From his 1500-page manifesto:
"In the science fiction movie Serenity <61>, the two great superpowers, the United States and China, have merged into the Alliance, which has moved humanity to a new star system. On the little-known planet Miranda, a gas called Pax was added to the air processors. It was intended to calm the population, weed out aggression. It worked. The people stopped fighting. They also stopped doing everything else, including breeding and physical self-preservation. A small minority of the population had the opposite reaction to this pacification. Their aggression increased beyond madness, and they killed most of the others. Tens of millions of people quietly let themselves be wiped out.
Movie director Joss Whedon is careful to point out that the Alliance isn't some evil empire, but rather a force that is largely benevolent. They meant it for the best, to create a better world, a world without sin. However, according to Whedon, "Whenever you create Utopia, you find something ugly working underneath it."
This is the only reference to Whedon in this conservaterrorist manifesto. Most of his references are to US Neocons.
Daniel Pipes is quoted repeatedly, referenced as a source repeatedly, and several of his essays are reprinted in whole as part of the terrorist manifesto. Likewise for Pamela Geller, one of the creators of the "Ground Zero Mosque" hysteria. He says right-wing blogger Fjordman is his "favorite contemporary author." Fjordman's writing appears frequently in this conservaterrorist manifesto.