For background see the article in the link below
http://www.jpost.com/Jewish-World/Jewish-News/American-Orthodox-community-condemns-Shas-rabbis-comments-against-national-religious-320059Shas is very mad at the Bayit Yehudi party headed by knitted Kipa wearer Naftali Bennet.
They see big budget cuts to the yeshivas, the threat of charedis being secularized by the draft and an overly lenient attitude towards who we will accept as a convert, by some of the Bayit Yehudi leadership.
For this and other reasons one of the Shas leaders R. Shalom Cohen made extremely nasty statements against the community that wears a knitted kipa.
A day after much criticism, he slightly limited who he said he intended to insult, but even his limitation still left the insult on much too many knitted Kipa wearers and his limitation was not said with sufficient force to convince
all Shas supporters that he indeed retracted from his general condemnation of knitted Kipa wearers.
It also needs further investigation, what red lines really have to be crossed before calling even someone like Bennet, evil names.
The question is how should Kahanists react?
On the one hand on some of the individual issues raised by Shas, Kahanists might to some degree side with them. On the other hand, Rabbi Kahane himself wore a black knitted Kipa and Shas to some degree is responsible for being shut out of the government for bringing back Oslo criminal R. Aryeh Deri as their leader. Deri still wants to make more phoney peace treaties, destroy settlements and promotes actions that strengthen our Arab enemies, thus endangering Jews.
Still another issue to consider is that both Shas and Bayit Yehudi have condemned some Jewish Kahanist heroes in the past. Perhaps this is a reason to let them fight and not get ourselves involved.
One final point, charedi incitement against other charedis who do serve in the army has led to outright physical attacks against those charedi soldiers.
Perhaps if anti-knitted kipa incitement is not stopped in time the same type of attacks could take place against individuals wearing knitted kipas?