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A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Hammer of Freedom 2
Hammer of Freedom 2
30 episodes
by Independent creator
The Hammer of Freedom 2 — Every record has been destroyed or falsified. Every book has been rewritten. Every picture has been repainted. History has stopped. Nothing exists except the endless present and there is nothing that stands against the end of history and the enslavement of Man. Except The Hammer of Freedom!
48659 views3331 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Frankenstein - The Return
Frankenstein - The Return
47 episodes
by Independent creator
The rebirth of a monster. For a hundred years castle Frankenstein has been a silent ruin. But now, the monster created by Dr. Frankenstein is about to reawaken to once again spread terror, destruction, and death. Can anyone stop the monster once and for all?
19667 views625 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Full of Eyes
Full of Eyes
70 episodes
by WisePathBooks
The purpose of this series is to help you see (by faith), savor (as all satisfying food to your soul), and sing (in all of life) the beauty of the One True God as he is revealed in the crucified and risen Jesus throughout all of Scripture. This is not an arbitrary goal since the God for whom we—and all things—exist is communicated to his creation with definitive authority in the incarnate Son (John1:14,18), and with climactic finality at the cross (John 8:28, 17:1,5). The implication that derives from this truth is simple and yet, like the wardrobe in C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia, contains worlds of glory within it: if we would know the glory, the beauty, the identity of the One True God, we look to the resurrection-illuminated cross of Jesus Christ. - by Christopher Powers (www.FullOfEyes.com)
26265 views1535 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Riot Town, USA
Riot Town, USA
52 episodes
by Dr. Rev. D.B.R.
"You are now leaving flyover country." Riot Town is an original webcomic satirizing recent & current events, largely inspired by my experiences surviving a decade in Portland, OR. Follow on Gab: @RiotTownUSA
81089 views2657 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series The Life of Ike
The Life of Ike
27 episodes
by Bluestem
A collection of autobiographical poems in the style of Edmund C. Bentley’s “clerihews”, written by a highly intelligent, erudite pitbull-lab-corgi-collie mix.
7011 views
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series 上嫁小鼠
上嫁小鼠
45 episodes
by 卫护港.漫画
第一以及唯一部漫画系列描述调情和社会性别等级。如果你不明白为什么你还没谈恋爱,被别人冷落,你肯定不是唯一的。
17775 views229 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Stonetoss
Stonetoss
447 episodes
by Stonetoss
Stonetoss is an independent webcomic covering current events, American politics and internet culture. Its primary theme is a critique of so-called “free thinkers” hysterically trying to shut all thinking down. The author encourages you to enjoy the comic, but if it offends you, that’s okay too.
2200996 views59082 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series The Chronicles of the Adventure, Hunting, and Liquidation Committee
The Chronicles of the Adventure, Hunting, and Liquidation Committee
26 episodes
by RPGrizzly
Bohdan Blood was a busy young man. Being the President of the AH&L Committee in the middle of World War Three did that, but now rumors of witchcraft and Cartel incursions around his Ozark home were making things downright unhealthy. Together with his wily friends Bohdan and company will dodge drafts, hunt cryptids, and burn witches in style to keep their neck of the woods from looking like a New York hellscape. Just another day for the Adventure, Hunting, and Liquidation Committee.
9832 views463 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Hammer of Freedom 2
Hammer of Freedom 2
30 episodes
by Independent creator
The Hammer of Freedom 2 — Every record has been destroyed or falsified. Every book has been rewritten. Every picture has been repainted. History has stopped. Nothing exists except the endless present and there is nothing that stands against the end of history and the enslavement of Man. Except The Hammer of Freedom!
48659 views3331 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Frankenstein - The Return
Frankenstein - The Return
47 episodes
by Independent creator
The rebirth of a monster. For a hundred years castle Frankenstein has been a silent ruin. But now, the monster created by Dr. Frankenstein is about to reawaken to once again spread terror, destruction, and death. Can anyone stop the monster once and for all?
19667 views625 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Full of Eyes
Full of Eyes
70 episodes
by WisePathBooks
The purpose of this series is to help you see (by faith), savor (as all satisfying food to your soul), and sing (in all of life) the beauty of the One True God as he is revealed in the crucified and risen Jesus throughout all of Scripture. This is not an arbitrary goal since the God for whom we—and all things—exist is communicated to his creation with definitive authority in the incarnate Son (John1:14,18), and with climactic finality at the cross (John 8:28, 17:1,5). The implication that derives from this truth is simple and yet, like the wardrobe in C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia, contains worlds of glory within it: if we would know the glory, the beauty, the identity of the One True God, we look to the resurrection-illuminated cross of Jesus Christ. - by Christopher Powers (www.FullOfEyes.com)
26265 views1535 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Riot Town, USA
Riot Town, USA
52 episodes
by Dr. Rev. D.B.R.
"You are now leaving flyover country." Riot Town is an original webcomic satirizing recent & current events, largely inspired by my experiences surviving a decade in Portland, OR. Follow on Gab: @RiotTownUSA
81089 views2657 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series The Life of Ike
The Life of Ike
27 episodes
by Bluestem
A collection of autobiographical poems in the style of Edmund C. Bentley’s “clerihews”, written by a highly intelligent, erudite pitbull-lab-corgi-collie mix.
7011 views
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series 上嫁小鼠
上嫁小鼠
45 episodes
by 卫护港.漫画
第一以及唯一部漫画系列描述调情和社会性别等级。如果你不明白为什么你还没谈恋爱,被别人冷落,你肯定不是唯一的。
17775 views229 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series Stonetoss
Stonetoss
447 episodes
by Stonetoss
Stonetoss is an independent webcomic covering current events, American politics and internet culture. Its primary theme is a critique of so-called “free thinkers” hysterically trying to shut all thinking down. The author encourages you to enjoy the comic, but if it offends you, that’s okay too.
2200996 views59082 likes
A tiny thumbnail of the cover art for the comics series The Chronicles of the Adventure, Hunting, and Liquidation Committee
The Chronicles of the Adventure, Hunting, and Liquidation Committee
26 episodes
by RPGrizzly
Bohdan Blood was a busy young man. Being the President of the AH&L Committee in the middle of World War Three did that, but now rumors of witchcraft and Cartel incursions around his Ozark home were making things downright unhealthy. Together with his wily friends Bohdan and company will dodge drafts, hunt cryptids, and burn witches in style to keep their neck of the woods from looking like a New York hellscape. Just another day for the Adventure, Hunting, and Liquidation Committee.
9832 views463 likes
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The streets were quiet, like a ghost town. I knew vehicles must be moving along the highway overpasses and through the surrounding urban maze, but I didn’t even hear a horn honk.


I strode toward the park.


I turned a corner and the square came into view. I crossed a street and stopped at the curb. A dust devil swept into the park and seemed to hover there, flexing and swaying like a living entity. I stood transfixed for a moment, with the impression that it was watching me, or taunting me.


In a few moments it dissipated. A gust of cold wind blasted through the streets, pelting me with sand and grit. A piece of paper slapped into my chest. When the wind abated, I grabbed the paper, prepared to discard it...then was drawn to some of the big, bold font on one side.


“CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVE IMMEDIATELY,” it read, “AND DEMAND LEGISLATION THAT ABOLISHES THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE!”


In smaller font, it had contact info for the Congress-commie in this district. I resumed walking, wadded the notice, and tossed it.


The cloud cover blocked out so much light, it seemed as if dusk had already fallen. I saw a group gathering in the park. By the time I reached the grassy area, two guys were testing the sound system.


“Testing one, two, three… Make America great again… Testing one, two, three...”


The boomer at the microphone was husky and bearded, wearing a black hat with gold letters spelling out “US Navy” and “Vietnam Veteran.” His partner was a younger, Hispanic dude with a red MAGA hat and a leather vest emblazoned with an image of the Marines raising the flag on Iwo Jima, with the arcing statement: “These colors never run!”


“Keep talking,” the marine said, pointing toward the other end of the park. “I’m gonna check the back.” He trotted toward one of the big, tripod-mounted speakers across the field.


“I got somethin’ better than talkin’,” the bearded guy said, turning to a stack of sound equipment near the “stage” area.


He pushed buttons, manipulated sliders, and some rough, gritty old music blared through the square.


Everywhere I hear the sound of marchin’ chargin’ feet, boy.

‘Cause summer’s here and the time is right for fighting in the street, boy…


“What is that?” asked a stocky young Millennial with a cowboy hat, nose wrinkled in disdain.


“The Stones, man,” Bearded Guy replied, with a grunting laugh and raised fist. “’Street Fightin’ Man.’ Dig it!”


I tried to discern the lyrics as I strolled past the people gathered around, but was distracted by my surroundings. New people were arriving in the park from all different directions, most humping rucksacks or civilian backpacks.


We had a mole in the police department who tipped us off to the plan. When the city approved the permit for this protest against hate crime hoaxes, they specified that all attendees park at a specific garage downtown.


Police had that garage buttoned down, so they could disarm patriots. Meanwhile, in what they thought was a brilliant secret plan, they allowed the Blackshirts to muster at the riverfront, fully armed with an assortment of weapons.


I had taken to calling the guys in my network “the Enforcers,” inspired by the role I once played in ice hockey. I instructed the Enforcers to avoid the designated parking garage and infiltrate the area from all directions, so the cops couldn’t render us all defenseless. The word must have spread around to other networks, too. The countermeasure seemed to be working. Men arrived in the park by twos, threes, and dozens, from all directions. They dropped their packs, pulled out improvised armor, shields, helmets, and weapons.


The street fighting men geared up. Some were strictly practical: ballistic vests or plate carriers; surplus tanker or chopper helmets; gloves and pads for the knees and elbows. Others were rather flamboyant: capes; frog costumes; round shields painted to look like Captain America’s famous frisbee.

The sound system was ready. I checked the time. The event should be kicking off in minutes. I retrieved my stash, slipped into the park’s public restroom and waited for an open stall.


Once my turn came, I closed the door of the stall and opened my sack. I temporarily removed my urban camouflage ACU-style pants to pull hockey pads on my lower regions. I already had my athletic cup in place. I pulled my XXL Cold War surplus flak vest over my torso. I had invested in some football shoulder pads after seeing a cinder block thrown at a patriot in the last riot (it broke his scapula). Mine were now painted a dark urban camo pattern. I cinched those into place. I put shaded military surplus goggles on (having learned the hard way that my shooting glasses would deflect a direct spray of Mace, but some of it could splatter or mist around the edges and get into my eyes anyway). Goggles also made identifying my face more difficult. I strapped on my new helmet—a coverless K-pot with an urban camouflage pattern painted directly onto the Kevlar. Finally, I smeared black and gray warpaint over the exposed part of my face.


I emerged from the restroom and several people stared or took pictures, but nobody communicated directly with me. Once I retrieved my hockey stick, however, they began to realize who I was.


The Enforcers already on station found me—plus a whole company of men beyond the number I’d been coordinating with via encrypted messaging. I had them stack empty packs near the sound equipment, and assigned a detail of older, less mobile men to guard the area. Our volunteer medics set up a first aid station there, which included stacks of small milk cartons, to be used when patriots got Maced in the eyes. “Based” demonstrators who were not Enforcers took advantage of the secured supply dump by stacking their stuff there, too.


The music (a succession of rowdy classic rock from a time before most of us were born) faded down and a bald, muscular man with sad eyes stepped up to the microphone. He introduced himself, then with minimal preamble, shared the details of a years-long imprisonment due to a false rape allegation and an activist judge.


The event had officially started. If our intel was accurate, that meant the cops would now be releasing the army of Blackshirts massed by the river. Zero hour was minutes away. I passed down the order to deploy.


Having more fighters on hand than I had anticipated, I split the Enforcers into three platoons. I would remain with the contingent posted on the east edge of the park’s perimeter. Deputy Dawg and Idaho Joe took their respective forces across the street to wait on either flank of the suspected avenue of approach.


After relating his personal experiences, the first speaker went on to summarize the fortunes of his accuser and the others complicit in framing him for a crime that never happened. It left me wondering why we give tax revenue to our “justice” system when this perversion of justice is what we get in return.


My hearing wasn’t great, but I could tell some of my guys picked up a significant sound. In a minute, I heard it, too: chanting. And marching, charging feet.


The Enforcers panel 3
The Enforcers panel 4
Street Fighting Man series cover
The Enforcers episode cover
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Website
7K views • 464 likes
9 comments

Street Fighting Man

Created by
author avatar
Henry Brown
Since 2009. rabid SJWs have made a collective effort to purge sane Americans from every public space. At outdoor events, revolutionary communist organizations like BLM and Antifa used raw, naked force to silence anyone to the right of Che Guevara. Then, around 2016, Americans began fighting back. Nick Polgar poses as a member of the SJW Hive Mind at his day job working inside Big Tech. But in the war on the streets, he leads patriots in bloody battle against the 21st Century Bolsheviks. Nick and his Enforcers organize and gear up for another street skirmish; but this time they take the offensive and push perhaps a bit too deep into enemy territory.
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