Anderson has been banned from many countries, in succession: South Africa, the United Kingdom, Botswana, Canada, Jamaica, the Schengen Area, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand.
The Southern Poverty Law Center describes him as a proponent of anti-government views. Anderson operates a website titled True Sons of Liberty where he recommends elimination of the Internal Revenue Service, the Federal Reserve Bank, the Social Security Administration, and child protective services.[8] He has appeared on InfoWars on numerous occasions, and the InfoWars store used to offer for sale video productions by Anderson.[b]
Allegations of antisemitism
The Anti-Defamation League cited Anderson of "a history of antisemitism through his sermons and a series of YouTube videos."[9] Emory University PhD candidate Matthew Brittingham suggested that Anderson is part of a connected but "diffuse group of theologically-focused, antisemitic Christian conspiracists who deny the Holocaust."[2] In March 2015, Anderson released a documentary titled Marching to Zion, in which he argued that the anticipated Jewish messiah is the Antichrist and that the Talmud is blasphemous.[10][a] Pastor and conspiracy theorist Texe Marrs appears in the documentary.[9] In May 2015, he posted a YouTube video, titled The Holocaust Hoax Exposed, promoting Holocaust denial.[11][c]
Why I Hate Barack Obama sermon
The church received national attention in the United States in August 2009, when Anderson delivered a sermon—entitled Why I Hate Barack Obama—in which he said he prayed for the death of the president.[12][13][d]
Anderson did not solicit the killing of President Obama but he did suggest that the country would "benefit" from his death.[14] Anderson told local television station KNXV-TV that he would like it if Obama were to die of natural causes because he does not "want him to be a martyr" and "we don't need another holiday."[14] He told columnist Michelangelo Signorile that he "would not judge or condemn" anyone who killed the president.[8]
Anderson's invective against Obama stems in part from his opposition to Obama's support for abortion rights.[15][16] Anderson was then the recipient of death threats while a group, People Against Clergy Who Preach Hate, organized a "love rally" which was attended by approximately one hundred people outside the church.[5][15]
The day after Anderson delivered his Why I Hate Barack Obama sermon, a church member, Chris Broughton, carried an AR-15semiautomatic rifle and a pistol to the Phoenix Convention Center, where President Obama was speaking.[5][17] Broughton explained that he was not motivated by the sermon although he agreed with it.[15] Broughton's appearance at the rally was part of a publicity stunt that was organized by conservative radio talk show host Ernest Hancock, who also came to the rally armed, and engaged in a staged interview with Broughton which was later broadcast on YouTube.[16] Anderson told ABC News affiliate KNXV-TV in Phoenix that the Secret Service contacted him after this event.[5]
Controversies
Border Patrol checkpoint incident
In 2009, Anderson had a confrontation with United States Border Patrol agents at an interior checkpoint on Interstate 8, about 70 miles (110 km) east of Yuma, Arizona. He refused to move his car or roll down his windows, triggering a 90-minute standoff and the calling of Arizona Department of Public Safety officers to the scene. The confrontation ended when authorities broke Anderson's car windows, tased him, and forced him out of the vehicle. Anderson said they beat him while he was lying prone on the ground.[18]
At his arraignment in April 2009, Anderson pleaded not guilty to two misdemeanor counts of resisting a lawful order. He was acquitted of the two charges by a jury in August 2010.[19][e]
Travel bans
As of 2019, Anderson has been banned from more than 30 countries, including every English-speaking developed country other than the United States (his home country); and most English-speaking African countries.[20] In September 2016, after he had announced his intention to travel to South Africa, Malusi Gigaba, the Minister for Home Affairs banned Anderson and his followers, citing the Constitution of South Africa and stating "I have identified Steven Anderson as an undesirable person to travel to South Africa”, even though Anderson said he had neither the authority or willingness to ban him from entering the country. [21]
In a YouTube video, Anderson mentioned a planned missionary trip to Malawi to set up a church there,[26] but Malawian authorities subsequently made it known that he would not be welcome in the country and that he would also be banned from entering it in the future.[27][28]
Anderson was denied entry to Canada on November 10, 2017.[29]
On January 29, 2018, Anderson was banned from entering Jamaica.[30]
Anderson was scheduled to preach in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, on May 23, 2019. The Dutch government began looking into banning him from entering the Netherlands on April 24,[31] leading to the factual ban from the Netherlands, and the rest of the European Union's Schengen area[32] on May 1. According to the Dutch state secretary, there is "no space for discrimination or the encouragement of hate, intolerance or violence in a democratic rechtsstaat like ours".[33]
The Republic of Ireland banned him on May 12, 2019.[34][35] On July 23, 2019, Anderson was denied entry to Australia.[20] On August 7, 2019, Anderson was denied entry to New Zealand.[36]
Swatting
On 4 April 2022, Anderson and his family were swatted.[37][38] The caller falsely claimed that Anderson had shot his wife and that there were "multiple [other] bodies" present in his home.[39] No one was harmed; police investigation concluded the call was made in bad faith.[38]
Personal life
Anderson met his wife Zsuzsanna in Munich, Bavaria, when he presented her with the gospel.[3][40] Zsuzsanna was raised as a Catholic but she had become an agnostic as a young adult. After converting Zsuzsanna to fundamentalist baptist Christianity, and they married in 2000; as of June 2023[update], the couple has twelve children who are homeschooled.[41]
Notes
^ abFor additional reference, the documentary Marching to Zion can be viewed on archive.org
^In a 2016 video titled Alex Jones and Info Wars Exposed!, Anderson explained that he used to be a supporter of Alex Jones but later denounced him due to his support of then presidential candidate Donald Trump, whom Anderson strongly opposes.