceanfront leisure, fashionable luxurious and all-American household leisure — famed by hit exhibits (“The Actual Housewives of Orange County,” “The O.C.” and “Laguna Seaside,” amongst others). Even crime in Orange County has been sensationalized and glamorized, with themes veneered by opulence, secrecy and illusions of suburban perfection. To Eric Lichtblau, the Pulitzer Prize winner and former Los Angeles Instances reporter, the true story is far-right terrorism — and its unstated grip on the county’s story.

“One of many causes I made a decision to deal with Orange County is that it’s not the norm — not what you consider because the Deep South. It’s Disneyland. It’s California,” Lichtblau says. “These are people who find themselves attempting to take again America from the shores of Orange County as a result of it’s gotten too brown of their view.”

His latest investigative e-book, “American Reich,” focuses on the 2018 homicide of homosexual Jewish teenager Blaze Bernstein as a lens to look at Orange County and the way the hate-driven homicide by the hands of a former classmate connects to a nationwide internet of white supremacy and terrorism.

I grew up just a few miles away from Bernstein, attending a performing arts college just like his — and Sam Woodward’s. I keep in mind the early discovery of the homicide the place Woodward turned a suspect, adopted by the information that the case was being investigated as a hate crime. The homicide adopted the information cycle for years to return, however in its protection, there was an absence of continuity in seeing how this occasion match right into a broader sample and historical past ingrained in Orange County. There was a bar down the road from me the place an Iranian American man was stabbed only for not being white. The seaside park of Marblehead, the place associates and I visited for homecoming photographs throughout sundown, was reported as a morning meet-up spot for neo-Nazis in skeleton masks coaching for “white unity” fight. These have been simply a number of the myriad occasions Lichtblau explores as signs of one thing extra unsettling than one-offs.

Samuel Lincoln Woodward, of Newport Seaside, speaks along with his legal professional throughout his 2018 arraignment on homicide costs within the loss of life of Blaze Bernstein.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Instances)

Lichtblau started the e-book in 2020, within the midst of COVID. He wished to discover a place emblematic of the nationwide epidemic that he, like many others, was witnessing — a number of the highest file of anti-Asian assaults, assaults on Black, Latino and LGBTQ+ communities, and rising extremist rhetoric and actions.

“Orange County sort of match lots of these packing containers,” Lichtblau says. “The horrible tragedy with Blaze Bernstein being killed by one among his highschool classmates — who had been radicalized — mirrored a rising brazenness of the white supremacy motion we’ve seen as a complete in America lately.”

Bernstein’s loss of life had been solely two years prior. The Ivy League pupil had agreed to fulfill former classmate Woodward one night throughout winter break. The 2 had by no means been shut; Woodward had been a lone wolf throughout his transient time on the Orange County Faculty of the Arts, earlier than transferring as a result of college’s liberalness. On two separate events over time, Woodward had reached out to Bernstein below the pretense of grappling along with his personal sexuality. Bernstein had no thought he was being baited, or that his former classmate was a part of a sprawling underground community of far-right extremists — related to mass shooters, longtime Charles Manson followers, neo-Nazi camps, and on-line chains the place members bonded over a shared fantasy of harming minorities and beginning a white revolution.

“However how is that this occurring in 2025?”

These networks didn’t seem out of nowhere. They’d lengthy been planted in Orange County’s soil, main again to the early 1900s when the county was residence to sprawling orange groves.

Mexican laborers, who shaped the spine of the orange-grove financial system (second to grease and producing wealth that even rivaled the Gold Rush), have been met with violence when the unionized laborers wished to strike for higher situations. The Orange County sheriff, additionally an orange grower, issued an order. “SHOOT TO KILL, SAYS SHERIFF,” the banner headline within the Santa Ana Register learn. Chinese language immigrants additionally confronted violence. They’d performed a big function in constructing the county’s state of governance, however have been blamed for a case of leprosy, and on the suggestion of a councilman, had their group of Chinatown torched whereas the white residents watched.

Gideon Bernstein and Jeanne Pepper Bernstein, center, parents of Blaze Bernstein

Gideon Bernstein and Jeanne Pepper Bernstein, middle, dad and mom of Blaze Bernstein, communicate throughout a information convention after a 2018 sentencing for Samuel Woodward at Orange County Superior Courtroom.

(Jeff Gritchen/Pool / Orange County Register)

Main as much as the brand new millennium introduced an onslaught of white energy rock popping out of the county’s music scene. Members with shaved heads and Nazi memorabilia would dance to rage-fueled declarations of white supremacy, clashing, if not worse, with non-white members of the group whereas listening to lyrics like, “When the final white strikes out of O.C., the American flag will go away with me… We’ll die for a land that’s yours and mine” (from the band Youngland).

A veteran and member of one among Orange County’s white energy bands, Wade Michael Web page, later murdered six congregants at at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin in 2012.

“It’s come and gone,” says Lichtblau, who observed these currents shifting within the early 2000s — and over time, when Reagandland broke in sure components to turn into purple. Even with sights of blue amid crimson, Trump on the panorama introduced a brand new wave — one which Lichtblau explains was fueled by “claiming their nation again” and “capturing the second that Trump launched.”

It may be exhausting to fathom the truth: that the Orange County of white supremacy exists alongside an Orange County formed each economically and culturally by its immigrant communities, the place since 2004, the majority of its residents are individuals of colour. Then once more, to anybody who has spent appreciable time there, you’ll discover the unusual cognitive dissonance amongst its cultural panorama.

It’s a peculiar sight to see a MAGA stand promoting nativist slogans on a Spanish-named road, or Accomplice flags at the back of pickup vans pulling into the parking plenty of neighborhood taquerias or Vietnamese pho outlets for a meal. Or a number of the households who’ve lived within the county for generations nonetheless using Latino employees, but inside their residing rooms Fox Information will likely be taking part in alarmist rhetoric about “Latinos,” alongside Reagan-era memorabilia proudly displayed alongside framed Bible verses. This cut up actuality — a multicultural group and one of many far-right — oddly fills the framework of a county born from a cut up with its neighbor, L.A., solely to develop an aggressive identification in opposition to mentioned neighbor’s perceived liberalness.

It’s this cultural rejection that led to “the orange curtain” or the “Orange County bubble,” which counsel these racially-charged ideologies keep contained or, exhaustingly, echo inside the county’s sphere. Quite the opposite, Lichtblau has seen how these white suburban views spill outward. Look no additional than the U.S. Capitol revolt on Jan. 6, additionally the e-book’s launch date.

Whereas well-liked perception would possibly assume these insurrectionists got here from deeply conservative areas, it was really the opposite, as Lichtblau explains. “It was from locations like Orange County,” he says, “the place the voting patterns have been seeing essentially the most shift.” Some would possibly argue — adamantly or reluctantly — that Jan. 6 was merely a stop-the-steal protest gone incorrect, a momentary lapse or mob mentality. However Lichtblau sees one thing a lot bigger. “This was white pleasure on show. There was lots of neo-Nazi stuff, together with lots of Orange County individuals stuff.”

As a society, it’s been collectively determined to count on the profile of the lone wolf killer, the outcast, carrying an identification strung from the illusions of a white man’s oppression — the sort to rail in opposition to unemployment advantages however nonetheless money the test. Somebody like Sam Woodward, reduce from the vestiges of the as soon as venerable conservative Americana household, the kind of God-fearing Christians who, as “American Reich” research within the Woodward family, educate and bond over ideological hate, and even whereas entrenched in a homicide case, constantly attain out to the sufferer’s household to the purpose the place the decide has to intervene. The existence of those suburban households is understood, as is the slippery hope one won’t ever cross paths with them on this ever-spinning spherical of American roulette. However neither these people nor their hate crimes are random, as Lichtblau discusses, and the lone wolves aren’t as alone as assumed. These underground channels have lengthy been ingrained within the American groundscape like landmines, now reactivated by a far-right digital panorama that connects these members and multiplies their ideologies on a nationwide stage. Lichtblau’s new investigation goes past the paradigm of Orange County to indicate a deeper cultural epidemic that’s been taking form.

Beavin Pappas is an arts and tradition author. Raised in Orange County, he now splits his time between New York and Cairo, the place he’s at work on his debut e-book.

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