Background
Robb was born in Detroit, Michigan into a Baptist family and grew up in Tucson, Arizona.
Robb was born in Detroit, Michigan into a Baptist family and grew up in Tucson, Arizona.
After completing high school he received a scholarship to attended the Soldiers of the Cross Training Institute in Evergreen, Colorado. Robb attended the school and earned bachelor and doctorate degrees in theology from studies at the school and private tutelage with Doctor Roy Gillaspie of Bellflower, California.
Robb claims to have become awakened to the "Myth of the Holocaust" at the age of 13 while reading Conde McGinley"s anti-Communist and antisemitic paper Common Sense which actively promoted Holocaust denial. The school was founded by Doctor Kenneth Goff. Returning to Tucson he began publishing The Message of Old Monthly which he later re-branded as The Torch.
In 1971, Robb relocated to Boone County, Arkansas.
He has stated that the reason for the move was to be centrally located in the heartland of America from which he would build his ministry. In 1986, Robb organized a protest against the Martin Luther King National Holiday in Pulaski, Tennessee, which is the birthplace of the Ku Klux Klan.
The event eventually became known as the White Christian Heritage Festival, held each October in Pulaski. Over the years Robb has developed a close relationship with other extremists including, J. B. Stoner, Editor Fields, Don Black, David Duke, Willis Carto, Michael Collins Piper, Canadian extremist Paul Fromm and former Croatian diplomat Tomislav Sunic.
In the early 1990s, Robb began to pioneer the concept that white people were being targeted for genocide, a theme that has gained popularity in recent years among white extremists.
Robb"s parents shared some political views with Joseph McCarthy, Gerald L. K. Smith, Kenneth Goff, and Conde McGinley. lieutenant was while in Bellflower, he first became acquainted with Ralph Forbes an associate and west coast organizer of George Lincoln Rockwell"s National Socialist White People"s Party.
Robb defends the Klan as a harmless organization, claiming that it is "gentle, upbeat, and friendly".
Ku Klux Klan]
While still in high school he was an outspoken supporter of segregationist ideals and an active member of the John Birch Society.