Archive for May, 2017

Alt-right holds torch protest against Confederate monument removal … – Salon

Virginia Republican Corey Stewart has made defending monuments to the Confederacy one of his signature issues in his outsider bid for the governors office in a flagrant bid to court racist voters while pretending he wasnt.

Its a very small turnout election were talking maybe 4 or 5percent of the entire voter base, he told the Washington Post earlier this month. So youve got a certain percentage of the electorate who are going to vote on abortion. Youve got a certain percentage of the electorate who are going to vote on illegal immigration. Andthen theres going to be apercentage who will vote on thehistorical monuments issue. Pretty soon, you add them all up and its a significant portion of people.

But now Stewart has a problem. On Saturday, a group ofracist alt-right activists led by publicity hound Richard Spencer held two protests in the Virginia city of Charlottesville demanding that the mayor cancel plans to remove a statue dedicated to Robert E. Lee, the famous Confederate general.

The nighttime event, which was reminiscent of an old-fashioned Ku Klux Klan cross burning rally according to some of its critics, put Stewart in a bind.

The prolific Twitter user has been unusually silent recently about the issue. Hes kept that silence through Mondayalthough hes promised to make a statement tonight at 7 pm on his Facebook page.

According to WUSA, a Washington-based TV station, Stewart is weighing dropping out of the race entirely.

Political operatives said Stewart must decide whether to disavow Spencer and the rhetoric that emerged at the protest, or embrace it and leave the governors race, the WUSAs Peggy Fox reported earlier today.

Of course, the reality is that racist activists have long been in favor of keeping Confederate monuments up and this has been known to anyone who wanted to pay attention to recent controversies in New Orleans or elsewhere.

Go here to read the rest:
Alt-right holds torch protest against Confederate monument removal ... - Salon

Trans cartoonist’s website hacked and replaced by Nazi imagery by ‘alt-right’ trolls – Gay Star News

Facebook/Sophie LaBelle

Sophie Labelle's website taken down by transphobic trolls

A Canadian trans cartoonist is being forced to go into hiding after her website was hacked and replaced by Nazi imagery.

Sophie LaBelle, who created the Assigned Male cartoon, was known for taking on transphobia and transmisogyny with her well known strip.

But then an orchestrated attack deleted every comic, she was sent thousands of death threats, and her address was published on several forums.

I just want people to be aware this is what you get for being trans on the internet and for reframing transness into something positive and empowering, the cartoonist wrote on Facebook.

Id also like to acknowledge that this attack was mostly planned because of four explicit reasons :

I will keep making my comics, no worries. Folks at Facebook are currently making sure this wont happen again before I can put my page back up. Nothing was lost.

The comics were LaBelles primary source of income, and so far her website remains down. However, her work is still available on her Tumblr.

Warning others in the trans community, a campaigner who spoke on condition of anonymity told Gay Star News:

This attack was dangerous and orchestrated. It was planned centrally, using a range of social media, and in large part out in the open.

We are still identifying posts online from individuals inciting this action, as well as people agreeing to join in. The motive is clear: many on the alt-right hate trans people with a passion, and they would like nothing better than to drive us out of the public gaze altogether.

Many of those participating in this attack are cowards. They are too afraid to identify themselves publcly and are unlikely to follow through on their threats. However, any threat should be taken seriously.

Read this article:
Trans cartoonist's website hacked and replaced by Nazi imagery by 'alt-right' trolls - Gay Star News

Alt-Right Proud Boys on the Suncoast | News | mysuncoast.com – WWSB ABC 7


WWSB ABC 7
Alt-Right Proud Boys on the Suncoast | News | mysuncoast.com
WWSB ABC 7
SARASOTA, Fla. (WWSB)--The alt-right group "Proud Boys" boasts more than 12,500 likes on Facebook and is growing in influence, even appearing at a protest ...

and more »

Read more from the original source:
Alt-Right Proud Boys on the Suncoast | News | mysuncoast.com - WWSB ABC 7

What Can BDS Teach Us About the Culture Wars? – Algemeiner

A protest in support of the BDS movement. Photo: FOA / Facebook.

Many who criticize outrageous forms of behavior on college campuses, from microaggressions to safe spaces, warn (either out of fear or glee) that once students who have been sheltered from challenging ideas and conflict enter the real world, they will quickly discover what its like to encounter an obstacle without Daddy there to intervene.

While I understand where such a sentiment might come from, it fails to note that new moral cultures tend to first take hold in the world of ideas and then work their way out to other parts of society. For once new ways of thinking and acting arise and achieve success, it is only natural that other people will try to replicate behaviors they might have otherwise never considered.

The campus situation is made more complicated by the fact that the evils protesters claim to be fighting against are not imaginary. Racial bigotry and gender stereotyping continue to be prevalent in our society, even if we have placed their most obscene aspects (such as common use of the N word or blaming women for being raped) beyond the pale. Poverty endures, even if millions arent starving in the streets. In fact, who would listen to protesters for a minute if the issues being chanted about didnt resonate with targeted audiences?

May 18, 2017 3:21 pm

But here is where experience dealing with the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel provides important insight into what might be wrong with perceiving todays campus uprisings as simply misguided tactics used in support of noble causes.

Before going further, I need to invoke some philosophy by bringing up that much-maligned 19th-century thinker, Friedrich Nietzsche. Ill let you read about the famous controversies surrounding the man and his work on your own, but for now you should be thinking about what he had to say about guilt as a form of control.

According to his theories, the powerful people of the world were brought under the control of the weak once the former were convinced that use of their power (never mind misuse and abuse) was something evil, for which they should be ashamed. In fact, Nietzsche saw the entire Judeo-Christian moral code as the means whereby the meekdidinherit the earth by convincing the strong that their strength represented sin for which they needed to atone, in particular by putting it into service for those less powerful than they.

Ill get to how those ideas were put to malicious use by others shortly, but for the purposes of this discussion keep in mind that attempts to use guilt to motivate action can only work on those already sensitive to the evils being condemned. To cite an obvious example, if everyone in a society believed it virtuous to denigrate people of other races, then no one would know what youre talking about if you condemned the evils of racism.

So accusations of bigotry or indifference to the suffering of the poor can only work against those who sincerely believe that everyone is susceptible to those evils. But doesnt everybody fall into this category?

The BDS movement provides a powerful counterexample. For, as anyone who has engaged with BDS proponents has seen, the boycotters insist that they are fighting on behalf of human rights, justice, and a wide range of noble causes and beliefs. But even as they vociferously insist others subject themselves to the boycotters own moral judgment, they are equally adamant that similar moral judgment targeting them is inadmissible.

More than that, the very notion that those whom the boycotters claim to represent (and on whose behalf they fight) exemplify the very sins being protested (human rights abuses, racism, sexism, etc.) is ignored or shouted down. In other words, to invoke my previous articles here and here, with the BDS movement we have the strange hybrid of people using the Culture of Victimhood to insist that those living in a Culture of Dignity obey them while ignoring the brutality routinely practiced by a Culture of Honor those boycotters support.

If others are now reading from the BDS playbook, creating a culture of one-way moral judgment where ends justify any means, we may be looking at a contagion not likely to end well.

The best-case scenario is that the current protest culture will turn out to be another moral panic that tends to flare up in this country, but eventually blows over.

A more troubling possibility is that a Culture of Victimhood will take hold beyond the campus driven not by those seeking to fight injustice but by the ruthless (i.e. those most able to suppress their own guilt even as they demand others feel guilty enough to bow down before them).

The threat from such a scenario is two-fold. First would be the degradation of thought and virtue currently taking hold on campuses, a phenomenon those of us who deal with BDS takeovers of institutions like academic associations and mainline churches have seen for years. Even more troubling is the possibility that a backlash will take the form of a new moral culture that, like dark ideologies of the 20thcentury, try to get beyond good and evil by rejecting all moral codes that equate power with sin.

Is there an alternative?

Possibly, but thoughts on that will have to wait until next time, when this series concludes.

Part III of a series. Part I is here, and Part II is here.

Original post:
What Can BDS Teach Us About the Culture Wars? - Algemeiner

Analysis: As culture wars intensify, some white Afrikaners push back – Daily Maverick

To find evidence that deep discontent is brewing in some white Afrikaans quarters in South Africa, you dont have to spend very much time online. On Facebook in particular, pages abound with comment after comment expressing a profound sense that theirs is a community under siege: the victims of a government which has deserted them, a media which doesnt hear them, and a liberal justice system consistently failing to uphold the rights of a conservative worldview.

In the perceived absence of support from any state institutions, such Afrikaners are building increasingly powerful private bodies to lobby for their interests. The most high-profile example of this in the last year was Afriforums January announcement that it had recruited state prosecutor Gerrie Nel to set up a private prosecutions unit to pursue cases that the National Prosecuting Authority declines to prosecute. That Afriforum had the financial power to headhunt a legal star like Nel says much for the commitment of its reported 190,000 private donors.

There have been persistent rumours that the ultimate aim of this unit will be to prosecute President Jacob Zuma. Directly asked whether this was the case at the Cape Town Press Club last week, Nel reportedly replied, Im avoiding [the] question, with a smile.

Finding ways to act parallel to the state to support Afrikaners seems increasingly to be the modus operandi of groups like Afriforum. It was recently reported, for instance, that Afriforum had built a community centre in Vryheid. That would normally be the role of the government but when the government doesnt care about you, you have to do it yourself. n Boer maak n plan, as the old saying goes.

Rural security is being handled along the same lines. In March, Bennie van Zyl, the general manager of the Transvaal Agricultural Union, told the Daily Maverick that when it came to preventing farm attacks, We are now doing it by ourselves.

Van Zyl continued: The closest helping hand you can get is on your own arm. We are creating farm watches, and carrying out training and reconnaissance. We are gathering intelligence by ourselves with our farmworkers. The farming population has its own plans.

That conservative white Afrikaners are able to mobilise effectively via private channels should be evident from the revelation this week that this groups boycott of the Spur restaurant chain has cost Spur millions already. It is a telling reminder: they may no longer be able to flex political muscle through formal structures, but there is still economic muscle to be flexed.

For a snapshot into the sense that this is a community which very much considers itself into siege, papers recently filed at the South Gauteng High Court are illustrative.

In the case heard by that court this week, where an organisation called the Organisasie vir Godsdienstige-Onderrig en Demokrasie (cheekily shortened to OGOD) is taking six Afrikaans government schools to court over their enforced Christian ethos, Afriforum and Solidarity have joined the case as amicus curiae.

Afriforum explains in its heads of argument that it joined the case because it represents a portion of society who is directly affected by the case. The language it uses in its arguments is highly revealing: the threat is one of alienating communities; of strip[ping] religious communities of their freedom to practise religion, not only as individuals but also as a community; of ensuring the total deprivation of [Christian] rights.

For some context, what the applicants are arguing is that schools funded with state money should not be allowed to promote one religion to the exclusion of others, and that religious observances may be held at the school but not be run by the school.

In a recent blog post, OGOD director Hans Pietersen clarified: We have asked for equitable treatment for all religions in school, and for the ending of the religious apartheid that is currently in place at these schools. We want more religions in schools. We have never sought to ban religions.

Nonetheless, Afriforums argument continues: If the state was to buy into the form of neutrality that [OGOD] proposes and elects to expel religious practises from schools, it will in effect elevate the worldview of [OGOD] above that of the respondent schools Those persons who do not conform, would effectively be ostracised from society.

It warns: If religious freedoms are completely washed out of public schools, it would lead to a withdrawal from public schools of a large portion of society who form part of religious communities The more communities withdraw and become isolated from the public sphere, the more unstable and volatile society would become. The result? A foreseeable isolationist movement amongst different religious communities will probably arise.

If that sounds to you like a bit of an over-the-top response to a proposal that state schools host prayer meetings after school rather than within school hours, youre not alone. But the point is that for groups like Afriforum, a much wider principle is at stake: the need to protect the rights and traditions of a community which feels itself ever more pushed to the margins of the state.

We feel like the whole school governance debate is one that conservative organisations keep pushing back on, SECTION27s Faranaaz Veravia told the Daily Maverick on Thursday. Theyve tried this around language, admissions, religion These are debates that have long been settled.

As long as perceived Afrikaner interests are threatened, however, and as long as there is still money to pay lawyers, you can expect the debates to be constantly revisited. Veravia sums it up: Theres a political pushback here. DM

Photo: Afrikaans students take part in a demonstration defending the use of Afrikaans as the language of choose at the University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa, 23 February 2016. EPA/KIM LUDBROOK EPA/KIM LUDBROOK EPA/KIM LUDBROOK

See original here:
Analysis: As culture wars intensify, some white Afrikaners push back - Daily Maverick