It’s Time to Stop the Deadly Rhetoric and the Dangerous Dodge of Both-siderism – Southern Poverty Law Center

The fatal shooting of a man reported to be affiliated with the far-right group Patriot Prayer last Saturday night on the streets of Portland should not have happened.

Im angry that Aaron Jay Danielsons life was taken from him. Im angry about every one of the lives taken in the 98 days since George Floyds murder. Whether the victims are Trump supporters, Black Lives Matters protesters, or law enforcement officers, the deaths that have occurred in this time of upheaval are wrong. We mourn each of these lives, regardless of ideology. And we mourn the lost futures of those who were convinced that taking the life of another human being is how we solve our societal problems.

For all we dont yet know about what happened in last weekends deadly shooting, there are three things that are crystal clear.

First, the blood thats been shed in Americas streets this summer is on President Trumps hands. When he revived the racist call-to-arms When the looting starts, the shooting starts in May, Trump lit a match under two dangerous powder kegs: city police forces blighted with bias and addicted to militarized crowd control tactics, and a growing right-wing paramilitary movement, jacked up by conspiracy theories and internet hoaxes, armed with military-grade weapons and homemade bombs. On Sunday, the president responded gleefully to reports that his supporters were firing paintballs and pepper spray at Black Lives Matters protesters and journalists. In the aftermath, instead of using the deaths in Kenosha and Portland as a call for peace, Trump continued to foment fringe conspiracy theories and ratchet up his rhetoric.

Second, as martyrdom for Danielson is proclaimed on far-right social media, we must remember that the vast majority of the injuries and deaths that have occurred in the protests have been suffered by racial justice protesters. Charlottesville launched the far-right narrative that depicts armed vigilantes and organized paramilitaries as righteous defenders of communities and heritage. Antifa hunting has been encouraged by elected officials and law enforcement from the local level to the Trump administration. Attacks on peaceful protesters now represent an alarming surge in extremist activity, as documented in the Southern Poverty Law Center report When the Alt-Right Hit the Streets: Far-Right Political Rallies in the Trump Era. And yet law enforcement seems all too willing to collude with or ignore these assailants.

Third: These deaths are preventable. They are unnecessary. They are symptomatic of the failure of civil society and democratic structures to rise above the bias and confusion of both-siderism.

Even before Trump famously characterized the deadly white nationalist riot in Charlottesville as involving very fine people on both sides, Portland was looking the other way as armed far-right formations came looking for a fight. Instead of recognizing, at the outset in 2017, the threat to the rule of law and democratic practice brought by groups like Patriot Prayer, Proud Boys, Identity Evropa, Oath Keepers, and Three Percenters as they descended on Portland, the chaos they produced was characterized as a street brawl between two sides that were seen as at best equally culpable.

Patriot Prayer founder Joey Gibson admitted his strategy to a reporter just after Charlottesville. They show up to goad leftists into a fury, then let them fight police while TV cameras roll, Willamette Week wrote, adding, whether antifa protesters brawl with his supporters or just clash with police, its a win-win for the far right.

Despite the transparency of the alt-right street brawl strategy and the known dangers posed by far-right domestic terrorism, a leaked internal investigation found that the Portland Police Bureau viewed far-right protesters as much more mainstream than their leftist counterparts. Other reporting has found active coordination between the bureau and far-right leaders as well as far-right adherents within the police force.

Promises by Portland city leaders to address the bias within the force and to reform police behavior toward protesters have gone unfulfilled. Targeting of protesters reached a dangerous crescendo in Portland in early August with pipe bombs thrown by a man who on video appears to be a retired U.S. Navy SEAL and former Central Intelligence Agency contractor who has worked in Afghanistan and spoken out on social media against the nightly Portland demonstrations, according to Oregon Public Broadcasting. On August 15, a right-wing demonstrator fired gunshots at racial justice protesters from his vehicle. Even after these alarming escalations, when Proud Boys and other far-right extremists took to the streets on August 16 for a No to Marxism in America rally, Portland police took a hands-off approach to the vigilantes brandishing weapons and looking for a fight; police declared a riot and moved on protesters only after the alt-right groups had left.

The Trump administration has consistently downplayed the threat of right-wing extremist violence and subverted officials attempts to address it, as detailed by Politico in a recent analysis, They tried to get Trump to care about right-wing terrorism. He ignored them. The lack of any documented threat from the left hasnt slowed the presidents bid to scare America into four more years. The night before a 17-year-old teenager espousing right-wing ideology drove across state lines with an assault rifle to open fire on civil protesters, the Republican National Convention featured the middle-aged white couple who brandished weapons against peaceful protesters.

The misplacement of federal attention, along with the cover provided by this president for racist and antisemitic violence and vigilante mobilizations, is coupled with inattention and confusion by the political center. Business and civic leaders are so busy parsing the distinctions among the overwhelming majority of peaceful racial justice protesters and those committing property crimes some of whom are far-right provocateurs that theyve lost sight of their own role.

Its time for leaders at every level to condemn physical violence unequivocally and stop the deadly rhetoric that encourages politicized violence to come out from behind the false and dangerous dodge of both-siderism and draw a clear moral distinction between hate activity and political disagreement.

Its time for the business community to do more than cut a Black Lives Matter commercial. For city leaders to do more than pass resolutions and then wring their hands when violent extremists come to town. For law enforcement to take seriously the threat to their own safety and the rule of law caused by anti-government formations and white nationalists in their own ranks.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown took a step in the right direction on Sunday when she made the connections: from Charlottesville to Kenosha to Portland, we have seen the tragic outcome when armed right-wing vigilantes take matters into their own hands. She stated, The right-wing group Patriot Prayer and self-proclaimed militia members drove into downtown Portland last night, armed and looking for a fight. Every Oregonian has the right to freely express their views without fear of deadly violence. I will not allow Patriot Prayer and armed white supremacists to bring more bloodshed to our streets.

Last year at this time, the city of Portland became a national model in the fight against bigotry. It was a proud moment when the City Council unified not only around confronting the white nationalist assault on our city, but also in understanding the unresolved bias that exists within policing toward Black, Indigenous and other communities of color and toward those engaging in peaceful civil protest. We need a unified Council now to do three things:

This needs to be the laser-focused work of our current City Council. And its past time for all mayoral candidates to hold a joint media conference denouncing white nationalist and armed paramilitary and vigilante incursions into our city, regardless of political ideology. While they may not agree on the specifics, we need to hear that each is committed to systemic police reform and has a vision for how to build a shared prosperity for Portland.

While this is a story playing out in Portland, it is a story of Everytown, USA. Every local elected official should be studying the lessons of the Rose City. Why? If the political center doesnt stand against the obvious reality of ongoing and deadly race inequality, it will continue to be up to the young people with the stamina to come out night after night to press for change in the streets.

Defending our democratic freedoms and institutions should not be left wholly to the young people in the streets, now branded as terrorists simply for opposing extra-legal authoritarianism and sounding the alarm over the early signs of fascism. Defending our democratic freedoms and institutions is the job of business, religious, and municipal leaders. Defending our democratic freedoms and institutions is the job of the middle, liberals and conservatives.

Its time to stop the deadly rhetoric and the dangerous dodge of both-siderism. Its time for the center to step up.

Eric K. Ward is a senior fellow with the Southern Poverty Law Center and Race Forward, and executive director of Western States Center. Read his other writings on this topic on Medium.

July 1:https://medium.com/@westernstatescenter/hate-crimes-the-gateway-drug-241fb388b87a

August 11:https://medium.com/@westernstatescenter/remember-reckon-recommit-charlottesville-three-years-later-dfb960e6f997

August 28:https://medium.com/@westernstatescenter/the-banality-of-evil-the-mainstreaming-of-both-siderism-35cb68b6dbc6

Photo byGetty Images/Anadolu Agency/John Rudoff

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It's Time to Stop the Deadly Rhetoric and the Dangerous Dodge of Both-siderism - Southern Poverty Law Center

Afraid of a Lurking Evil, a Writer Goes Down the Rabbit Hole – The New York Times

RED PILLBy Hari Kunzru

There are no actual red pills in Red Pill, not even a cherry cough drop. The title of this novel, for those of us who are hopelessly behind on our memes, refers to the process of discovery that the books unnamed narrator undergoes or thinks he undergoes. The term comes from The Matrix (a film I found so intellectually vapid that I couldnt finish watching, however brilliant its visuals), and has since gained currency with everyone from mens rights groups to the alt-right to Elon Musk. Keanu Reevess character faces a choice: Take the blue pill and continue his happy illusory life, or the red one and see the world as it actually is, in all its dizzying, violent, chaotic glory.

The narrator of Hari Kunzrus clever but exasperating sixth novel lives in cushioned Brooklyn safety, a progressive member of the creative classes, an essayist and teacher, a husband and a father. Yet he finds himself suffering from both writers block and a nameless dread, as though something profoundly but subtly wrong is about to happen in the world at large. Both conditions feed off each other, and make him believe that hell be unable to protect his family from any waiting malignity. He broods, and when hes offered a fellowship at a Berlin think tank his wife is happy to see him go. Each longs for a few months of peace; each hopes that hell not only write something but also get his head straight.

The think tank is on the Wannsee, a lake to the west of the city center, and looks across the water to the villa where the Nazis planned the Holocaust; in his authors note, Kunzru writes that hes borrowed the location of the American Academy in Berlin, while imagining a completely different set of living conditions. Nothing there goes as planned, and the narrator quickly begins to see the study center as oppressive. The visiting scholars are required to foster community by working in a shared space and sitting in assigned seats at meals; he refuses to do any of it. Their productivity is logged, and he soon begins to believe that his room is being searched and his every movement monitored by hidden surveillance cameras. Eventually he confronts the centers administration, and is then ordered to leave, well before his time is up.

Red Pill depends on Kunzrus skilled use of a seemingly unreliable narrator. We have to believe that maybe he really is being watched; at the same time, we want to shake him into sense, and with each page he grows ever more puzzling. Just before leaving Berlin, the narrator has a chance meeting with a man called Anton, and uses the encounter to justify his fears. Anton is the showrunner of a Shield-like TV series about a bent nihilistic cop. They talk, head to a restaurant, and the narrator has the sense that the producer is about to initiate me into a mystery, offer me the red pill.

No such luck; Anton sees human life in terms of the squeamishness felt by those who arent tough enough for truth, and the narrator doesnt have the right stuff. Indeed, the narrator soon believes hes being laughed at, and later, unable to let his humiliation go, he starts to stalk the man on the web. That takes him into a territory of alt-right message boards and conspiracy theorists, a cyber kingdom in which Anton looks at home, and in fact appears to be posting under a variety of names.

The London-born Kunzru began his career with The Impressionist (2002), a sprawling historical novel about his fathers native India, but since then his fiction has often used the machinery of the thriller, with its secrets and hidden identities, as a way to explore the contemporary sense of the self. Kunzrus work as a journalist, including two recent and indispensable essays in The New York Review of Books on the web-fueled rise of contemporary autocracy, shows hes a shrewd and unsparing observer of recent politics. In these pieces and others, the generalized sense of dread that the narrator of Red Pill feels becomes all too specific, a dread to which names and causes are firmly attached and open for analysis.

I wish I could say the same for this novel. Red Pill comes most fully alive in a long middle section in which the narrator listens as one of the villas cleaning staff, a former East German punk rocker, describes her experience of Stasi persecution. That conversation stands in counterpoint to his own growing paranoia, his belief that hes being watched and even persecuted by both the think tanks administration and Anton too. But is he? And if so, why?

After leaving Berlin the narrator decides to pursue his obsession instead of going home. He checks into a small hotel in Paris and tries to work out just who the mysterious Anton is, what cause he speaks for and who is served by his cop show, Blue Lives. The narrators computer searches eventually start him off on a physical one, a ludicrous trip to an island off the coast of Scotland, where he sets up in a stone hut and sees himself as waiting for battle. After that, theres a psychiatric hospital all ready to take him in.

Which would seem to solve the formal conundrum on which this book depends. Yet Kunzru has one final and overdetermined twist to offer. Back in Brooklyn the narrator tries to resume his old life, but he still wonders about what lies waiting out there in the dark, and the very end of the novel seems to give him an answer.

Red Pill closes in November 2016, with a party meant to celebrate the election of Hillary Clinton. I went to such a party myself, and remember the stomach-twisting hollowness I felt at the end of the evening. But as the conclusion to this novel it seems a bit obvious. As he watches the returns, the narrator sees something revelatory in a shot of a Trump victory party, something that convinces him that he was in fact right: There is some renewed malignity at loose in the world. Kunzrus own journalism, however, will tell you much more about it than Red Pill does, and for all its technical skill the novel finally sings an old refrain: Just because youre paranoid doesnt mean they arent after you.

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Afraid of a Lurking Evil, a Writer Goes Down the Rabbit Hole - The New York Times

HHS spokesperson Michael Caputo pushed COVID-19 conspiracy theories and praised white supremacists in unearthed podcast – Media Matters for America

In a podcast unearthed by Media Matters, Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson Michael Caputo spread baseless conspiracy theories about the coronavirus, praised white supremacist Milo Yiannopoulos, and said Democrats are counting on COVID-19 fatalities in order to win the election against President Donald Trump.

On his now-defunct show Still Standing with Michael Caputo, the current HHS spokesperson pushed the debunked conspiracy theory that the coronavirus was invented in a bioweapons facility in Wuhan, used racist terms to refer to the virus, and said Democrats are calculating how long they can actually keep the coronavirus concern ball in the air in order to win the election. He also praised various white supremacist and alt-right personalities, including neo-Nazi Milo Yiannopoulos and Pizzagate conspiracy theorists and alt-right Twitter personalities Mike Cernovich and Jack Posobiec. On his podcast, Caputo also pushed anti-Semitic conspiracy theories about billionaire progressive donor George Soros paying anti-Trump protesters and other conspiracy theories about Democrats, the media, and the Mueller investigation.

CNN previously reported on racist and sexist now-deleted tweets from Caputo.

Caputo was thrust into the national spotlight when then-special counsel Robert Mueller looked into his involvement in the Trump 2016 campaign during his investigation. He spread conspiracy theories about the investigation on Twitter, and in the clips unearthed by Media Matters, he said hes not right after going through the Mueller investigation and can barely breathe because of his anger.

A longtime friend of Stone, Caputo was at the forefront of the campaign to get Stone a presidential pardon. HHS Secretary Alex Azar appointed Caputo to his position as an HHS spokesperson in April 2020, putting a vocal defender of President Donald Trump in a key messaging role, according to CNN.

Two of the most important agencies under HHS tasked with fighting the coronavirus, the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have recently come under fire for the perception that the apolitical agencies are being influenced by political pressure from the Trump White House. Controversial FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn told the HHS spokesman his position is well deserved during an interview on the podcast that Caputo currently hosts for the department.

Caputo at present represents a department that includes science-driven research and regulatory bodies, all of which require trust from the public at large. His history as a Trump loyalist, an ally of white supremacists, and a conspiracy theory enthusiast all raise questions as to whether the HHS has appropriate personnel in place to respond to the global pandemic.

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HHS spokesperson Michael Caputo pushed COVID-19 conspiracy theories and praised white supremacists in unearthed podcast - Media Matters for America

Letters: Imagine a U.S. overrun by the alt-right – The Durango Herald

In response to Don Wicburgs letter, Imagine a U.S. overrun by hateful leftists (Aug. 23): Imagine a country where the president pushes conspiracy theories rather than proven medical advice.

Imagine a country where people with guns show up at a candlelight vigil. Imagine a country where the current administration has had over 400 people quit because they refuse to be complicit in the destruction of democracy.

Imagine a country where foreign countries are invited to spread lies to tip an election. Imagine a country where the president endorses voter suppression by slowing the mail. Imagine that a once superpower is now pitied by third-world countries and laughed at by its allies.

Sadly, one does not have to imagine any of these things. They are happening before our eyes and being cheered on, Wicburg writes by the alt-right.

Think that over as you decide whether to vote, and for whom to vote this November, he said.

Candace RichersonDurango

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Letters: Imagine a U.S. overrun by the alt-right - The Durango Herald

RNC speaker criticized for several actions seen as dogwhistles to alt-right – Forward

Image by Courtesy of Cawthorn for ...

Congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn

A day after the last-minute ouster of a scheduled speaker at the Republican National Convention due to accusations of antisemitic Twitter activity, another guest is also attracting criticism.

Madison Cawthorn, 24, is the Republican nominee in a solid-red North Carolina congressional district. He has also garnered attention for a series of posts and actions that detractors say are dogwhistles to the so-called alt-right.

On a 2017 trip to Germany, Cawthorn made a point of visiting the Eagles Nest, Adolf Hitlers vacation home. He later later posted pictures of the visit on Instagram, saying it was part of his bucket list and referring to the Nazi leader by the German honorific Fuhrer. (The caption also said the Eagles Nest was a place where Supreme Evil shared laughs and good times with his compatriots.)

Cawthorn deleted the posts earlier this month.

Cawthorns real estate company is called SPQR Holdings, a reference to the Roman motto Senatus Populusque Romanus, or the Senate and People of Rome. The phrase was a commonplace reference to Roman government in antiquity, but in modern times has been coopted by white nationalist groups.

In one of his campaign videos, Cawthorn can be seen displaying a Spartan helmet on his chest as he aims a rifle. The Spartan helmet, in addition to being the logo of Michigan State University sports teams, has also been appropriated as the logo for the Oathkeepers, one of the largest anti-government militia groups in the United States, with some 30,000 members as of 2016, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Cawthorn has denied that he is racist, noting that his fiancee is half-Black.

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RNC speaker criticized for several actions seen as dogwhistles to alt-right - Forward

Confessions of a Trump Troll – The New Yorker

A middle-aged lawyer recently sat down at a pok restaurant in a North Georgia town. He was sniffling and dabbing his eyes with a napkin. Dont think its corona, he said, pulling up a Web site on his phone with statistics on diagnoses worldwide. Then he looked at Twitter and began talking about a different sort of virus. When Donald Trump first announced his Presidential bid, I told my wife, immediately, Hes going to be the President, he said. The lawyer welcomed the candidacy. How to put this and not sound fifteen? he said. I like chaos. I thrive in it.

For years, the lawyer, who asked not to be identified, worked in Washington, D.C., for the Republican Party. He moved his family south a few years ago, having realized, he said, that D.C. is just Hollywood for ugly people. He found that he had time on his hands. Id never been interested in social media, he said. I cant stand Facebook. But he became intrigued by the power of Twitter. Really repulsive meme-ing, the stuff that makes you laugh, makes you remember, he said. The right, he went on, is great at it instinctively. Whether its a 4chan board or basement neckbeards, they nail it. They can distill a huge talking paragraph into a cat picture. He considers Trumps digital facility absolutely genius, and believes that his frequent Twitter misspellings (Barrack Obama, covfefe) are intentional. In 2015, while the lawyers young children napped, he began trolling. Id have a glass of wine, talk to my wife, watch Netflix, and see what kinds of things we could do, he said. He would sometimes pass four or five hours a day this way.

The lawyer is not a mainstream Republican; he likes Bill Clinton and Bernie Sanders. He was also unbothered by the recent Senate report on Russias election meddling. (If youre not interfering with elections, he said, youre not doing it right.) Out of curiosity, he attended a far-right gathering, where he found the younger attendees to be maybe a little misguided, but well intended. He began creating fake Twitter accounts, he said, to see whether I could get more interactions, more retweets, by being a little more radical. The Confederate flag was often his avatar, or the Bonnie Blue, a lesser-known Confederate banner. For his handles, he made up acronyms with a nationalistic tinge, such as FFK: Faith Folk and Kin. He fashioned the accounts ersatz users as boomers or gun-rights activists. The latter, he said, were easy: Just follow Dana Loesch and interact with those crazy girls who stay up all night tweeting Second Amendment stuff. He added, Id get them to retweet me and then my following would blow up. By the time the 2016 race was under way, he had about twenty accounts, each with a few thousand followers. His fake alt-right accounts amplified Trumps messaging and distorted Hillary Clintons. (Something about her makes me nervous, he said.) His fake Antifa ones spread what he called disinformation and false stories to benefit Trump.

He pulled up an old account with the handle Ruthless Lessruth. This was supposed to be a girl who was married to an alt-right guy, he said. He explained how hed used the account to trick an Antifa group into protesting an alt-right rally that didnt exist: I P.M.d the head of the Atlanta Antifa and told him that my husband was alt-right and that I was repulsed by it. Then, in the guise of the wife, he directed the Atlanta Antifa group to a would-be rally at a Marriott Marquis. A bunch of people showed up. That was hard to do, to pose as a girl with political views that Im not familiar with. Some of his Antifa accounts also pushed veganism. You have to find some community to exploit, he said. Id find an approved vegan account with Antifa leanings and interact with them a bit. It was really tedious. But Im a lawyerI get into the minutiae. Manning accounts on both sides of the political spectrum had its risks. There was always the fear of tweeting something out of the wrong account, he said. Like praising immigration to my alt-right followers or something.

The lawyers trolling dropped off in 2017. Hed become disillusioned by Trump. He hasnt done anything he said he was going to do, the lawyer said. But Id vote for him over Biden. No one is excited about Biden. (I would have pulled for Bernie, he said.) He recently opened a new Twitter account. I just dicked around on it, he said. I watched some of the trending tags. Im not a conspiracy theorist. Theres nothing I think is being hidden from us that I care a lot about. He sighed. Maybe Ive just gotten old.

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Confessions of a Trump Troll - The New Yorker

Trump redefined the race and other commentary – New York Post

RNC journal: Trump Redefined the Race

Democrats strategy doesnt involve Joe Biden winning, argues Daniel McCarthy at Spectator USA. He just has to accept office when the coronavirus and the media have defeated President Trump. Yet the GOP convention tore up the narrative and wrote a new script, one focusing on the violence raging in cities run by Democrats, redefining the race. For the left, its still about COVID, racism and the personality of the candidates. But for Trump, its about what hes accomplished and whats happening in US cities. Biden says little about the flames, riots and killing in the cities because theres nothing he can say without either admitting his party is controlled by cultural pyromaniacs or that hes become a firebug himself. Will Trumps gambit work? Reality is on the presidents side, and its a hell of an equalizer.

President Trumps acceptance speech Thursday drew clear and arguably persuasive contrasts between himself and former Vice President Joe Biden in many areas, including their broad-based visions for America, the economy and law enforcement, Doug Schoen contends at Fox News. The RNC also made clear strides to emphasize diversity within the Republican Party, with noteworthy speeches by the likes of Sen. Tim Scott and ex-Gov. Nikki Haley. So while much will turn on how the economy, the pandemic and urban unrest play out in coming weeks its very likely that after the four-day Republican convention, the race will tighten. In all, it seems the race for the White House will be much closer than most people are predicting.

Because the media have been so hysterically anti-Trump, the RNC was the first time in four years that non-leftist Americans have seen other Americans reflect positive views about President Trump, observes Mollie Hemingway at The Federalist. On foreign affairs, they saw a return to realism, with multiple speakers spelling out policies based on the national interest. There was substantive outreach to black voters: Everyone seemed ready to fight the slurs from the media about Trump and Republicans being racist. True, the press still lashed out against the Republican convention, sometimes ridiculously so even after gushing about the Dems shindig. But watching Americans speak positively about Trump was emboldening for Republican and independent voters, as they prepare for a fall campaign sure to include surprises.

Few flavors of abuse are more ugly than the scorn showered by many overwhelmingly Democratic Indian Americans on Nikki Haley, declares Tunku Varadarajan at The Wall Street Journal. Specifically, his praise of her RNC speech prompted criticism that Haley, ne Nimrata Randhawa, anglicized her name to run for office. And if America isnt racist, as Haley claimed, then why did she change her name to Nikki? Yet that reflects a belief that its fitting for America to accommodate immigrants but not for immigrants to have to accommodate America. Besides, Nikki, a Punjabi word for little one, is actually on Haleys birth certificate as her middle name. To suggest she is trying to pass for white and bury her own identity is not only desperately overheated. It is racist.

Chaos in the streets, such as in Kenosha and Portland, laments Reasons J.D. Tuccille, is a sight with which well become very familiar if the situation in this country continues to spiral out of control. BLM hard-liners, antifa, alt-right Proud Boys and other groups are increasingly mixing it up, endangering ordinary people and property. Talk of Civil War 2.0 might be overblown, but countries dont have to collapse for chaos to reign. We could see a scenario like Northern Irelands Troubles: simmering tensions, occasional flashpoints, two irreconcilable communities of left and right inhabiting the same geographic space. To avoid the spread of that conflict, were going to have to find a way to live with each other, or to leave each other alone.

Compiled by the The Post Editorial Board

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Trump redefined the race and other commentary - New York Post

New Far Right Party Aims to Stoke Fear of BLM Into Organized White Supremacy – Truthout

The last three years have been a marked and unending period of decline for the organized alt-right. Ostensibly led into a somewhat cohesive social movement by Richard Spencer, the collection of publications, podcasts, high-profile white nationalists and organizations that made up the alt-right saw their peak in the two days they laid siege on Charlottesville, Virginia. Yet they were shut down afterward as anti-fascist activists confronted them, kicking them off platforms and legally challenging them. There have been attempts to regroup since, with Spencer returning to his work of building meta-politics and others forming white nationalist organizations like the Patriot Front or going even more extreme with accelerationist terror organizations like Atomwaffen Division or The Base.

The neo-Nazi website, The Right Stuff, and its headline podcast, TDS (formerly The Daily Shoah) were a central part of this world, creating much of the slang and internal language that became the popular dialect for the white nationalist movement, mixing the world of pseudo-intellectual white nationalism and the violent and vulgar racism of neo-Nazis. The hosts of TDS were hit as hard as anyone: leaders were doxxed, jobs were lost, and their platform was taken virtually off of all mainstream internet channels. The hosts of TDS have persisted, publishing episode after episode, and sustained by a small army of paying subscribers. This is not enough for them, and they are venturing back into the world of white nationalist organizing with a new group called the National Justice Party.

The first in-person meeting for the National Justice Party was held on August 15, where Mike Enoch Peinovich, co-host of TDS, alleges a couple hundred people came together.

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Weve decided to create a political vehicle that we can use to channel all the energy that people have against whats going on right now in a way that will be actually challenging the system instead of into the Republican Party, Peinovich said on TDS, taking the position that the Republican Party ultimately does not serve white nationalist ends.

In an email that was circulated to interested participants, Peinovich was listed as the chairman, and other affiliated people include Joseph Jordan, the real name of white nationalist podcaster Eric Striker; Michael McKevitt, a member of neo-Confederate group Identity Dixie and linked to The Right Stuff; Tony Hovater, a neo-Nazi member of the now-defunct Traditionalist Workers Party who was profiled in a much-maligned New York Times piece; Warren Balogh, who is involved in suing Charlottesville city leaders over the 2017 Unite the Right rally; Gregory Conte, an associate of Richard Spencer; and Alan Balogh, Warrens dad and alleged associate of the neo-Nazi National Alliance.

At the National Justice Party meeting, Peinovich showed a video of cut-together images intended to show an apocalyptic situation for white supremacists: immigration, declining white birth rates and the false belief that pedophilia is becoming politically acceptable. The name for the party likely comes from the publication National Justice, run by Peinovichs co-host for another white nationalist podcast, Joseph Jordan, otherwise known as Eric Striker. That publication is filled with accusations of Zionist control of institutions, the supposed violent proliferation of antifa and white genocide conspiracy theories. The platform for the National Justice Party, which was shared privately with guests, promises to nationalize or break up major tech and pharmaceutical companies and banks, set an immigration and natal policy to keep the U.S. white, and confront the Zionist occupation of our government. Tech companies have been a focus of white supremacists because of the intense deplatforming they have received, and so they have taken the talking point of nationalizing them as public utilities. This is an example of the far right adapting a left-wing political point to their own purposes: They want to neutralize private ownership of these platforms, but for very different reasons than the left does.

While these types of quasi-political organizations rarely have the ability to make a dent in the U.S. electoral system, they do have the ability to organize and further radicalize the far right. Anti-fascist movements have largely destabilized most of the formal organizations that allowed the white nationalist movement to grow, and this is the newest attempt to reinvigorate this movement by pulling together a large swath of the community into a unified front. While groups like the Patriot Front have also been doing this over the last year, Peinovichs high-profile status among white nationalists gives the National Justice Party the frightening ability to create a groundswell. By framing itself as a political party, it has the ability to create a more protected space for political activism, a strategy that was used by Matthew Heimbach for the neo-Nazi Traditionalist Workers Party, whose collapse left a void for Peinovich to fill.

[I] do think the name is a bit of a head-nod to Polands Law and Justice Party, says Alexander Reid Ross, a doctoral fellow at the Centre for Analysis of the Radical Right, an organization that tracks hate groups. By making ethno-centric distinctions between law-abiding Poles and law-breaking immigrants (along with their political allies), the nationalist Law and Justice Party has been able to draw older voters into a coalition with poor people who support Law and Justices social programs. It seems like this platform is something close to what we might see out of this new [National Justice Party].

The rhetoric used in the opening meeting of the National Justice Party seems to be drawn from conservative fearmongering over the supposed violence of Black Lives Matter protesters. They hope to draw on these white anxieties by uniting a traditionally popular message of law and order with their own white supremacy.

This situation comes at the nadir of the white nationalist movements collective organizational strength. By using the language of security, they can hope to channel white fears about the Black Lives Matter movement back into organized white supremacy.

The white nationalist wing of the alt-right is largely running on fumes at this point; there have been no new innovations for a while, and the remaining groups are static or in decline, says Spencer Sunshine, a researcher who tracks the far right. The [more moderate by comparison] alt-lite is doing better by milking anti-antifa rhetoric, now promoted by Trump, and high-profile street clashes which have expanded to include opposing the resurgent Black Lives Matter movement.

The National Justice Party does not need to run candidates to be effective. Presenting itself as a political party adds some protection and the appearance of legitimacy, even if members are simply organizing as a street force or white nationalist activist organization. The Traditionalist Workers Party was the political arm of the earlier Traditionalist Youth Network, but instead of being an electoral group, the party simply focused on being a big tent organization for third position fascist ideas that combined economic protectionism with racialism. Even organizations that did run candidates like the U.K.s National Front in the 1970s engaged in public attacks on marginalized groups and activists, and were a threat to public safety.

While figures like Peinovich have become pariahs on most social media, they have continued to try and retain a presence on these platforms despite almost constant bans, and The Right Stuff currently has a Twitter account. If they are allowed to have a growing presence on public social media, then this new project has the ability to reach a wider audience and potentially recruit from disaffected parts of Trumps base. The question now is how those measures can be undermined as tech companies decide exactly how they want to approach far right threats. While the racist language of the National Justice Party is just barely coded, it may be diffuse enough to go under the security systems of social networks and allow it to build up steam.

There are currently no Federal Election Commission filings for the National Justice Party, which is the kind of registration that would offer it the protections that usually come with a political party. It is still unclear if donations are coming in for the party as an official political entity, but it does not appear to be registered as such at the moment.

Although it is likely that the party will never have electoral sway, it provides itself as a vehicle to push white nationalist talking points and foment vigilante violence. At a time when attacks against Black Lives Matter protesters are becoming a common form of rightist vigilantism, this is a frightening development that could have real-world consequences. Instead of allowing far right organizations like the National Justice Party to become a violent force, activists should consider it a potential threat in its infancy, which is the only way to undermine fascist movements before they lead to tangible harm.

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New Far Right Party Aims to Stoke Fear of BLM Into Organized White Supremacy - Truthout

Micheli: Voters have a chance to shun "alt-right," slash-and-burn politics – Wyoming Tribune

I feel like I am too much doom and gloom in these articles, but you simply cannot overstate the difficult position in which Wyoming finds itself.

The latest piece of bad news is that, for the first time since statehood, there is not a single rig in the entire state drilling for oil or natural gas. Think about that for a minute: since 1884, this state has always had some development activity happening. Today, there is zero. That is horrible news for a state that depends so drastically on oil and gas tax revenue to balance the budget.

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Matt Micheli is a Cheyenne attorney, a longtime political consultant and former chairman of the Wyoming Republican Party. Email: Matt_Micheli@yahoo.com.

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Micheli: Voters have a chance to shun "alt-right," slash-and-burn politics - Wyoming Tribune

Customer responds after lesbian bakery owner in Detroit is asked to make homophobic cake – WXYZ

DETROIT (WXYZ) A bakery shop in Detroit owned by a lesbian couple said they received an order to put "Homosexual acts are gravely evil" on a cake.

April Anderson, co-owner of Good Cakes and Bakes, said she fulfilled the order despite her hesitation. They were suspicious that it was an attempted setup.

"I was like, this can't be real," Anderson said.

Her bakery is located in Detroit's Avenue of Fashion commercial corridor. Anderson said adversity has been a lifelong challenge.

"I'm a Black woman. I'm a lesbian," Anderson said. "It's not my first time being discriminated against."

However, Anderson admits she was caught off guard by the order. The customer ordered and paid for the cake online.

The customer left this message for special instructions: I am ordering this cake to celebrate and have PRIDE in true Christian marriage. Id like you to write on the cake, in icing, 'Homosexual acts are gravely evil.' (Catholic Catechism 2357)"

Anderson said she initially thought the request was for a Pride cake but thought it was ironic because Pride month is in June. Despite the offensive message, Anderson baked, boxed and got it ready for pick up.

She also wrote words of unity and had a letter attached.

"We wrote on there, 'God is Love and Love is God' because that's what it is," Anderson said. "There was no anger."

We reached out to the man who made the order. His name is David Gordon. He said he is a Christian Catholic and was denied services on the basis of his beliefs.

He sent 7 Action News a statement: *Nota bene: I acted in a personal (non-professional) capacity in placing the Good Cakes and Bakes order in question. My employer has nothing to do with my actionsthey did not have any advance knowledge of my personal action. It would be a stark breach of journalistic integrity to suggest in any way they did. Note also that in the original Pridesource article on this matter, the term alt-right is slanderously applied to Church Militant. Church Militant is not alt-right. It firmly eschews racism of any stripe. Church Militant is made up of orthodox Catholics, people who believe no more or no less than what the Catholic Church teaches. I am a Catholic Christian. I fall into the religion protected class as set forth by governing federal and state civil rights laws. I was denied the services I requested at a place of public accommodation on the basis of the content of my beliefs this is gleefully acknowledged by the owners of the bakery in the relevant Pridesource article. Good Cakes and Bakes admits that it never had any intention of serving me and making me the custom red velvet cake that I duly requested and paid for. Imagine the umbrage if a homosexual couple arrived at their wedding reception to find a Christian baker had made them a straight cake. This is fundamentally about fairness and parity, not ideology."

"I really prefer he picked up the cake and read the note." Anderson said. "Maybe we could have had a conversation."

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Customer responds after lesbian bakery owner in Detroit is asked to make homophobic cake - WXYZ

A Former White Nationalist Goes on the Record, and a Classic Villain Gets an Origin Story – The New Yorker

Illustration by Golden Cosmos

How does a progressive young person go down the rabbit hole of the alt-right to embrace an ideology of hate? Samantha insists that she wasnt a racistshe had once canvassed for Barack Obama, after allbut soon after joining the organization Identity Evropa she found herself rubbing shoulders with the neo-Nazi organizer Richard Spencer and chanting Sieg heil. When she left the group, she contacted the reporter Andrew Marantz to tell her story. Plus, Sarah Paulson talks about her role as star of the new Netflix series Ratched, which imagines the origin story of the great antihero Nurse Ratched, from Ken Keseys One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest.

The actor takes on the origin story of Nurse Ratched, from One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest.

How did one woman go from canvassing for Obama to carrying a tiki torch in Charlottesville? A former white nationalist explains how she got in, and out, of the movement.

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A Former White Nationalist Goes on the Record, and a Classic Villain Gets an Origin Story - The New Yorker

Kalamazoo police chief responds to criticism of handling of Proud Boys rally – MLive.com

KALAMAZOO, MI Until my boss tells me any differently, I am the chief of public safety, Karianne Thomas told MLive Tuesday.

The Kalamazoo Public Safety chief has come under scrutiny, including facing calls for her resignation, over how her department handled the Proud Boys rally and counter-protests that occurred Saturday, Aug. 15, in downtown Kalamazoo.

Many community members speaking out some still upset over the handling of Black Lives Matter protests that occurred in the wake of George Floyds death in the city called for Thomas resignation during last nights Kalamazoo City Commission meeting.

Related: Citizens call for new leadership in Kalamazoo after failure during Proud Boys rally

Thomas said during a Sunday afternoon press conference she understood the criticisms from the community, as well as the frustration many were feeling.

When asked Tuesday what her department needs to do to restore faith in the institution among the Kalamazoo community, Thomas said she believes the department need to be consistent in their after-action reviews, learn from these types of events and be both open and responsive.

Im committed to this community and Im committed to this department and its continuous improvement, she told MLive during an interview Tuesday, Aug. 18. If there was a simple answer we wouldnt be in Day 82 in Portland of riots or the Magnificent Mile in Chicago.

If I, in little old Kalamazoo, had those answers believe me, Id be wanted everywhere in the world.

Much of why the department has come under scrutiny is that, despite violent clashes between the alt-right group and counter-protesters, none of the 10 individuals arrested by police were associated with Proud Boys. Some of the violence between members of the groups was captured on video.

Related: None of them saw a single repercussion, counter-protester says of Proud Boys who rallied in Kalamazoo

In total, nine adults were arrested and one juvenile, Thomas said. The juvenile was released to the custody of his parents. Eight of the adults have had their charges dismissed, she said.

Seven of the adults arrested, according to the city attorney and county prosecutors offices, are from Kalamazoo County.

A ninth person arrested Saturday, 31-year-old Travis Anderson of Adrian, was charged with resisting and obstructing a police officer. Anderson was arraigned in Kalamazoo County District Court on Monday, Aug. 17. Anderson was released from jail on a $1,000 bond.

Among those arrested was MLive reporter Samuel Robinson, who was initially charged with impeding traffic and jailed. The charge was later dismissed, and Thomas issued Robinson a public apology during the Sunday news conference.

Related: Charge dropped against MLive reporter, chief apologizes for arrest at Kalamazoo protest

The chief said Tuesday there are no active internal investigations at this time looking into the arrest of Robinson or any of the other arrests during Saturdays protests.

She said the department will take a closer look at what media credentials mean in terms of access at such an event. She also said the department is committed to working with members of the media to educate one another moving forward.

We are doing our after-action review and going through what happened and thats ongoing, Thomas said. We have detectives assigned to look through all of those videos, to see are there any other assaults there. If anything else comes to light, well look at that as it happens.

Addressing rumors of local homeless people having been attacked on Saturday, Thomas and Assistant Chief David Boysen each said they have seen no evidence of such actions thus far. No one has come forward to say they were assaulted on that day, they said.

We have found no evidence to corroborate that whatsoever and our analysts are looking at all the footage, pouring through all the news footage, the body cam footage and our footage recorded from our over-watch (camera), Boysen said.

When asked if any suspects in the violent clashes who were among the Proud Boys group have been identified from that footage, Thomas said investigators were simply not that far into the process.

These things dont happen overnight, she said. They can take weeks.

Thomas boss, Kalamazoo City Manager Jim Ritsema, said during Monday nights city commission meeting that he felt things should have been done differently, but that he stands behind the chief.

We shouldnt have arrested people from Kalamazoo and should have arrested Proud Boys, Ritsema said.

The city manager said, in addition to the department reviewing footage of possible criminal acts committed by Proud Boys, his office will also conduct a review of how police handled the situation. That will include probing whether police should or could have had units closer to the Proud Boys, acknowledging the criticism from some that police were not on scene until some time after the violence began.

It was a very serious situation and no one said it was anything less than that, Thomas said Tuesday. Its easy to Monday morning quarterback and to be a Google cop.

Its human dynamics and people are trying to make it seem like it was a simpler situation than it was. It was anything but that.

Among criticisms of the departments handling from residents included claims from some that Proud Boys appeared to receive police protection while leaving the Radisson Plaza Hotels parking garage in their vehicles.

Michael Barker, who called into the virtual city commission meeting Monday, said it felt as if the department provided security service for the Proud Boys. Barker, who said he was in town to peacefully protest on Saturday and was arrested, shared a similar sentiment as Kalamazoo resident Adam Danis, who was also arrested and later saw that charge against him dropped.

They were never going to get a better opportunity to take statements, take names, try to suss out which of those people were involved in the actual crimes that they knew had been committed, Danis said, criticizing police ushering traffic out of the garage.

Thomas, as she did Sunday, reiterated on Tuesday that it was not realistic for officers to have stopped vehicles at that time.

The Proud Boys were in and out of town in 90 minutes, which is a success, she said. We wanted them out of town. We told them to leave the parking ramp. They left the parking ramp and once we go through all the videos, and see if theres anything else out there, well address that as it comes.

City officials have asked that if anyone has video of assaults that occurred during the days events, or was assaulted, to reach out to Kalamazoo Public Safety so those incidents could be investigated.

People can contact Kalamazoo Public Safety at 269-488-8911 or Silent Observer at 269-343-2100 or http://www.kalamazoosilentobserver.com.

Also on MLive:

Kalamazoo City commissioners scrutinize police response to Proud Boys visit

Police chief says Proud Boys completed their mission by causing chaos in downtown Kalamazoo

Charges dismissed against eight involved in Proud Boys rally and counter-protests in Kalamazoo

Rally turns violent as Proud Boys met by counter-protesters in downtown Kalamazoo

Outside investigator will review police use of tear gas on Kalamazoo protesters

Outside agitators forced officers to deploy tear gas, pepper spray in Kalamazoo, police say

Original post:

Kalamazoo police chief responds to criticism of handling of Proud Boys rally - MLive.com

How The Internet has Warped Film Criticism: Part II – mxdwn.com

Evan Krell August 8th, 2020 - 8:48 AM

Part I: https://movies.mxdwn.com/feature/how-the-internet-has-warped-film-criticism/

In my previous article, I gave a brief overview on how YouTube has given rise to certain brands of internet criticism, touching on the skit filled angry reviewers of the mid 2000s and the nitpicking, exaggerated shows like Honest Trailers and CinemaSins. The article drew the through line showing how these types of videos help spur the alt right movement online and how they lead to the types of malicious hate and comments directed towards The Last Jedi for its prominent female characters. See that article for more info.

For this piece I wanted to use another case study to highlight this topic. Another large franchise film with prominent female characters; 2019s Captain Marvel. In the yearlong gap between Infinity War and Endgame, Marvel Studios released two films to bridge the gap, the first of which was Captain Marvel. It was also noteworthy for being Marvels first standalone superhero film with a female lead, something that was long overdue. It and Black Panthers development were being impeded by Marvel Entertainment head Ike Perlmutter and other studio executives who felt like films starring women or Black characters wouldnt perform well enough at the box office. It took a shakeup in management around 2015 to get the films on track. Regardless, it was long past time for more diversity in these films.

Anticipation was high in the lead up for the film. Carol Danvers was and still is a fan favorite in the world of comics and in the initial announcement for Marvels Phase 3 slate, the reveal that the film would focus on Carol was met with thunderous applause. Initial trailers in the wake of Infinity War were also met with excitement, doubled by producer Kevin Feige hyping up Carol Danvers as the most powerful character among the Avengers lineup. As the films release drew nearer however, the conversation began to shift.

Before the film released, Rotten Tomatoes had a feature called want to see, where users of the website could demonstrate their interest in seeing the movie. The numbers for Captain Marvel were astronomically low, with an abnormal amount of submissions far above the usual Marvel movie, or any movie for that matter. People speculated that these were attempts to review bomb and dissuade audiences from seeing it. Rotten Tomatoes soon altered this feature to only show the amount interested instead of a percentage. Sure enough on opening day when user reviews opened up, the film had tens of thousands of negative reviews, more than major blockbusters get in their entire run. Most of these reviews likely came from bots, and almost all of them featured complaints about the movie being feminist propaganda.

Sadly, this type of reaction wasnt all too surprising. YouTube, a breeding ground for alt right internet trolls, was plagued with similar messages all throughout the movies marketing campaign. One infamous example was a user editing stills of the film to make Carol Danvers smile, believing that women should smile and look pretty. All over YouTube, alt right users were posting lengthy rant videos, claiming the film was part of a feminist agenda and making vitriolic comments towards the films star Brie Larson. The videos only got more frequent once the film released and much like The Last Jedi, its often hard to talk about the film in some online spaces without a horde of alt right trolls launching into rants and personal attacks.

When moving the discussion backwards a couple of years, this type of unbridled bigotry doesnt seem apparent during the release of Wonder Woman in 2017. Theres sure to be some of this hatred on YouTube but it was never to scale of the Captain Marvel review bombing. There could be several reasons as to why. Theres certainly something to be said about the sort of cult of personality that has formed around DC Comics, though that more applies to Zack Snyder. There have however been examples of many DC fans putting together conspiracy theories that Marvel has paid off critics to bad mouth other superhero properties. Though these have always been a very vocal minority and likely didnt have much to do with the Captain Marvel discourse.

The simple answer is that Brie Larson was incredibly outspoken during the pre-release phase of the film. In interviews, Larson would often use her platform to speak out against inequality and sexual harassment in the film industry. She became the primary target of attacks from many alt right users, who as I mentioned in the previous piece, almost always harbor a deep resentment towards women. Brie Larsons outspokenness, coupled with titular characters stoicness and defiance towards traditional gender roles, infuriated the trolls to no end.

The discussion around the review bombing also got more people talking about the nature of user review websites like Rotten Tomatoes. The video game industry has seen a similar problem with video game reviews, and that is the nature of reviewer scores. Often times people wont actually read or watch a review, theyll just skip to end or scour the page to find the numerical score assigned to the movie. This mirrors the discussion surrounding YouTube channels like CinemaSins. The nuance is gone, and all people care about is if something is good or bad. The internet likes to speak in hyperbole. Everything is either the greatest thing since sliced bread or its an abomination. Rarely can something just be okay.

It doesnt help that Rotten Tomatoes scoring system is unorthodox and not a very good judge of quality. If a film has a score of 78%, that doesnt mean that the average review score is 78/100. It simply means that 78% percent of reviewers are in agreement about liking the movie. Those positive reviews could range from liking it a little bit to absolutely loving it. Despite this, people often flock to these scores and make judgments about the movie before actually seeing it for themselves. Thats not to say that these numbers cant be helpful in giving a vague idea of the films reception, they certainly can be. When the reviews are raided by these trolls though, that becomes skewed.

The entire history and festering of the online alt right is too much to cover in just two short articles. Films like Captain Marvel or The Last Jedi are simply some of the most public spaces where these hate groups are making themselves known. This goes beyond whether or not someone thinks Captain Marvel is a good movie or not. Its becoming increasingly clear that the avenues in which films are discussed, like YouTube and Rotten Tomatoes, are becoming one of the fronts where the alt right is most active. As always, its important to take a stand against bigotry wherever it rears its ugly head root it out whenever possible.

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How The Internet has Warped Film Criticism: Part II - mxdwn.com

Hiya, Nice to see everyone earlier. Here’s the second books lead, by Jamie Maxwell. Print headline: Rallying cry from the ‘establishment’ right…

Allen Lane, 16.99

Review by Jamie Maxwell

IN Twilight of Democracy, Anne Applebaum charts the fracturing of the Transatlantic right. The book is part-memoir, part-polemic. Over the past 20 years, the conservative movement has split into two factions, Applebaum contends: traditional neoliberals, who believe in free-markets, democratic institutions and the rule of law, and populists, who thrive on division, confusion, and nationalist paranoia.

Applebaum a journalist and historian based variously, in Poland, Britain and the US belongs firmly to the first faction. A veteran contributor to the Spectator, Sunday Times and Washington Post, she has enjoyed ringside access to rightwing elites for decades. Until recently, she was on good terms with Boris Johnson, a man she now describes as an all-consuming narcissist with a penchant for fabrication. (Nobody serious wants to leave the EU, she quotes the future prime minister as saying in 2014. Business doesnt want it. The City doesnt want it. It wont happen.)

In 2008 she broke with the Republican Party after John McCain added Sarah Palin a proto-Trump to his presidential ticket. McCain never spoke to me again, she writes. In Poland, Applebaum and her husband, the politician Radek Sikorski, have become targets of anti-Semitic propaganda linked to the countrys ruling Law and Justice Party. Whether I like it or not, I am part of this story, she laments.

Applebaums premise is that mainstream conservatives cautious, sceptical, committed, above all, to the cause of individual freedom have been sidelined by extremists. She is particularly interested in the so-called clerks of authoritarianism: the writers, bloggers, and intellectual agitators think Dominic Cummings and Steve Bannon who spread disinformation in order to undermine democratic norms.

Applebaums narrative sweeps across Europe and North America. In Hungary, she meets Maria Schmidt, an anti-communist scholar turned cheerleader for the far-right Orban regime. In Spain, she profiles Vox, an insurgent nationalist party cultivating a form of Trumpism on the Iberian peninsula. In Britain, she interviews John Sullivan, who once wrote speeches for Margaret Thatcher but now thinks the break-up of the UK is a price worth paying for Brexit. And in the US, she explores the dark pessimism of Donald Trumps highest-profile media supporters, including Fox News host Laura Ingraham, who believes American society is being destroyed by mass immigration.

The common theme uniting these disparate political threads, Applebaum says, is a desire for simplicity and the need to impose order on a disordered world. The end of the Thatcher and Reagan eras, coupled with the Wests triumph in the Cold War, left British and American conservatives with a deep sense of cultural despair, culminating in the revanchist campaigns of Brexit and Trump. In continental Europe, rightwing anxiety over the erosion of national borders produced new forms of militant euro-scepticism, laced with Islamophobia.

Class and inequality arent major factors in the rise of the alt-right, Applebaum insists: The vast majority of people [in the West] are not starving. If we describe them as poor, its because they lack things that human beings couldnt dream of a century ago. What matters is the growth of anti-pluralism and, in the age of social media echo-chambers, an aversion to fierce debates.

At heart, Twilight of Democracy is a rallying cry for an embattled neoliberal establishment; a warning, directed at the centre of the political spectrum, about the fragility of modern democratic culture and its system of open, constitutional government. Without constant vigilance, Applebaum concludes, that system may not survive the precariousness of our current moment. Liberal democracies always demanded things from citizens: argument, effort, struggle, she writes. They always required some tolerance for cacophony and chaos, as well as some willingness to push back at the people who create cacophony and chaos.

As you might expect from a celebrated historian of Soviet power, Applebaum is a forceful and intelligent writer. The splintered conservative social milieu she depicts is fascinating, both for its autobiographical insights and as a record of the internecine battles that have taken place on the Anglo-American right in recent years.

Less convincing, however, is her account of the schisms origins. The problem, she says, isnt closed-mindedness. It is simple-mindedness. Voters embrace authoritarian figureheads because they prefer unity over division and familiarity over the unknown. Demographic change is confusing, so it provokes a cultural backlash. Political discourse is contentious, so it is spurned in favour of more binary narratives. This logic is both reductive and self-serving: centrists can cope with the complexity of the 21st century, Applebaum a centrist says, but simple-minded populists cant.

Applebaum also mistakes her own sense of personal displacement for a fundamental shift in conservative ideology. Indeed, she consistently overstates the extent of the rupture in rightwing politics and downplays key elements of continuity between different generations of conservative leaders.

Applebaum assumes and expects the reader to assume that Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan were democrats in a way that Johnson and Trump arent. But Thatcher cleaved away entire layers of local government and used the police to suppress strikes in pursuit of her radical economic agenda. Likewise, Trump may have entered the White House on a promise to drain the swamp, but he has governed as a relatively conventional Republican, cutting taxes for the ultra-rich, ditching vast swathes of federal environmental regulation and amplifying the grievances of white voters in a style consistent with past GOP presidents, Reagan among them. Ultimately, Trump is a product of conservative orthodoxy, not a rejection of it, and Thatcher was the archetype for Johnsons populism, not its antithesis.

This category error runs through the entire book. The new right is more Bolshevik than Burkean, Applebaum says. These are men and women who want to overthrow existing institutions, to destroy what exists. Really? Brexit was sold as an opportunity to restore British (or English) national independence from the grip of European control and Vox campaigns to defend Spains indissoluble unity from separatist movements in Catalonia and the Basque Country. These projects arent revolutionary. They are reactionary. The alt-right isnt trying to smash prevailing class structures. It is trying to strengthen them.

Applebaums analysis may be more relevant in Eastern Europe, where the post-Soviet consensus is visibly under strain, than it is in Western Europe and North America. But as a blanket account of how rightwing politics moved from the Reaganite optimism of the 1980s to the apocalyptic alarmism of today, it fails to convince. Twilight of Democracy is a compelling book, just not a very persuasive one. Applebaum wants things to go to back to normal, before hyper-partisanship and polarisation became the key registers of debate in London, Washington, and Warsaw. She overlooks the fact that normal wasnt all that democratic in the first place.

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Hiya, Nice to see everyone earlier. Here's the second books lead, by Jamie Maxwell. Print headline: Rallying cry from the 'establishment' right...

The Facts Just Arent Getting Through – The Atlantic

A few weeks ago, I went to a political rally in a farmyard. The Polish presidential candidate Rafa Trzaskowski was speaking; in the background, a golden wheat field shimmered in the late-afternoon sun. The audience was enthusiasticthe host, a local farmer, had spread news of the candidates visit only the day beforebut the juxtaposition of Trzaskowski and the wheat field was odd. He is the mayor of Warsaw, speaks several languages, has degrees in economics, and belongs to the half of Poland that identifies as educated, urban, and European. What does he know from wheat?

But Trzaskowski was running for president in a country whose other half lives in an information bubble that teaches people to be suspicious of anyone from Warsaw who is educated, urban, and European. Polish state television, fully controlled by the ruling Law and Justice party, was sending aggressive messages into that bubble, warning its inhabitants that Trzaskowski was dubious, foreign, in hock to LGBT ideologywhich the incumbent president, Andrzej Duda, called worse than communismand beholden to Germans and Jews. The messages, constantly repeated on a wide array of radio stations and television channels, were designed to reinforce tribal loyalties and convince Law and Justice voters that they are real Poles, not impostors or traitors like their political opponents.

During his short campaign, Trzaskowski did his best to reach into that bubble too. He stood beside wheat fields, spent a lot of time in small towns, and ran ads that called for an end to division. We are united by a dream, he said in one speech: a dream of a different Poland, a Poland where there are no better and worse citizens. This was a deliberate choice: Instead of mobilizing the voters inside his own bubble by attacking the ruling party, he sought to bridge Polands deep polarization by appealing to national unity.

Anne Applebaum: Polands rulers made up a Rainbow Plague

He came close, winning 49 percent of the vote. But he failed. Trzaskowskis half of Poland was insufficiently enthusiastic, while the other half was energized, angry, and very much afraid of Jews, foreigners, and LGBT ideology. Dudas voters were also happy with the government subsidies and reduced retirement age that his party had approved, and not remotely inspired by Trzaskowskis language of solidarity and unityif they even heard it.

If they even heard it: If that doesnt sound familiar, it should. Because the same thing could happen in the United States this fallor during the next election in France, or Italy, or Ukraine. American politics, Polish politics, French politics, Italian politics, Ukrainian politics, all derived from their own history, economics, and culture, now have this in common: In each of these countries, deep informational divides separate one part of the electorate from the rest. Some voters live in a so-called populist bubble, where they hear nationalist and xenophobic messages, learn to distrust fact-based media and evidence-based science, and become receptive to conspiracy theories and suspicious of democratic institutions. Others read and hear completely different media, respect different authorities, and search for a different sort of news. Whatever the advantages of these other bubbles, their rules render the people in them incapable of understanding or speaking with those outside of them.

In some places, including Poland and the United States, the country is divided in half. In other places, such as Germany, the proportions vary, but the divide is just as deep. A couple of years ago, I took part in a project that looked at foreign influence in the 2017 German parliamentary elections. We found, among other things, that the overwhelming majority of Germansleft, right, and centerfollow a mix of big newspapers, magazines, and television outlets, including public TV. But many of the Germans who vote for the far-right Alternative for Germanythe number hovers between 10 and 14 percentget their news from a completely separate set of sources, including a heavy dose of Russian-funded German-language media, such as Sputnik and RT. The voters in the far-right bubble dont just have different opinions from other Germans; they have different facts, including facts provided by a foreign country.

David Frum: The great Russian disinformation campaign

The point I am making here is not about Russia. It is about the deep gap in perceptions that now separates a tenth of German voters from the other 90 percent. Is that chasm permanent? Should the other German political parties try to reach the people in the populist bubble? But how is it possible to reach people who cant hear you? This is not merely a question of how to convince people, how to use a better argument, or how to change minds. This is a question about how to get people to listen at all. Just shouting about facts will get you nowhere with those who no longer trust the sources that produce them.

Here is how this problem looks in the United States: On the day after Donald Trump met Vladimir Putin in Helsinki in 2018, Sarah Longwell found herself in Columbus, Ohio, talking with a focus group she had conveneda room full of people whom she characterizes as reluctant Trump voters, people who had voted for the president but had doubts. Trumps bizarre behavior in Helsinki had bothered her. The president had looked cowed and frightened; in accepting the Russian leaders insistence that he had not interfered in the 2016 U.S. election, Trump appeared to side with Putin and against Americas FBI. D.C. is on fire about it, Im on fire about it, I think its a big moment, Longwell told me. I ask folks in Columbus, What happened yesterday in Helsinki? They look blank.

Longwell is a Republican activist, or rather a Never Trump Republican activistone of the few remaining members of what was once a large group. She spent 2016 rooting for an alternative to Trump. She spent 2017 losing friends. That was the year of the body snatchers, she said, when people who you thought were with you suddenly started to change. In 2018, she tried to figure out what to do next. Instead of giving up, she and another Never Trump Republican, the longtime journalist and activist Bill Kristol, raised money and set out to find people who felt the same way, not in Washington but across America, especially in Republican-voting suburbs.

Their initiative, now called Republican Voters Against Trump, immediately ran into the information wall. Among Longwells focus group in Ohio, Trumps bizarre behavior in Helsinki did not register. People havent heard about it, Longwell recalled thinking. Its not breaking through. This wasnt because the people in the group were uninterested in politics. Nor was it because they were only watching Fox News. On the contrary, they were getting news from social media, from alerts on their phone, from devices of all kinds. They were getting too much news, in fact. As a result, all reporting about Trumpthe crush of scandals and corruptionis, Longwell said, so omnipresent, so daily, that it becomes white noise to people.

Helsinki, porn stars, Grab them by the pussy, Ivanka Trumps Chinese trademarks, taxpayers money going to Trump golf clubs, the sex scandals, ethics scandals, legal scandals, even the power-abuse scandal that led to Trumps impeachmentthey have all melted together over the past four years. They have become a series of unpleasant news stories that follow TV advertisements for hairspray or mouthwash, that precede a Facebook post about a cousins wedding anniversary. For Longwells reluctant Trump voters, dislike of the scandals and dislike of the media that report on the scandals became one and the samea huge hornets nest that nobody wanted to touch or think about. At the same time, these same voters were being bombarded with other messagesmessages that reminded them of their tribal allegiance. They swim in a cultural soup of Trumpism, Longwell said. Being Republican was part of their identity. Images relating to God, patriotism, and the Republican Party were all around them. Cumulatively, those messages were much stronger than their dislike for Trump.

Quinta Jurecic and Benjamin Wittes: Revenge of the Never Trumpers

Ben Scott, a technology expert who worked on disinformation policy at Barack Obamas State Department and was an adviser to Hillary Clintons 2016 campaign, has studied that same phenomenon. Digital media, he told me, have allowed people to experience a higher frequency of highly evocative representationsmeaning the constant barrage of pictures, video, commentary, and memes that portray America, Christians, or families under siege; that align Trump with the Church and the Army; that see threats from foreigners, immigrants, outsiders of all kinds. People who live in this alternative news bubble also see or hear mainstream, fact-based media. But they reject them. They identify them as the enemy, and they learn to ignore them. The Clinton campaigns mistake, Scott reckons, was its belief that people inside this bubble could be moved by an appeal to facts. They werent.

At first, Longwell also thought that an appeal to facts could move reluctant Trump voters to change their mind. But when she played them videos that clearly showed Trump lying, they shrugged it off. In part, this was because they did not hold him to the same standards as other politicians. Instead, she thinks, they saw him as a businessman and a celebrity, someone exempt from normal morality. They say, Yes, he lies. But hes honest, hes authentic, hes real, Longwell said.

Even more powerful, though, is the pull of the group. Republican voters know that Trump lies. If they forgive him, that is because their friends and their families, the other members of their party, forgive him too. Im a Republican, my parents are Republicans, all of my friends are Republicans, Longwells focus-group members told her. To vote differently wouldnt just be an intellectual decision for these voters. It would tear them away from their tribe.

But what happens when that tribe itself starts talking about Trump in a different way? That, it turns out, is quite another matter entirely.

Inside the noisy and chaotic modern information sphere, the message doesnt matter nearly as much as the messenger. Many people no longer trust major media outlets to give them valuable informationand they may never do so again. They no longer trust politicians or groups they perceive to be outside their tribe eitherand the days when a president got a respectful audience just for being the president may never return again. But voters do trust people they know, or people who resemble people they know. Understanding this to be true, Longwell and Kristol began experimenting. Instead of just creating professional campaign videos (though they have made one or two of those), they began soliciting and disseminating homemade clips. The Republican Voters Against Trump website features a quote from one of themId vote for a tuna fish sandwich before Id vote for Donald Trump againas well as information on how to create your own video.

Hundreds of people have contributed clips, and many have already been posted. Among them are people who describe themselves as lifelong Republicans, as evangelical Christians, or as veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. The videos are unscripted: The people in them give their own reasons for feeling disillusioned or angered by an administration they believe has betrayed them and their conservative ideals, and they explains their views in their own words. People know that they are being sold something in an ad, Longwell said. By contrast, they look at the RVAT videos, they see someone in their community, and they think, I like that person.

When tested on focus groups, the ads do have an impact: People find them convincing. Perhaps this is because they reflect conservative anxieties about Trump without criticizing the conservative tribe. The people in the videos sympathize with Republican voters dilemma, as Longwell herself does. Tribalism isnt all negative, she said. It also involves elements of loyalty, trust, and community. Indeed, Trumps abuse of loyalty, trust, and community is what seems to anger both her and the people in the videos the most. Their feelings of betrayal come through.

Robert P. Saldin and Steven M. Teles: The last anti-Trump Republicans are biding their time

The use of insiders to reach into closed communities is an established techniqueone often used in touchier, more trying circumstances. Sasha Havlicek, who runs a counter-extremism organization in London called the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (the group also worked on the 2017 German election study), has tried many times to find credible inside voices to speak with people who are on the cusp of being recruited online, whether into ISIS or white-supremacist organizations. Havlicek and her colleagues sometimes find disillusioned former members to counsel these would-be recruits, but she also looks for church groups, local employers, veterans, or anyone who can offer an alternative sense of community. Whats important, she told me, is to find people who can offer a crucial form of reassurance: Once you change your vote or your politics, once you break from what everyone around you is doing, you wont be alone.

If the world of counter-extremism offers lessons, so does the experience of anti-communism. Back in the 1980s, Poland was a Soviet-occupied Communist country with an entirely closed media environment. The Communist Party ran all the newspapers and the sole television network. Protest was illegal, and protesters were arrested. But an unusual dissident group called the Orange Alternative broke through the wall of regime mediaby making people laugh. The group staged happenings that werent exactly demonstrations but something closer to comic performances. In 1987, the Orange Alternative held a parade on the anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, carrying pro-communist banners and drawing laughing crowds; another time, dozens of people dressed up as Santa Claus and gave out candy. The authorities were flummoxed: The parades were clearly protests, but the police looked stupid when they arrested people for wearing communist red outfits or Santa Claus suits. Srdja Popovic, the veteran Serbian activisthe helped lead a youth movement that overthrew the Serbian dictator Slobodan Miloevihas lectured on what he calls the power of laughtivism. Humor melts fear, he says. Mockery removes the aura of an authoritarian party or leader, making followers more willing to listen to alternatives.

In the U.S., this is one of the tactics now being pursued by the Lincoln Project. Founded by another group of anti-Trump Republicans, it doesnt need the elaborate introduction it might have required a few weeks ago, not least because it has so successfully trolled the president. In May, the group made a short video that began with the words, There is mourning in America. Today, more than 60,000 Americans have died from a deadly virus Donald Trump ignored. Gloomy music followed, along with gloomy pictures: tattered buildings, abandoned houses, shabbily dressed people. Then, at the end, a picture of the Lincoln Memorial and the American flag: If we have another four years like this, will there even be an America?

The clip, a harsh take on the famous Ronald Reagan Morning in America commercial, was an instant hit: More than 1.5 million people watched it within two days of its appearance on Twitter. Even more people saw it after it ran on Fox News in the Washington, D.C., market. One of its viewers was the president, who fired off a series of midnight tweets loaded with all the familiar insults: RINOs, losers, a disgrace. The result: Money poured into the Lincoln Projects coffers. John Weaver, one of the groups founders, told me that in subsequent days, the video was viewed on Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook millions of times.

Reed Galen, John Weaver, and Rick Wilson: The party of idolaters

Since then, the Lincoln Project has launched advertisements mocking Trump in Russian; advertisements making fun of the presidents apparent difficulties drinking a glass of water; advertisements laughing at his campaign manager, who was later fired, possibly for that reason; advertisements appearing within minutes of the event that they parody. A clip needling the president over his weight and apparent mental decline briefly caused #ImpotusAmericanus to trend on Twitter. The sometimes nasty, sometimes childish glee radiated by the groups Twitter account (1.8 million followers) has provoked a harsh counterattack. The Lincoln Project and its founders have been denounced by some on the right as Democrats in disguise, acting under a false flag; by some on the left for alleged hidden agendas; by others as stooping to the same destructive tactics as the president. My Atlantic colleague Andrew Ferguson called the Lincoln Projects ad campaign personally abusive, overwrought, pointlessly salacious.

The Lincoln Projects founders count the attacks from the Republican Party as a success, not least because they distract the GOP from its campaign against Joe Biden. But do the Lincoln Projects ads get through to Republican voters, let alone change their minds? Steve Schmidt, another one of the founders, argues that the information bubble around the president really does now function like an autocratic personality cult: Before any positive messages can get through, the spell has to be broken. For that reason, attacking Republican Party leaders is a necessity. Diminish them, mock them, and laugh at them, Schmidt told me. Punch back hard before you lose the ability to do it. He also thinks that aggressive, even vulgar, laughter will help break through the wall of indifference and convince distracted voters that something important is happening. The side arguing from democratic values should not be the soft side in the debate, Schmidt said. It should be ferocious.

In the grand scheme of things, both of these Never Trump Republican projects are tinylike little speedboats racing alongside the aircraft carrier that will be the Democratic presidential ad campaign this fall. Weaver described their role as the sappers blowing up supply lines while the generals prepare their assault. Still, some of their efforts run parallel to Bidens campaign strategy. He, too, is looking for ways to reach into the conservative bubble, or at least to not offend it. Biden has, for example, been careful to avoid making statements that could be used to scare Republican voters. He does not call for defunding the police, for example, or the opening of the border, or the abolition of all private health insurance. He keeps his rhetoric moderate, even though his base is baying for redder meat. As Ezra Klein of Vox has written, the Democratic candidates campaign staff is well aware that mobilization is often the flip side of polarization. The language that excites his base will also enrage his opponents, which is why he avoids it.

The risk, of course, is that Biden ends up like Trzaskowski, issuing calls for unity that excite nobody, not even his own party. But not everybody in the liberal center ends up that way. Schmidts conclusionthat the side arguing from democratic values need not be boringwas also reached a few years ago by a group of university students in Zurich, the founders of an effort called Operation Libero. When they began, the Swiss Peoples Party, a populist-nationalist party, dominated the countrys politics. It had successfully promoted a vision of Switzerland as a closed enclave, and proposed a series of referendums designed to stoke xenophobia, halt immigration, and curtail the countrys ability to sign foreign treaties.

Peter Beinart: Biden goes big without sounding like it

In contrast, Operation Liberos founders argued for a more welcoming vision of the nation. They pointed out that modern Switzerlands founding moment was the liberal revolution of 1848, that the country had a long history of religious tolerance and openness to the world. Calling themselves the children of 1848, Operation Libero started making amusing video clipsan animated cartoon of Helvetia, the national symbol, howling as she is knocked over by a populist wrecking balland memes. The group created teams of volunteers who would argue against the Swiss version of the online alt-right, and invited the populists to engage in debate. It worked: Not only did Operation Libero help its own side prevail in several referendum campaigns, but its members looked like they were having fun doing it. One widely circulated photograph showed members of the groupincluding one of its founders, Flavia Kleiner, in a hot-pink jacketcheering exuberantly as they celebrated an electoral victory.

But Operation Libero didnt just offer fun; it also offered patriotisma different version of patriotism. We are offering a more positive view of Switzerland, Kleiner told me a couple of years ago. We dont want it to be an open-air museum with an idealized past. In the United States, the field is wide open for Biden, or anyone who supports him, to use emotive American symbols and traditions to mobilize voters of all stripes. One Biden campaign ad from last year went in exactly this direction, contrasting the language of the Declaration of Independence (All men are created equal) with the language of the 2017 alt-right march in Charlottesville, Virginia (Jews will not replace us). The renewal or recasting of American founding documents to suit a contemporary moment is, of course, nothing new. Martin Luther King Jr. quoted the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence and referred to the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

But there is a possible trap here too. In this era of information overload, the appeals to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness that worked in the past might now sound trite; worse still, the language of democracy and of Americas founding can sound like yet another set of slogans in the information war. Trumps campaign seems to be hoping that this happens; thats why the president is already mocking the ideas and ideals of democracy itself. On social media, the president has posted Trump 2024, 2028, 2032 memes and teasing tweets about postponing the election. Although they did cause some alarm among some of his supportersproof that the rules surrounding elections still enjoy bipartisan respectTrumps tweets may have achieved their purpose among others: They made the familiar rhetoric of democracy and common purpose sound old-fashioned, out of touch, dated.

Its not just American rhetoric that no longer unifies. American history itself has become contentious too. At a moment when people are arguing over statues, how can stories about the past ever unite us? Or, to put it differently: How can Biden talk about American history in a way that doesnt alienate either his opponents or his supporters?

Read: The Kumbaya candidate

Some lessons might emerge, eccentric though they may seem, from another project Ive been part of. This one also used focus groups, in an attempt to understand how Ukrainians in regions with very different histories remember the past. Western Ukraine was part of Poland until 1939, the east has a long history of Russian domination, and the two regions have radically different memories, especially of the Second World War. Russian disinformation directed at Ukraine has long sought to exacerbate these differences, characterizing western Ukrainians as Nazis and reminding easterners of the part they played in the Red Armys victory. As a result, any conversation about the war is liable to make somebody (maybe everybody) angry.

But when focus-group moderators changed the subject to different historical traumas, it turned out that the differences were not so great. When Ukrainians talk about, say, the Soviet-Afghan War in the 80s or the economic collapse that followed the end of the U.S.S.R. in the 90s, they have similarly strong emotions and similarly evocative feelings, no matter which part of the country they inhabit. They are also more likely to believe the information presented in documentaries about those subjects, whereas they approach similar films about the Second World War with distrust.

To my knowledge, no one has yet done the same kind of study in the U.S. But I can guess that, as in Ukraine, some Americans are divided by their different historical memories. Right now, different interpretations of the civil-rights movement, and even of the Civil War and Reconstruction, lie at the root of angry arguments about statues, military-base names, and the Confederate flag. Reconciling those memories is not something that will happen between now and November. But there might well be other things we can talk about, other episodes in American history that evoke strong, unifying feelings in both red and blue America. The moment of national mourning that followed 9/11? The financial crisis of 2008? The Biden campaign has already begun to explore the national experience of isolation and lockdown. Unsurprisingly, the Trump campaign has responded with a disinformation campaign designed to sow doubt about whether that isolation and lockdown were even necessary. From its point of view, anything that creates bonds between red and blue Americans is anathema.

One way or another, all successful campaignspolitical campaigns, activist campaigns, even commercial advertising campaignsneed to reckon with the fact that audiences live in different information spheres. The era of mass media and unitary campaign slogans is drawing to an end. This is not news: The Russian operatives who intervened in the 2016 election were telling members of Black Lives Matter Facebook groups different things from what they told the anti-immigration activists they targeted in Idaho.

Still, we havent really absorbed the significance of this moment. In this post-mass-media era, sowing division is far easier than creating unity, giving an advantage to politicians who seek to win by creating scapegoats and enemies. Targeted advertising makes it much easier to splice and dice the electorate, and it isnt hard to create misunderstandings between groups who no longer speak to each other. For all those reasons, the odds are that whoever is the ultimate victor, the 2020 campaign will leave America even more bitterly divided than it is today, and that will go on being a problem in the future.

Read: The long arc of Joe Biden

Even if the Democratic nominee wins, Can Biden reach into the opposite bubble? is a question not just for the autumn of 2020 but for the spring of 2021, the winter of 2022, and many years into the future. The need to reach across informational and cultural divides will add an extra layer of complication to the multiple economic, medical, and foreign-policy crises a new Biden administration would immediately face, and will make it difficult to carry out the deep reforms that our bureaucracy, our democracy, and our health-care system need. But unless Biden makes an effort to talk with his opponents, he could end up much like the candidate in the Polish wheat field, with only the facts and 49 percent of the public on his side. Bidens campaign may represent the last chance to bridge the gaps that divide us. If Trump wins another term, then we can be certain that no one will even try.

Originally posted here:

The Facts Just Arent Getting Through - The Atlantic

Gen Z Reviews Classic Movies | ‘Red Dawn’ is the most violent film of its time but barely worth the trouble no – MEAWW

The year was 1984 (coincidentally) and John Milius came out with his masterpiece, 'Red Dawn'. The first movie to bear the PG-13 rating in the US, 'Red Dawn' was once declared the most violent movie ever by the Guinness Book of World Record.However, watching it now makes you really wonder what all the hype was about. Is it violent? Yes, but not nearly as much as many of the movies that have been released in the 30-odd years since 'Red Dawn' hit the silver screen.

Keep in mind, the 'Rambo' series had only just begun two years ago and was yet to really get into form. And even in its year of release, 'Red Dawn' only holds the distinction of having been the first PG-13 movies because 'Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom' and 'Gremlins' had both been criticized for the level of violence they featured despite having a PG rating.

So in other words, it's not so much that 'Red Dawn' was so violent they had to invent a rating category for it, it's just that it was the first to come out after the change had already been made. It was still the most violent film of its time in terms of kill count (2.23 acts of violence per minute) but we now live in a time where movies have turned violence into an artform and sadly, beyond the violence, there's really not much to the movie.

'Red Dawn' is basically 'The Red Scare: The Cinematic Version'. The movie begins with the invasion of a town in Colorado by Soviet and Cuban troops and revolves around a bunch of teenagers (played by soon-to-be iconic actors like Patrick Swayze and Charlie Sheen) who begin waging guerilla warfare against the invaders.

If you knock your sense of disbelief out and leave it tied up in the attic before watching this film, you might still enjoy it. But it's so riddled with issues that it's hard to believe that this movie is something of a cult classic, to the point where the military operation that took out Saddam Hussein was called Operation Red Dawn and a remake of the movie was released in 2012.

'Red Dawn' feels like a strange combination of your grandfather's ravings about "the dirty commies" and your weird internet troll cousin's social media posts about the importance of guns and arming ourselves ahead of some phantom invasion or the other.To begin with, the movie's premise hardly holds up.

When the film begins, it is revealed that in this "near-future", NATO has broken up and Mexico is now a communist state. Yet none of that explains why the Soviets and the Cubans would pick Colorado of all places to launch their invasion.It's not a particularly well-written movie in any other aspect either. The plot seems hastily thrown together and the concept of character development doesn't seem to have been considered at any stage in the production process.

The only thing that comes close to explaining the why of the movie is Milius's own political views, which are on the very, very far right. The closest equivalents to his worldview that exist in contemporary politics are the anarcho-capitalist movements that deride both left-wing ideology and the state in equal measure.We see that distrust of the state in 'Red Dawn'. And a nice dose of hatred for "those damn dirty commies", of course.

Ultimately, the movie does have its audience today. Granted, that audience consists mostly of alt-rightists, gun nuts, and the kind of people who watch films solely for the gore, but it is an audience nonetheless. If you do hold the aforementioned political leanings, you might enjoy 'Red Dawn'. If you're just a gore fan looking for some vintage violence, you might enjoy it a little less. And if you're literally anyone else, the only reason to watch this movie is in film school or because you've been asked to review it.

'Red Dawn' was released on August 10, 1984.

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Gen Z Reviews Classic Movies | 'Red Dawn' is the most violent film of its time but barely worth the trouble no - MEAWW

Dear White People: 10 Best Episodes, According To IMDb – Screen Rant

The controversialNetflixprogram known asDear White Peoplehas truly taken the internet by storm, neatly dividing the field into devoted fans and rabid haters. Although showrunner Justin Simien believes that the negative reactions only serve to rehash the original point of his show, the fact remains that the world is not as egalitarian is a lot of people assume it to be.

RELATED:10 Most Powerful Quotes from Netflix's Dear White People

Each of theepisodes often elaborates on a singlecharacter's perspective, showing audiences the many possible angles that one must consider before delivering judgment. The series is to conclude with its fourth and final season to be released later this year here is a list of the 10 best episodes from the first three, arranged by IMDb score.

When the Student Pep Rally blockade doesn't work out as planned, Gabe tries to check on Samantha, but her absence makes him suspicious. He believes that she had some sort of romantic/sexual encounter with Reggie, who she was allegedly taking care of that night.

Troy declares that a meeting will be organized to discuss the issue, while Gabe and Joelle run around obtaining the backing they need from the different marginalized communities at Winchester. Gabe's standing is left in tatters when it is discovered that he was the one who called the campus police to the party (which left Reggie severely traumatized).

In the second season premiere, Samantha is forced to deal with a troublesome Twitter troll spewing alt-right garbage directed against her account. During her radio program, she refuses to consider Joelle's various (and rather sensible) suggestions, choosing instead to ruminate on the nefarious AltIvyW.

All members of A-P are disconcerted about the school's insistence on fusing them with David House, implying that the management believes in the ridiculous idea of self-segregation.

As the season one finale, this episode does not consider one character's view, but rather ties all the loose ends together into a neat bow. Lionel's piece comes out in The Independent, which forces Troy to acknowledge his father's dominating behavior and he reacts by destroying the glass panes in the front door of Hancock Hall.

Luckily, the campus police don't shoot him for this act, but that could be because Dean Fairbanks manages to arrive at the scene in time. In the end, the two old-pals-turned-bitter-enemies, Sam and Coco, find common ground and return to being tentative friends.

Reggie spends his time healing from his ordeal the previous night (having a cop aim a gun at his face through absolutely no fault of his own). The Black Students' Union has a meeting over the event, pointing out that the campus police have no reason to be carrying around weapons on university grounds.

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Sam rejects Kurt's obviously insincere attempts at smoothing things over and plans to take matters into her own hands. At least Reggie finds some minor solace in narrating his experience via open mic poetry.

Troy and Coco begin a sexual relationship, which he wants to convert into romance, but is firmly rebuffed. He later eavesdrops on Samantha's argument with Dean Fairbanks, learning (to his astonishment) that it was she who invited people to the Blackface party, although she rationalizes her actions as necessary to unravel the deep-seated problems of racism at Winchester.

Lionel tags along with Troy on his "campaign trail" to become the President of the student body. Everything becomes considerably more complicated when Thane Lockwood, a popular jock, dies in an accident.

Coco reminisces about her first year at college, in which she requested that she be moved to Bechet House rather than A-P, but her developing friendship with Sam put her at ease. The pair soon found their own paths, however, with Coco subscribing to a sorority while Sam involved herself with the Black Student Union.

In the present timeline, Coco's endorsement of the Dear Black People party upsets Samantha and Joelle greatly. However, it is Sam who is left shamed when Coco suggests that the Dean didn't punish the former as severely as she would have been if she looked "more black."

This episode takes viewers on Gabe Mitchell's journey, specifically after his falling out withSam (and every POC student on campus). For most of its runtime, the story focuses on their relationship, finally culminating in Sam and Gabe meeting up in her radio booth.

Here, everything that has ever gone wrong is painfully dredged up he is angry about her cheating on him, while she is annoyed that he continues to demand evidence of "racial inequalities." Finally, the pair realize that they still have feelings for each other andthat all their complaints are, in fact, a manifestation of their love.

The world through the eyes of Lionel Higgins is both rose-tinted and filled with terror. The poor introvert finds it tricky to muster up enough courage to take a stand, but at least he's beginning to learn to say no.

RELATED:Dear White People: 5 Characters We'll Miss When the Show Ends (And 5 Who We Won't)

Lionel tells the BSU about the Blackface party, which is then promptly shut down. He goes on to write a front-page story about it for Silvio. He is the first to identify Sam as the culprit behind the party. He tells her that he knows what happened, which is why she accepts the responsibility (and the inevitable punishment)by means of her show.

The series opener introduces the sophisticated dynamics within Winchester without any preamble a radio show host cries foul about a Dear Black People party, but explains her rage by accurately comparing the dangerous stereotypes about Black people with the benign ones that refer to their privileged counterparts.

Unluckily for Sam, her loyalty to activism is questioned by her friends when they find out that she's in a relationship with a "white boy." To set things right, she acknowledges her role in the Blackface party, calling it a "sociological experiment."

The darkest episode in all three seasons by far, Chapter V begins almost innocently, following Reggie's app testing journey (to see if someone is woke or not). Joelle complains about his persistent "cyberstalking" of Sam, but the two end up going to Addison's party after making up.

Here, Addison casually drops the n-word while rapping and Reggie takes serious offense to it. Unfortunately, someone calls the campus cops, and they just ignore Addison's involvement in the argument and demand that Reggie display his student ID. When he refuses, they draw their gun on him.

NEXT:Dear White People: 10 Quotes To Remember From The First Episode

Next Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Main Characters & Their Harry Potter Counterpart

In real life, Ajay disguises himself as an academic, mainly writing textbooks for children who all hate him for making their lives more miserable. He also writes about TV and film, strewing his opinions across the internet to see if people care (they don't).

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Dear White People: 10 Best Episodes, According To IMDb - Screen Rant

The anatomy of a city with a hate problem – Xtra Magazine

Four years ago, Jyssika Russell and two colleagues decided LGBTQ2 youth in Hamilton, Ontario, needed space. About an hours drive from Toronto, Hamilton has a population of nearly 750,000, a thriving arts scene, a large university. But there were no queer community centres. No gay bars. Some local non-profits ran LGBTQ2 programming, but nothing permanent that stood on its own. For a city of this size, we had nothing, Russell says.

Speqtrum is meant to be part of the solution. Russell and her co-founders designed the pilot project to provide active and social workshops for young LGBTQ2 people. Since then, Speqtrums offerings remain much the same. Our whole premise is to create and build community, primarily through activities, she says. The idea is that then that can help you connect and support each other.

But it is among the few offerings in Hamilton.

And that mattersespecially in a city where xenophobic protesters have made a routine out of demonstrating; where a former neo-Nazi leader worked at city hall, openly, for years; and where, in 2018, the most hate crimes were reported in the country.

That hatefulness was demonstrated in full force at Pride 2019 in Hamiltons Gage Park, when a group of protesters with homophobic signs showed up. According to the CBC, they physically clashed with counter-demonstrators who blocked them from the festivities. A number of people in pink masks identifying themselves as anarchists manoeuvered a portable barrier to block them, wrote CBC Hamilton reporter Samantha Craggs. Punching, shoving and hitting broke out between the two groups. Several people were injured.

Hamilton police were in attendance, but many felt they were slow to react. (An independent review of the incident, released in June 2020, found that the response to the violence was inadequate.) Meanwhile, Fred Eisenberger, Hamiltons mayor, and some of the city council came under heavy criticism for not more forcefully denouncing the protestersit took Eisenberger a week to release a formal statement. In the end, five people were charged: one of the homophobic demonstrators, and four of the counter-protesters.

A City of Hamilton spokesperson told Xtra that the city remains in solidarity with the LGBTQ2 community and is committed to being a Hamilton for All, where everyone in the city feels safe and welcome, and that they regret the violence that occurred at last years Pride event. Mayor Eisenberger and Hamilton Police Service Chief Eric Girt apologized for the pain and fear experienced that day by our Two-Spirit and LGBTQ+ communities, their friends and allies.

Hamilton is a city where marginalized communities have for years been trying to make space for themselvesthrough programs like Speqtrum and annual Pride events. But its also a city where hate has festered, particularly in the past few years. And its not alone: Research has found that right-wing extremism is growing worldwide. Thats why Hamiltons queer communitys fight against homophobia and racism isnt just their fightits everyones.

Hate does not emerge or operate in a vacuum, wrote Barbara Perry and Ryan Scrivens in their 2018 research paper on how organized hate groups emerge in Canada. The pair, both researchers of right-wing extremism, found three patterns: a community history and normativity of racism, a political climate of intolerance and a weak law enforcement response.

You can find these patterns in Hamilton. We have a history of hate groups in Hamilton that goes back over 80 years, as well as anti-Black racism within how we tell histories about Hamilton, and that is visible in leadership in Hamilton, across sectors, Ameil Joseph, an associate professor of social work at McMaster University, told CBC Hamilton in 2019.

In 2001, for example, just four days after 9/11, a mosque and a Hindu temple were targeted in acts of arson. Three men were arrested 12 years later, and all pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of mischief.

Theres a history of homophobia and intolerance toward LGBTQ2 people in the city, too. In the early 1990s, then-mayor Bob Morrow refused to declare Gay Pride Day; it would take a human rights tribunal ruling four years later to force him to recognize the day in Hamilton. Morrow, who was first elected in 1982, remains the longest serving mayor in Hamiltons historyhe didnt leave until he lost the 2000 election. (He also came back to serve as an appointed councillor after a city councillor died in 2014.) Even in his final year as mayor, he still did not attend Pride events, according to a local Hamilton Spectator report.

Since then, Hamiltons demographics have shifted significantly. Its become a bit of a joke in Toronto for people, fed up by sky-high housing and living costs, to claim they are going to pick up and move to Hamiltonand some of them are actually doing it. In 2016, a Hamilton Spectator report found that newcomers to the area were just as likely to be migrating from other parts of the province than from another country, and that the largest generational group of people living in the city were millennials. And nearly one in four people in Hamilton under the age of 15 are people of colour. Perry and Scrivens note that when newcomers arrive, they are often seen as scapegoats for all sorts of social ills by a small subset of people who are more likely to become radical.

Weve had a number of people and youth connect with us coming from other places in the [Greater Toronto Area] before they move here, mainly coming here because of cheaper rent, more services and transit options than the suburbs, says Russell. But, anecdotally, she noticed that some older LGBTQ2 people were doing the oppositemoving from Hamilton to Toronto for better access to safety and community.

Though the poverty level has lowered since the mid-90s, it remains high compared to the Ontario average. There are also massive income disparities at the neighbourhood level, according to the Spectator: 11 neighbourhoods in the lower inner city still have poverty rates of more than 30 percent.

Hamilton has a strong tradition of union activism and, at the federal and provincial level, the downtown ridings have been NDP strongholds since at least 2006, while more affluent areas of Ancaster and Dundas have typically voted for the Conservatives or Liberals. Yet, in 2018, Hamilton recorded the highest reports of hate crimes in the countryalmost triple that reported in Toronto, the biggest city in Canada.

It wasnt a surprise, says Michael Abraham, the lead at the SPACE Youth Centre, a drop-in centre for youth that provides programming for LGBTQ2 people. But it was so sad to see.

In 2018, there were 18 incidents of hate bias against the LGBTQ2 community; 58 were because of racial bias and 49 were because of the victims religion. That was a slight decrease in the number of incidents due to bias against sexual orientation from the previous year, when there were 22 incidents.

Hamiltons statistics in 2018 outstrip many other communities. Compared to the citywhich had 17.1 hate crimes per 100,000 peopleOttawa, the third ranked at the time Statistics Canada released the information, had only 9.8.

And Kojo Damptey, the interim executive director of the Hamilton Centre for Civic Inclusion, notes those numbers are also likely underreported. Those communities dont have a good relationship with the police, he says. Then theres the issue of hate crime reporting: For an incident to be officially counted as a hate-motivated crime, it must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt that an actual crime occurred, and that it was motivated by hate. If Im walking downtown and somebody uses a racial slur at me, there is no chance that that person is going to be arrested, says Damptey.

Meanwhile, the tenor of racist, homophobic and transphobic incidents in Hamilton seemed to be getting worse. Weve often had the usual sort of religious person standing up on the hill with a sandwich board [at Pride], says Cole Gately, who was among organizers of Hamiltons 2017 Pride events. But about three years ago, people Gately describes as street preachers came to protest, as well as people he believes may have been affiliated with white supremacist groups.

It was in late 2018 that the Yellow Vest movementa group originating in France, protesting high gas and living costs, but that soon, in parts of Canada, intermingled with alt-right groupsmade its way to city hall. The first recorded protest, in December that year, was against Canada signing the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration, an international agreement on a common approach to international migration.

After that, the protests at city hall became a weekly event, escalating into the confrontation at Pridewhich left many people in vulnerable communities wondering why a public space had become a venue for xenophobia and intolerance. Most of the leaders in our city and politicians said nothing, says Cameron Kroetsch, who is on Hamiltons LGBTQ advisory committee and the Pride board of directors. That has been the status quo, from what I can tell, for a long time in Hamilton. The city did eventually look into whether it could legally bar the group from a public space. A City of Hamilton spokesperson says that the citys corporate security team continues to observe rallies and demonstrations that take place in municipal spaces such as the city hall forecourt, andif there is reasonable evidence to substantiate a complainta trespass notice can be issued. So far, the city has issued two trespass notices related to violence by hate groups.

But more incidents have only increased friction in Hamilton. In 2019, a Vice investigation found Marc Lemire, a former neo-nazi leader, had been working at Hamilton City Hall for years, his name left off most of the citys public facing records. (After this was disclosed, Hamiltons LGBTQ advisory committee asked the city council not to fly the Pride flag at City Hall during Pride; instead, they didnt have a flag raising ceremony.) And Paul Fromm, a known white supremacist, was spotted at the Yellow Vest protests, according to the CBC. Then came the Pride counter-protesters.

The overall situation became scary enough that some community organizers worried they were putting themselves at risk just by holding events. Chris Farias was the host of Drag Queen Storytime in Hamilton, performing as Ladybird Fancypants. After one performance at Carter Park in the fall of 2019, Farias came home to find they had messages from concerned friends after hearing that threats had been made against Ladybird Fancypants and the event. Suddenly, Farias had to weigh performing against the potential of putting children at risk. I was scared that I was drawing hate to [kids], they said. Since then, Farias has only held Drag Queen Storytime online or for private events.

This hate Hamilton is, in some ways, a microcosm of the troubling rise of right-wing extremism in pockets of North America. Perry and Scrivens note that across Western Ontario, Quebec, the lower British Columbia mainland and Alberta, the economic transition and the demographic transitions that have affected [southern Canada] more than [northern Canada] have created a whole raft of anxieties for some elements of society. London, Ontarioonly about an hour-and-half drive from Hamiltonalso had alt-right protests in 2017.Hate speech and hate-promoting activity became so problematic that, in 2017, the City of London announced that the managing director of parks and recreation would be able to refuse or revoke permission for events on city grounds if they believed it promoted hatred or discrimination, writes Eternity Martis in her book They Said This Would Be Fun, a memoir about her experiences with racism while attending university in the city. (Martis is also a senior editor atXtra.) Hate incidents in the city have been so shocking that theyve made national headlines.

Theres evidence that organizers of the Hamilton Yellow Vest protests wanted to spread their movement further afield. According to the Canadian Anti-Hate Network, last year Justin Long, a member of the group, said in a video that its his goal to clear anti-fascists out of Hamilton and then move on to another citymaybe Niagara Falls.

While not all white nationalists are homophobic, the majority of right-wing extremists are virulently anti-LGBT and share an anxiety and fixation on white birth rates, which are just barely keeping pace with racial minorities, writes Julie Compton for NBC News. And according to a 2020 United Nations Security Council Counter Terrorism Committee report, there has been a 320 percent rise in attacks by individuals affiliated with extreme right-wing terrorism in the last five years. This all combines to create a potentially dangerous situation for queer people.

That there are no permanent safe spaces for LGBTQ2 people wasnt always the case in Hamilton. The Well was Hamiltons queer community centre for 10 years. Embassy, one of a small handful of gay bars, was located smack downtown from the mid-1990s. Despite the best efforts of one former mayor, Pride festivities have been marked since the early 90s.

But both The Well and Embassy closed in 2016. There have been some efforts to provide funds for LGBTQ2 communities: The city of Hamilton has a diversity and inclusion facilitator and, in 2018, installed rainbow sidewalks outside of city hall. But according to Joey Coleman, publisher of civic affairs news site The Public Record, there is no direct operational funding dedicated for LGBTQ2 programming aside from the facilitator position. A City of Hamilton spokesperson says that the citys enrichment fund applies an equity, diversity and inclusion lens to our grant process and engagement plans to ensure we are reaching all. This includes grants for Pride Hamilton.

Hamiltons lack of LGBTQ2 spaces is such an issue that while doing research for a survey of Hamiltons queer community, Suzanne Mills, one of the authors of the report and an associate professor at McMaster Universitys school of labour studies, noticed the town halls they were holding were very popular among queer and trans folks. [The attendees] didnt want to participate in the research at all, Mills says. They just wanted to meet people, that they would talk to about how they wanted social spaces and things to do. The study, released in 2019, found that while Two-Spirit and LGBTQ people generally have a strong connection to Hamilton, fewer felt that same connection to the citys queer community.

Mills research has also found that while LGBTQ2 folks generally feel safe in Hamilton, many do not feel safe outside or in places affiliated with religion. Racialized cisgender people and trans people felt less safe comparatively.

Creating space in the city has long been a unique challenge. But Adam George Palios and Steven Hilliard have tackled it headfirsta reversal of sorts on the headlines about hate in Hamilton. Their promo company, Adam and Steve, is one of the biggest organizers of LGBTQ2 events in The Hammer. Last year, they hosted a Pride party in this midst of all the strife. There was not a homophobic protester to be found. Instead, 500 people showed up to celebrate queerness. I remember walking around that night, genuinely in tears, seeing people I hadnt seen in years, who, for the first time in so long, came out to Pride to celebrate, says Hilliard. I think that that is the measure of where a community is going.

Just holding safer space [can] also be very healing, says Palios. Just to know that you can go somewhere and relax with your friends and you dont always have to be on edge. In the absence of a dedicated gay bar, Palios and Hilliard instead work on educating staff at local venues on how to be a safe space for the queer communitywhether thats the club where they bring alumni from RuPauls Drag Race, or the local sports bar where they host Dirty Bingo.

Having space can be crucially important to stopping hate. And having a united front also shows that the community has strength and support from others. Those sort of mechanisms [community centres] are so important for developing broader community support and developing allyship and solidarity, but also in deterring violence, says Barbara Perry.

Mills study of Hamiltons queer community found that there was a sizable minority of people who are leaving the city to access services and community spaces geared for LGBTQ2 peopleand almost all of them would prefer not to leave. Theres just a lot of people who feel lonely and disconnected, Mills says.

While Hamilton lacks something permanent, other organizations have stepped up to support the LGBTQ2 community in the last few years. The AIDS Network provides more generalized non-AIDS related programming, according to Mills study. The Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board hosts Rainbow Prom, a safe space for youth to celebrate. Kaleidoscope is an LGBTQ+ youth circle co-founded by Kiwanis Boys and Girls Clubs of Hamilton and NGen Youth Centre.

In May 2018, The SPACE Youth Centre introduced OQRA, an informal support group for queer and trans Black, Indigenous and racialized youth, after hearing concerns from the community that even what little was for offer in Hamilton was overwhelmingly white. (The Centre also offers Scope, an LGBTQ2 youth circle.) But Michael Abraham says the team is also trying to bring an intersectional lens to everything they do at SPACE. I think having spaces in which you can exist and flourish is a common need that pretty much anyone and everyone has, he says. So when you dont see yourself represented in your community, or the wider city, thats quite a challenge.

Speqtrums Jyssika Russell believes that this kind of organizing work is what can effectively stomp out hate in Hamilton. I think its just a perfect time to really highlight that whats going to stop a hate crisis in Hamilton is investing in community organizations, into mental health supports, into affordable housing and into addictions programs, Russell says. These are the things that will actually alleviate so many of those community issues.

Theres evidence that this kind of support for marginalized and vulnerable communities can push back against far-right radicalization. Perry and Scrivens reported that its often community activists who are able to see where hate is bubbling up and more effectively communicate that to authorities. One police officer in our study suggested that rights activists are crucial to counter-extremism initiatives because they fill in the gaps where police cant go, they wrote. (This, of course, depends on police having a trusting relationship with marginalized communitiesa reality that seems quite distant today.)

But funding remains an issue. Russell is currently fighting to keep Speqtrum going not only during a pandemic, but as the organizations provincial funds are set to run out.

A community hub space, first proposed by councillor Nrinder Nann, has received support from council. Mayor Eisenberger and several staff and councillors even visited Torontos 519 community centre, looking at it as a potential model for a centre in Hamilton. A community hub, however, was not in this years city budget, which passed before the COVID-19 pandemic began. (A city spokesperson said that as the city begins to reopen, this important work will continue.)

But the fight is far from over. I think sometimes people dont realize the amount of stress that this puts on people in our community, says Russell. The hate stuff is happening at the same time as our communities are hurting.

I think its incredible how resilient weve been able to be, she adds. But building these spaces, building community, takes a lot of time and energy and a lot of heart.

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The anatomy of a city with a hate problem - Xtra Magazine

Dear White People: Which Character Are You Based On Your Zodiac? – Screen Rant

In many ways, the message offered by theNetflix Original,Dear White People, has been diluted in the backlash it has received for allegedly performing acts of "reverse-racism." Regardless, the show, currently about to enter its fourth installment, has received critical acclaim for its portrayal of minorities.The playful nature of the story blends seamlessly with the complex, and painful, issues brought up by the series.

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The world within Winchester University exemplifies the need for aBlack Lives Mattermovement, but simultaneously provides its students with safe spaces rarely afforded to people in the real world. In that sense, one might argue that thecharactersaren't entirely aware of the realities that lie beyond their campus protests. In either case, it would be fun to evaluate the Zodiac nature of some of the main roles (different as they all are from each other.)

The senior-most authority figure in all of Winchester, Dean Walter Fairbanks has earned his position with enormous amounts of hard work and persistence. As he keeps telling Troy, he wants nothing more than his son's success (without the accompanying stigma of stereotyping).

Being an Aries, Fairbanks is able to maintain control over the student body as well as Troy's future for a surprisingly long period of time. He clearly doesn't have a lot of patience, though, seeing as he considers Sam's complaints to be unimportant in the larger scheme of things.

Initially shy (read: Extremely introverted), Lionel comes into his own as a journalist for the school magazine, The Independent. Whenever it comes to his reporting, Lionel manifests the Taurus identity of hyperfocused diligence, devoting himself to gathering information about the stories that hefinds noteworthy rather than what his boss, Silvio, wants him to write about.

Lionel is a gentle soul, but when pushed to his limits, he can be quite the firebrand a fact proven when hepublicly accuses Silvio of beingSamantha's alt-right troll nemesis.

Coco had a tough childhood, one thatmade her into the woman she is today. Unfortunately, Coco tries her hardest to distance herself from her past, believing that only this will allow her the space to blossom into greatness, or, "the second black female President," as she calls it.

Nevertheless, Coco is suspended between both versions of herself, as many Gemini are, unable to decide which fork in the road power or comradeship is more suitable for her.

Reggie Green loves to learn, jumping from course to course and excelling in all of them with equal ease. A classic Cancer, his dreams are wider than his ambitions, which can sometimes lead to difficult or conflicting situations.

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One example of this occurs when Reggie instantly falls for Samantha White, even though she has a boyfriend. Another is when he sticks up for the misogynistic abuser, Moses Brown, defending him against allegations from women (simply because they happen to be white).

Joelle Brooks is a Leo: a true force of nature that parallels her best friend, Sam, in terms of activism. She is a bit on thegrouchy side at times, like when she goes off at Reggie for pining over his unrequited (and totally unnecessary) crush.

Joelle has a high level of self-esteem, as well. This is partially why she happens to be one of the smartest kids at Winchester, although shenever gets to outshine Sam and herpassion.

Muffy Tuttle plays the antagonist at first, butting heads with Coco over the smallest of matters. She has a tendency towards being manipulative, a feature inherited from her extremely wealthy background.

However, her Virgo nature shines brightest much later, when she willingly confides in Cocoabout being pressured into having sex with Moses Brown. Muffy is not one to take others' opinions as doctrine, either, like when she tells Joelle that it is the duty for all women to fight together (irrespective of race).

The Libra within Gabe explains his academic brilliance and commitment, seeing as he takes on a series of jobs, including being a Teaching Assistant, in addition to his enormous Master's course load.

While dating Sam, Gabe begins to rid himself of privileged thought processes, considering POC issues with a gentle compassion (excluding, of course, the matter of calling the campus police on Reggie). Gabe is constantly attempting to balance his inner prejudices with doing the right thing, a definitive Libra sign.

Sam White is the protagonist and the most vociferous character in the show, establishing a satirical radio program to "teach" white peoplehow tominimize their various microaggressions.

As a dynamic Scorpio, Sam refuses to let anything hold her back against speaking her mind, regardless of how it could affect her friendships, romances, or scholastic endeavors. At the same time, Sam finds it hard to let go of control, as seen when she insists on hiding her relationship with Gabe, a white man.

Kelsey is not very involved in the sociopolitical drama eternally staged at Winchester, but this doesn't mean she doesn't care about them. The difference here, however, is that her Sagittarianhabits imbue her with sufficient composure not to overreact whenever something goes awry or missing (with the singular exception of her therapy dog, Sorbet).

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Kelsey is honest to the point of shamelessness, which is shown when she basically reads Coco for assuming that she was only now coming out of the closet.

The Capricorn-born are blessed with a burning desire to win at everything in life, something Troy exhibits on a daily basis. One of the most popular (and accomplished) pupils at Winchester, he even plans to become President of the student body in order to further his aspirations.

Sadly, Troy's journey aligns with those of his wealthy white peers. He is regularly at odds with the black students on campus, mainly for his "elitist" bearing and perennial Devil's Advocacy.

The mostenigmatic character is the Narrator, who primarily plays a disembodied voice discussing the major events in the series. He also offers psychological and emotional context for the actions and behaviors of the main cast.

Like the Aquarius, the Narrator is rarely involved in issues directly but rather seeks to maintain historical records. However, he is revealed at the end of season 2 to be a real person (an ex-professor named Dr. Edward Ruskins), who reaches out to Sam and Lionel on behalf of the Order of X.

Rashid displays the major Pisces traits of empathy, generosity, and politeness, all of which hold him in good stead as an exchange student from Kenya. Although he is unable to totally comprehend the discourse of racism in America, Rashid remains a supportive and helpful person, especially to Joelle (whom he has an open liking for).

Rashid can be a bit sassy at times, for instance, when he point-blank tells the Black Caucus that his "ancestors were smart enough not to get captured."

NEXT:Dear White People: 10 Quotes To Remember From The First Episode

Next Every Episode Of The Man In The High Castle Season 1, Ranked According To IMDb

In real life, Ajay disguises himself as an academic, mainly writing textbooks for children who all hate him for making their lives more miserable. He also writes about TV and film, strewing his opinions across the internet to see if people care (they don't).

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Dear White People: Which Character Are You Based On Your Zodiac? - Screen Rant

Election 2020: Conspiracy theory candidates become mainstream by politicizing fear – Palm Beach Post

Q Anon adherents have become more visible and outspoken across Florida over the past few years. Now the plethora of Q candidates have mainstreamed the fringe beliefs.

Reba Sherrill of Palm Beach wants to represent Florida in Congress.

The Republican candidate for the District 21 seat presently held by Democrat Lois Frankel said she supports term limits and calls for health care plans to include dental and eye coverage.

Pretty standard campaign stances for Republican candidates. Then, there are Sherrills more atypical beliefs.

Sherrill also believes that "pedivores" or pedophile cannibals eat babies to get high. And that children as young as six are taught about having sex with animals.

"There are so many things that are actually being taught to our children in the school system, I would categorize it as pure evil," she said on a YouTube video. "They start educating children in kindergarten about bestiality, anal sex and all these different things that children should not be exposed to."

Whoa, thats out there, yes, but Sherrill is not alone among congressional candidates in some of her more eyebrow-raising beliefs.

Elizabeth Felton, also running for Frankels seat, promotes a debunked conspiracy theory that Hillary Clinton ran a child sex-trafficking ring out of a Washington, D.C. pizza parlor.

Two candidates running for the GOP nomination in another Palm Beach County congressional district also espouse seemingly outlandish views. Jessi Melton asserts communists run Broward County and Darlene Swaffar claims the government confiscates children from families who refuse to immunize them.

Meanwhile, four other candidates vying for three other congressional seats across Florida have also advocated wild conspiracy theories. Those include allegations the "American Baseball League" is being taken over by Marxists and the implication that the "C" in the Chick-Fil-A logo is a symbol of sexual deviancy.

Political experts say the 2020 election has brought out candidates who are a standard deviation or two toward the margins of the spectrum.

"Normally, political parties would do things to suppress their fringes," said political strategist Rick Wilson. "Now, they don't have the ability to stop these people from defining themselves as the core of the Republican Party."

In Florida, a common denominator among most of the the conspiracy theorists is they follow Q Anonymous QAnon, or Q, for short.

Among other things, Q adherents posit that a "Deep State" cabal of pedophiles run by political elites, business leaders and Hollywood celebrities are plotting to take over the world. Qs mission? "Enlighten" followers in an attempt to prevent that from happening.

Another commonality: They support President Donald Trump, whom many Q followers point to as the one who will lead believers "from darkness to light."

To be sure, the Q candidates also make mainstream, conservative arguments.

Protecting unborn babies? Check. Cleaning Floridas waterways? Check. Improving education, halting sex trafficking and fiercely defending second amendment rights? Check, check, check.

However, Q candidates often have other beliefs beliefs that not long ago would only have been whispered in private with like-minded individuals. But no more.

One political analyst said the beliefs are heartfelt.

"When they say they believe something, they are not lying," said Joseph Uscinski, Associate Professor of Political Science and specialist in public opinion and mass media at University of Miami. "Generally these beliefs are sincere, and this is what they think is true."

Certainly, the QAnon crowd has become more visible and outspoken across Florida over the past few years.

At some of President Trumps rallies, they stand out by wearing t-shirts or holding signs with codes identifying themselves as believers. On the internet, they use symbols like triangles, owls and lightning bolts; and hashtags like #GreatAwakening, #Q, #QAnon, #QAnonTruth, #OutOfTheShadows, #FallCabal and #WWG1WGA "Where we go one, we go all."

They have appeared at local government hearings, too. At a June 23 Palm Beach County Commission meeting to discuss mandating face masks, conspiracy theorists were front and center, ranting about the devil, the "Deep State," pedophiles and 5G technology.

From political fringe to mainstream

Experts say the proliferation of conspiracy candidates this election cycle is unsurprising, particularly in blue states.

"Youve got districts and states that tend to be strongly Democrat or Republican, and you are more likely to see them come up particularly in places that are solidly blue," said Mark Fenster, law professor at the University of Florida. "Places where the Republican Party is fairly small, out of power, and very intensely motivated to believe the worst of the other side."

No longer on the political fringe, candidates espousing conspiracy theories have drawn support and raised money.

Case-in-point: Sherrills opponent Laura Loomer, is arguably the highest-profile conspiracy theory candidate in Palm Beach County. Loomer, who denies any association with QAnon, has raised a stunning $1 million, much of it in large donations.

"Big donors tend to give money to candidates that they believe are going to win, no matter their views," said John Krosnick, professor of political science at Stanford University. "Then they will own them."

Another candidate that has embraced conspiracy theories about communism, Melton, has raised over $156,000, including 22 donations from WinRed, a GOP fundraising platform created by Trump, Jared Kushner and Republican congressional leaders, among others.

Melton has also snagged high-profile endorsements from Kentucky GOP U.S. Sen. Rand Paul and political adviser and Trump insider Roger Stone, who recently had his prison sentence commuted after being convicted of seven felonies. Stone also endorsed Loomer.

Like Loomer, Melton has had her share of troubles with social media. Twitter suspended Melton on several occasions after she posted doctored photos, fake quotes, and medical misinformation.

Down, but far from out, Loomer and Melton found acceptance on Parler an alternative social media site where conspiracy theories run rampant and facts, falsified quotes, doctored videos and misinformation can be shared without fear of censorship.

It is a place where subscribers can learn about how FEMA is planning a mass slaughter of Christians with the use of guillotines. And how Trump saved thousands of kidnapped babies hidden in cages under Central Park and in San Francisco. And how Bill Gates plans to implant microchips in people through the coronavirus vaccine, as well as how those in power plan to confiscate everyones money and turn them into slaves.

While the subject of conspiracy theories runs the gamut from how 5G radiation causes coronavirus to why Dr. Anthony Fauci is behind the "Plandemic," child sex trafficking rings seem to be the conspiracy theory of choice among QAnon followers.

These rings are omnipresent, they say, run by Satan-worshiping demons such as Hillary Clinton, the Obamas, Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson and Oprah Winfrey. One widely shared video accused online furniture retailer Wayfair of being part of a sex trafficking ring.

In July, TikTok joined Twitter in blocking Q-related hashtags and banning thousands of accounts after reports of Q members stalking other subscribers and not adhering to posted guidelines. Days later, Trump threatened to shut TikTok down.

Bipartisan conspiracy politics

Pam Wohlschlegel, committee member of the Republican Executive Committee of Palm Beach County, said the focus on conspiracy theorists in this years primary elections is overplayed. She doubts they will get much traction at the ballot box.

"I would think that most people won't support it," Wohlschlegel said.

Either way, Wohlschlegel said, the Republican Party, like the Democratic Party, does not prohibit anyone from running on its ticket and is not responsible for what individual candidates espouse. Its up to the voters to decide.

"Make intelligent decisions when you vote," she recommended. "The only way to do that is to study the candidates and take every advantage you can to meet them in person."

Wilson, a member of the Lincoln Project that opposes Trump, said the damage to the GOPs brand will be long-lasting.

"Its going to make the Republican Party much less sellable as an entity in suburbs among educated voters and those who are not mentally amenable to the absurdity it represents," he said.

Political affiliation does not dictate ones propensity for believing conspiracy theories, said Uscinski, who has written three books on the subject.

"It's not based on left-right politics," he said. "Its an absolute rejection of left-right politics. QAnon wants to kill the Clintons and Obamas, but they also want to kill the Bushes, Mike Pence, Oprah, Tom Hanks."

He also points out that, in the current election cycle, the right has not been the only side to fall victim to conspiracy theories.

"He ran against his own party and said everything is corrupt," Uscinski said of former presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. "He just sticks with one conspiracy that the 1% control everything. But because Democrats dont have their own version of QAnon, you dont really hear about it that much."

But on a path paved by the highest-ranking government official in the nation, every QAnon candidate in Florida is running on a Republican ticket, save for one Independent. Trump opened the door, Uscinski said, and believers walked through it.

"Trump ran as a Republican, but he didnt run as a traditional Republican or a conservative," he said. "He ran as his own thing, which was against the establishment at large."

QAnon in a nutshell

QAnon is an unorganized faction bound by shared beliefs. Its roots trace back to 18th century Germany, but it did not garner mainstream media attention in the U.S. until the summer of 2018, when QAnon supporters wore distinguishing T-shirts to a Trump rally in Tampa.

There is no identified leader of QAnon, but some followers believe it to be a government insider with access to secret intelligence information. The leader then disseminates to QAnon followers the "truth" that the cabal the secret political operatives who run the country behind the scenes is attempting to hide.

QAnon writings tend to refer to people who should be feared in general terms by referring to them vaguely as "they," "the bad people," or the "Illuminati" powerful players like Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Bill Gates, Beyonc and Jay-Z who are hell-bent on world domination, they say.

Those who have been "redpilled are the enlightened ones. Those "bluepilled" are ignorant deniers of truth who choose darkness over light, ignorance over actuality.

Conspiracy theory culture can take hold, Krosnick said, when people have trouble accepting that a traumatic event can be caused by a lone individual or happenstance.

"You can understand why someone at home would wonder or say, This doesnt pass the smell test of plausibility," he said. "You cant deny JFK was assassinated, but the explanation for many people doesn't feel right."

In the past two decades, the rise of social media, combined with the proliferation of broadcasting, has helped propel conspiracy theorists out of the shadows. It was then cultivated by a president who has propagated doubt in mainstream media and government institutions, Krosnick said.

"The president shows up and says all the news you used to trust is now fake," he said. "The countrys ability to be confident that we have trusted sources to go to to know the truth has disintegrated."

So, in the perceived absence of reliable news sources, people gravitate to "conspiracy" theories to answer their questions, "alternative" facts to calm their fears.

"With a president that has promoted skepticism and is telling the public false information that is then widely discredited, now peoples imaginations are free to roam wherever they want to," Krosnick said.

While Trump and the Republicans do not hold a monopoly on conspiracy theories, those espousing the lion's share of those beliefs this election cycle are almost exclusively Republicans, said Fenster.

Typically, he said, conspiracy theories flow at a faster rate from whichever political party is out of power at the time. That is why widespread conspiracy theories on the right are so unusual this election cycle.

"What is different about today is that we have someone who broadcasts conspiracy theories who is in the White House," Fenster said. "It is now more on the right than on the left. And the alt-right community is defined by a conspiratorial view of how the world works."

Trump has become a master at using conspiracy theories to deflect attention away from issues on which he does not want the public to focus, Fenster said. During a recent week of polling that showed the president losing support nationwide, Trump reached for a doozy that reportedly shocked even his inner circle.

"Like the delay the election tweet," Fenster said of Trump's July 31 tweet suggesting the general election be postponed due to unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud. "Or really bad economic or COVID news. It distracts from that and will change the conversation once again."

So, when a president pushes conspiracy theories and convinces the public that facts are not facts and the mainstream media cannot be trusted, what is a skeptic to believe? Enter the QAnon phenomenon.

"Well see if it's on the fringes or not," Fenster said. "This could be a coming out party within Republican Party for QAnon believers, depending upon how they do in the elections."

Establishment GOP support?

Whether establishment Republicans show up to vote for QAnon candidates remains to be seen, said political analyst Trimmel Gomes. So far, national and state parties have said little, if anything, to denounce QAnon candidates.

"You may have traditional Republicans who may be concerned [about QAnon ideology], but theyve already been drowned out by everything else that's sort of invaded the party," Gomes said. "You are seeing the party just unfurl even further. Its getting so far right that anything goes. And now, QAnon has just latched on and become a melting pot for all the crazies."

Krosnick said that while it may appear the QAnon phenomenon is spreading like wildfire, research shows that is not the case. Social media followers can be artificially inflated and posts of support for conspiracy theories, or anything else for that matter, can be perpetuated by bots.

Uscinski, who has for years conducted regular polling in Florida about conspiracy theories, agrees that the number of QAnon followers is not exploding.

"We put it in a feeling thermometer that goes from 0-100," he said of a June 23 poll in Florida. "Q came out a few points better than Fidel Castro. And Florida hates Castro."

Still, some experts are concerned.

"I worry deeply about how we're going to get out of this mess," Krosnick said. "I dont see a pathway forward to help people regain trust in facts. Its going to take a really extraordinary set of leaders in the country to bring us back under control."

Gomes agreed.

"This phenomenon, unfortunately, has picked up legs," he said. "The test will be the upcoming election. Its worrying that people are losing grips on facts and questioning facts ...They don't trust the media, so you cant go back to them with rational arguments. And I don't know what the solution is to stop it."

@WendyRhodesFL

wrhodes@pbpost.com

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Election 2020: Conspiracy theory candidates become mainstream by politicizing fear - Palm Beach Post