Let's Talk About the Radicalization of Young White Males Online

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This is an interview with the author.



This is the article she wrote about this:

https://thebaffler.com/salvos/new-man-*****-nagle


Here is another podcast:




@Y2Dre @Shook @Raymond Burrr @Red Shield @bdizzle @satam55 @Houston911 @Sagat @Trajan @Sukairain @YouMadd? @Diasporan Royalty
 

Trajan

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Red Ice Radio has been hacked :blessed:

Red Ice Radio is a huge white supremacist media site



Here's the owner Henrik Palmgren, Swedish white supremacist and husband of Russian American white supremacist Lana Loktef, crying like a bytch about his site getting taken down.

"I'm not a white supremacist"
"We're nice people"

fukk outta here and hold that L :mjlol:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Oklahoma militia man charged by FBI in plot to blow up government building like McVeigh





Oklahoma man charged in anti-government bomb plot

Oklahoma man charged in anti-government bomb plot
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The FBI has arrested an Oklahoma man on charges that he tried to detonate what he thought was a 1,000-pound bomb outside a bank, acting out of a hatred for the U.S. government and an admiration for Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, according to court papers.

Jerry Drake Varnell was arrested shortly after a Friday night attempt to detonate a fake bomb packed into what he believed was a stolen cargo van outside the bank in Oklahoma City, according to a criminal complaint filed in federal court.

According to the complaint, over the course of a months-long undercover investigation by the FBI, Varnell made repeated statements about the extent of his hatred of the federal government.

In one conversation he said he believed in the “Three Percenter” ideology — a form of anti-government activism that pledges resistance against the United States government on the belief it has infringed on the Constitution, according to court papers. Those who subscribe to the ideology incorrectly believe that only 3 percent of the colonial population participated in the American Revolution, and they see themselves as their heirs.

According to the complaint, Varnell expressed a desire to blow up buildings, but in a way that would minimize deaths or casualties, possibly by detonating the device at night when offices would be mostly empty.

Authorities said Varnell attempted to detonate the fake bomb at 6:30 p.m. Friday. He was taken into custody shortly after midnight, according to the complaint.

Authorities are expected to announce his arrest later Monday.
 

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Trump won't condemn white supremacists or Vladimir Putin — and the 2 are closely linked
Natasha Bertrand
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A billboard showing a pictures of then-president elect Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin is seen through pedestrians in Danilovgrad, Montenegro, November 16, 2016. Reuters/Stevo Vasiljevic

  • Trump's refusal to unambiguously condemn white supremacists who organized the Charlottesville rally reminded many of his reluctance to criticize Putin.
  • Both Trump and his nationalistic base have found a natural ally in Russia's current zeitgeist, which perceives the US as a globalist, imperialist power working on behalf of liberal elites.
  • White supremacy — manifested frequently as anti-Semitism — is inextricably linked to the worldview of many alt-right admirers of Putin's Russia.
President Donald Trump has faced heavy criticism for denouncing violence "on all sides" rather than explicitly condemning white supremacism in the wake of last weekend's deadly rallies in Charlottesville, Virginia.

"We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry, and violence on many sides," Trump said at a press conference on Saturday. "On many sides."

The comments were celebrated by neo-Nazis and white supremacists, who rejoiced in the president's refusal to call them out by name.

"He refused to even mention anything to do with us," wrote Andrew Anglin, founder of the neo-Nazi and white supremacist website Daily Stormer. "When reporters were screaming at him about White Nationalism he just walked out of the room."

Trump's refusal to unambiguously condemn the white supremacists who organized and marched at Friday's "Unite The Right" rally, which continued into Saturday, reminded many of his reluctance to criticize Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"Your 5000th reminder," tweeted Republican strategist and fierce Trump critic Rick Wilson. "Donald Trump will go to Twitter war with anyone who displeases him. Except Putin, Nazis, and white-supremacists."

Trump's bromance with Putin reached new heights last week when he thanked the Russian leader for ordering cuts to the US embassy's staff in Moscow. But his flirtations with Putin, as with the white nationalists who form a core part of his base, predate his rise to the presidency.

Whether Trump feels an ideological connection to Putinisim or white nationalism — which are closely linked — is not totally clear. Just as Putin has used nationalism and a return to "traditional values" to consolidate power, Trump may have fanned the flames of xenophobia before and during his campaign to rile a predominantly white base that was already susceptible to racist rhetoric and a hatred of globalization.

In the US, the rise of the alt-right as a crusade against establishment politics coincided with Trump's political ascendance and was aided heavily by far-right news outlets like Breitbart, which was called "a platform for the alt-right" by Trump's chief strategist (and former Breitbart CEO) Steve Bannon.

Both Trump and his nationalistic base, however, appear to have found a natural ally in Russia's current zeitgeist, which perceives the US as a globalist, imperalist power working on behalf of liberal elites.

"Objectively, Trump's behavior mirrors Putin's behavior," Robert Amsterdam, an American lawyer who was once detained by Putin and formerly represented Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, said in an interview earlier this year. "The substantive areas of agreement between Putin and Trump, and between Bannon and Putin's aides, are really significant."

'Putin is supporting nationalists around the world'
White supremacy — manifested frequently as anti-Semitism — is inextricably linked to the worldview of many alt-right admirers of Putin's Russia.

David Duke, the former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan who told reporters on Saturday that white-nationalist protesters were working to "fulfill the promises of Donald Trump," has traveled to Russia several times to promote his book "The Ultimate Supremacism: My Awakening on the Jewish Question."

The book has been sold openly in the main lobby of the State Duma (Congress) for the equivalent of about $2.

White supremacist Matthew Heimbach, who said he identifies as a member of the alt-right, told Business Insider in an interview late last year that "Putin is supporting nationalists around the world and building an anti-globalist alliance, while promoting traditional values and self-determination."

"I really believe that Russia is the leader of the free world right now," added Heimbach,who was slated to speak at the "Unite The Right" rally.

Heimbach, whose Traditionalist Workers Party was deemed an extremist group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, pushed back against claims that he is anti-Semitic. But he said he believes "the organized Jewish community" is heavily involved in "supporting movements that want to destroy nationalism."

He also described the US' current foreign policy as aggressive and imperialistic, and criticized NATO's military buildup in eastern Europe as an example of how the US is trying to promote a "global conflict" with Russia.

Trump, too, has warned that a hawkish Congress has forced the US' relationship with Russia to an "all-time and very dangerous low." He also criticized NATO, calling it "obsolete," and was slammed by Jewish organizations across the country for failing to mention Jews in a statement commemorating Holocaust Remembrance Day.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump AP

For Heimbach, Putin's brand of orthodoxy, which opposes same-sex marriage, abortion, and globalism, "is the last institution standing for traditional values." And he's happy to see Putin working hard to export those values, even if that may be perceived as meddlesome and globalist in its own right.

Trump has hardly been a crusader for traditional social values. But he has never condemned Putin's many human rights abuses, at one point going as far as to tell former Fox News host Bill O'Reilly that the United States "kill people, too."

Alt-right leader Richard Spencer, the head of the white nationalist think tank the National Policy Institute, has similarly argued that the US should dispense with its globalist policies by pulling out of NATO and resetting its relationship with Russia. Spencer helped organize last weekend's white nationalist protests.

Kevin MacDonald, who gave a speech at Spencer's NPI in late November about how "Jews remade America in their interests ... to make white America comfortable with massive non-white immigration and its own dispossession," has written that the "demonization of Russia in Western media and political circles" is a Jewish campaign to undermine Putin.

Preston Wiginton, a white supremacist from Texas who sublets Duke's Moscow apartment when he travels to Russia, has written that his "best friends" in Russia — "the only nation that understands RAHOWA [Racial Holy War]" — are "leading skinheads."

Spencer's ties to Russia, which he has called the "sole white power in the world," go deeper. He was married until October to Russian writer and self-proclaimed "Kremlin troll leader" Nina Kouprianova, whose writing under the pen name Nina Byzantina regularly aligns with Kremlin talking points.

The webzine Spencer founded in 2010 called Alternative Right accepted contributor pieces from Aleksandr Dugin, the far-right, ultra-nationalist politician who encouraged Putin's incursion into Ukraine and whose work has been translated into English by Byzantina on her blog. (It does have a caveat: "The views of the original author do not necessarily reflect those of the translator.")

Dugin also recorded a speech titled "To My American Friends in Our Common Struggle" for a nationalist conference organized by Heimbach last year in California, and has been a guest on InfoWars, a far-right radio show hosted by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.

"Your reputation's amazing," Trump told Jones when he was a guest on InfoWars in December 2015. "I will not let you down."
 

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Richard Spencer and His Kook-Right Ilk Are Agents of Russian Influence
Kremlin intelligence is manipulating the far-right. It’s time to push back.
John R. Schindler08/14/17 11:25am
Opinion

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Neo Nazis, Alt-Right, and White Supremacists encircle and chant at counter protestors at the base of a statue of Thomas Jefferson after marching through the University of Virginia campus with torches in Charlottesville, Va., USA on August 11, 2017. Samuel Corum/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

The weekend’s bloody chaos in Charlottesville, Virginia, where a far-right protest devolved into rioting and murder, has shaken the country and shocked the world. The bucolic college town was transformed into a charnel house when a right-wing young man barreled his car through a crowd of counter-protesters, killing one and injuring 19, six of them gravely.

The accused killer, James Alex Fields, age 20, was quickly taken into custody, and he turns out to possess all the expected traits: a young man with an unstable home life and mental health problems serious enough to have kept him out of the military, possessing an affection for Nazi memorabilia and views. These are precisely the sort of maladjusted young people—nearly all of them male—who under slightly different circumstances turn to jihadism. Our domestic radicalism problem knows no specific background, religion, or ideology.

The Charlottesville mayhem has concentrated minds on the continuing presence of the kook-right among us: angry young white men who assemble, brandishing flags of the Confederacy and Nazi Germany. Make no mistake: the weekend was their triumph, notwithstanding that most of them resemble cosplayers more than hard-bitten radicals. A movement which barely exists outside the Internet got a few hundred members together and garnered world attention.

Nothing about the weekend’s ugliness has received more criticism than our president’s stunning inability to condemn these neo-Nazis and their violence. Why Donald J. Trump singularly failed to rapidly denounce Fields and his ilk is a troubling question—not to mention one that’s difficult to answer. After all, the kook-right is tiny in numbers, are hardly major campaign donors, and are repulsive to normal Americans, so why would any president delay condemning them?

The Nazified far-right thereby has joined the highly select pantheon of people whom President Trump won’t denounce no matter how badly they misbehave—whose only other member is Vladimir Putin. It bears examining whether Trump’s stunning silence may not be a coincidence.

Our extreme right, with very few exceptions, are super-fans of the Russian president, in whom they see a strong, traditional leader who runs the world’s only whitenuclear-armed great power. Their websites brim with adulation for Putin as a demigod who resists the Western social justice agenda with more than words. That this depiction of Putin may not be entirely true matters not a whit to his ardent alt-right fans.

Although our country has always had white supremacists, Russia has given them renewed focus and energy, as well as a ready-made worldview. This take on the world includes overt white nationalism which despises the United States as a decadent and multiracial society. The Moscow menu suspiciously includes support for a range of foreign issues such as adulation of Bashar al-Assad and his nasty Syrian regime.

Assad just happens to be a Russian client, which explains why American neo-Nazis profess deep admiration for him and his bloody dictatorship, even though one wonders how many of these extremists could locate Syria on a map. True to form, young Mr. Fields posted a picture of Assad with the title UNDEFEATED on his Facebook page. Ideological synchronicity between the American neo-Nazis and the Kremlin approaches complete overlap.

Take the case of Richard Spencer, who was in Charlottesville as the de facto leader of the rising far-right in our country. Young and photogenic with his famously fashy haircut, Spencer too is a strong Putinphile, exuding praise for Russia and its strongman leader to anybody who will listen. His connections are more than ideological, however. His wife, Nina Kouprianova, is a Russian far-rightist herself with Kremlin connections.

As Nina Byzantina on Twitter, she is a full-fledged Kremlin troll who reliably follows the Putin line on virtually any issue, foreign and domestic, while Kouprianova has also served as the English translator for Aleksandr Dugin, a quixotic political theorist and self-proclaimed “geostrategist” who functions as Moscow’s ambassador-at-large to the Western extreme right.

Although Dugin possesses little actual influence in the Kremlin, he is highly esteemed among his legions of foreign fans, who detect in his mystical racist screeds a genius which others cannot. He plays a key role in propaganda outfit controlled by Russian intelligence which I detailed last year:

The website of Katehon, a Kremlin-approved “think tank,” is revealing. Here is Putinism’s Orthodox mysticism, Russian nationalism, and Alex Jones fantasy melded in all its bizarre glory. The name is revealing: Katehon comes from the Greek theological term for “that which resists the Antichrist.”

Its writings include the full range of conspiratorial anti-Western venom. The CIAand/or Jewish financiers are behind the world’s problems. War-mongering banksters seek to destroy Russia and Orthodoxy. Of course, the West is corrupt and racist too. For good measure, there are paeans to Malcolm X and the Islamic Republic of Iran.

This is classic Kremlin disinformation, a mix of opinion-masquerading-as-fact and outright fabrications. This crackpottery, however, has regime imprimatur.

To anyone versed in Russian intelligence tradecraft, Spencer and those of his kook-right ilk who espouse nakedly pro-Kremlin views, are at least agents of influence, to use the proper Chekist term. However, there are connections between Moscow and the Western far-right which are more troubling than mere ideological fellow-traveling.

In Europe, security services have tracked the activities of Russian military intelligence, known as GRU, and in recent years their operations have included violence. Russian football hooligans who caused mayhem in Europe last summer, leading to dozens of casualties, many of them seriously injured, included known Kremlin special operatives—some of them possessing GRU tattoos.

More ominously, GRU has been training and arming neo-Nazis in Europe, with sometimes lethal consequences. Last October, a Hungarian policeman was shot dead by István Győrkös, a far-right radical who had been running paramilitary training camps for neo-Nazis from Hungary and Germany. Győrkös had met frequently with GRU representatives, and these war-games were clandestinely supported by Moscow, Hungarian security officials quickly deduced, with Kremlin officials even taking part in the “training.”

This problem is hardly confined to Hungary. German counterintelligence has noted strange connections between GRU operatives and neo-Nazis in their country, using martial arts clubs as cover for recruiting Moscow-friendly radicals. Things have moved even farther along in Sweden, where a failed bombing of a refugee center in January turned out to be the work of two Swedish neo-Nazis who had received military training in Russia from GRU instructors.

There are no publicly known cases of American right-wing radicals receiving terrorist training from Russian intelligence, but this may only be a matter of time. Across Europe, Kremlin ideological outreach to far-right circles has led to military training and the supply of weaponry. The weekend tragedy in Charlottesville was at least partly inspired by Moscow’s propaganda. If we don’t start to take this problem seriously, like Europe we will soon be facing more and worse extremism with a distinct GRU footprint.

Therefore, it’s imperative that we tackle domestic extremists with our full counterintelligence arsenal, meaning identifying Kremlin secret operations which support the extreme right in our countrythen neutralizing the before this cancer metastasizes further. Although it’s painfully evident that the Trump White House will do no such thing, the longer we wait to tackle this problem, the worse it will get, and more lives will be lost.

John Schindler is a security expert and former National Security Agency analyst and counterintelligence officer. A specialist in espionage and terrorism, he’s also been a Navy officer and a War College professor. He’s published four books and is on Twitter at @20committee.
 

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On Twitter, Trump accuses blacks of racism three times as often as whites




By Christopher Ingraham August 14 at 4:44 PM
a White House speech on Monday President Donald Trump denounced racism as "evil" after facing two days of bipartisan criticism for declining to specifically condemn Nazis and white supremacists following a violent rally Charlottesville, Virginia.

After a non-specific response on Saturday decrying the violence exhibited on "many sides," on Monday he addressed the problem head on: "Racism is evil," he said, "and those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including the KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists and other hate groups that are repugnant to all that we hold dear as Americans."

Trump's initial hesitancy to call out white racism did not go unnoticed, and it has similarities with a longstanding trend on Trump's twitter account: In his eight years on Twitter, Trump has been far more likely to accuse African Americans of racism than white people.

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Trump has used the word "racist" or "racism" at least 56 times on Twitter, according to the Trump Twitter Archive, a website that tracks and archives all the President's tweets. In two-thirds of those Tweets, Trump levied accusations of racism at individuals or groups of people. And those accusations followed a very clear pattern: Trump has directed accusations of racism toward black people three times as often as he's done so against whites.

trump_tweets_about_racism.png



Most of Trump's allegations of racism have been directed against just two people. One of them is former MSNBC host Touré, who he accused of being a racist no fewer than ten times in the course of a long-running feud lasting from October 2012 and September 2013. Below, a characteristic tweet:





That feud was evidently sparked, in part, by comments Toure made on Twitter about Trump's bankruptcies.

Similarly, in August of 2013 Trump sent six tweets accusing HBO Real Sports host Bryant Gumbel of being a racist. As with Touré, Trump characterized Gumbel as a "dope" and "dumb." The accusations may have been linked to comments Gumbel made about Trump's golf courses.





Trump has also tweeted out accusations of racism against talk show host Tavis Smiley ("a hater & racist") and former President Barack Obama ("a total racist?"). In 2012, noting strong African-American support for the former president, Trump asked "is that racism?"

Trump has also called the film Django Unchained, about a freed slave, "the most racist movie I have ever seen." He similarly characterized the title of the sitcom Black-ish, about an upper middle-class black family, as "racism at highest level?"

Conversely, Trump has sent a total of seven tweets accusing white individuals of racism. They include Hillary Clinton ("needs to address the racist undertones of her 2008 campaign"), Elizabeth Warren ("very racist!") and David Letterman ("must apologize for his racist comment").

Trump's also used the words "racist" or "racism" in a number of other tweets that discuss the concept but don't necessarily accuse anyone of racism. For instance:





Half of those 18 tweets, however, contain an explicit or implicit denial that Trump himself is racist. "Don King, and so many other African Americans who know me well and endorsed me, would not have done so if they thought I was a racist," Trump said in June of 2016. A number of other tweets thank specific individuals, like Al Sharpton, David Letterman, and former CNBC host Donny Deutsch for apologizing for calling Trump racist.

Trump's deployment of the race card primarily against black Americans may seem odd. African Americans have borne the brunt of American racism for centuries, from slavery through Jim Crow and segregation and into modern-day prejudices that are less explicit, but no less corrosive.

But Trump's use of words like "racist" and "racism" is perhaps best understood in the context of a modern conservative movement that has come to believe, against all evidence, that whites face more discrimination than blacks. By using racial language primarily as a cudgel against his non-white critics, Trump has given validation to that belief.

"Isn't it intetesting [sic] that anybody who attacks President Obama is considered a racist by the real racists out there," Trump remarked in 2013. Trump doesn't specify who the "real racists" are.

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