We used to bust Rob Freeman’s chops all the time, but we haven’t since we cost his wife a judgeship a few years back. Looks like we have some more chop bustin’ to do.
Rolf Maurer
Following the 2014 controversy over Connecticut Probate Judge candidate Anna Zubkova’s marriage to outspoken white supremacist Rob Freeman, the former National Alliance member, extremist faux intellectual has remained relatively quiescent, since. But his ownership of a Putnam, CT cab company might cause more issues of concern.
Save for the Volkish website reposting last August one of his old entries in his Mindweapons in Ragnarok blog celebrating the fanaticism of Oliver Cromwell, a direct contrast of Rob Freeman’s words and actions couldn’t be more apparent than comparing his lofty commentary in a podcast interview the same month with his jaw-dropping management of Putnam Taxi in Windham County, Connecticut, established six years prior.
Interspersed with singular musings on the anti-Aryan subtext of Arthur Miller’s Death Of a Salesman, the ethnic importance of STEM education, etc., his commentary last August on the podcast Waffen Haus and Surviving Weimerika upheld an overarching emphasis on building a self-starting, white-centric culture of intellectual prowess and small business enterprise to challenge the looming dominance of whom he repeatedly called the “hajis” in American society.
“White companies… you don’t call it that, you don’t call it the, you know, ‘Nazi Company’. You call it whatever,” he said. “You don’t say… just have it be, how you call, plausible deniability. But just do it. People don’t dare to do anything. You gotta have some daring again. What happened to our courage?
“I have seen a White company headed by…one of us (that) hired White employees, (and) went up head to head against a Jewish-owned shop full of foreign…on-white workers and foreign workers, Muslims, Pakistanis and stuff,” he later said, later admitting it was his company he was referring to. “And, you know, the Jewish owners was too greedy and the non-White workers, they basically had the slave mentality. They wanted to get as much as they can out of it for the minimal work. And so the White company wiped the floor with them.”
Which is why, as owner of Putnam Taxi, it’s more than a little unexpected that Freeman, himself, apparently has no problem sharing the almost universal customer (and public) contempt for his four-man operation on its own Facebook page.
Adjectives and descriptions like “dirt bags”, “horrible”, “… rather drive drunk then use your service ” and “try not leaving an elderly lady stranded at the bank!! ” highlight a comment thread spanning May, 2016 to as recent as April 21 of this year.
Considering a documented slovenly disregard for timeliness, the most rudimentary concept of courtesy, not to mention episodes of careless driving and even public indecency (last November one outraged mother who wasn’t even a customer shared a photo after a passing PT driver urinated in her driveway), it’s understandable why a frustrated poster from 2017 asked, “How is this even a taxi service?”
With “white courage” and enterprise behind it, how, indeed?
Of more critical concern is to what degree Putnam Taxi constitutes a concrete threat to safety and security of people in its service area. The lengthiest Facebook charge recounts an unidentified PT employee actually inviting the irate husband of one fare to come to the “Putnam post office if you’d like to meet me face to face” in response to his complaint.
Whether this person was Freeman or not (in fact, it was), when one takes into account the aggressive “Hard White” ideology he has espoused in the past, combined with a documented penchant for physical cruelty, the degree to which the white supremacist’s views infect the culture of his business renders a ride in a Putnam cab a potentially perilous proposition.
Just out of curiosity how did the person know that the driver was urinating in her driveway