Archive for May, 2017

Richard Spencer Makes ‘Alt-Right’ Foray Into Sweden – Forward

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Richard Spencer

The alt-right is expanding to Sweden.

The white nationalist Richard Spencer is partnering with two Swedish groups to makes a new media company, BuzzFeed News reported. It will be like Breitbart but further to the right, one organizer said.

The new company has been dubbed the AltRight Corporation. Spencer will partner with Arktos Media, a Swedish publishing house that prints English-language editions of nationalist titles from a range of countries. The other Swedish partner is Red Ice, popular white nationalist outlet that produces videos and podcasts.

Spencer said he was devoting all of the resources that once went towards his nonprofit National Policy Institute to the project. NPI lost its tax exempt status for failing to file tax returns in March. Spencer told BuzzFeed that Sweden was the perfect fit for an alt-right project like this. In all of Europe, Spencer said, its almost like Sweden is the most alt-right.

Red Ice creator Henrik Palmgren, who serves as the AltRight Corporations media director, said media companies like his own are in an information war against the government in the international press. Its part of the strategic battle, if you will the war of ideas, Palmgren said.

Email Sam Kestenbaum at kestenbaum@forward.com and follow him on Twitter at @skestenbaum

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Richard Spencer Makes 'Alt-Right' Foray Into Sweden - Forward

Opinion: Trump’s Alt-Right Is Preparing For Violence To Defend Fascism – PoliticusUSA

By now it isnt breaking news that Trump or his acolytes in Republican-controlled states are opposed to the Constitution, on myriad levels and regarding many, many topics. One of the Constitutions provisions that has received a lot of Trump and Republican criticism as of late is the peoples right to assemble enshrined in the First Amendment. One ardently believes that if masses of people assembling were cheering and supporting Trumps authoritarian regime, none of the anti-protest bills in Republican states would exist.

Since those assembly prohibitions are not yet in the law, Trumps fascist supporters have taken it upon themselves to arm up and, in a frightening development, formed an alt-right fight club to engage in street violence. It is noteworthy that, as reported by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the young white, pro-Trump men are forming a small army to literally engage in violence against what they call anti-fascists.

This is a telling development when alt-right (Nazi) groups are forming an army to defend fascism. Just two years ago the idea of an anti-fascist movement in democratic American would have been absurd. Now it is a reality and the pro-Trump goons are ready and anxious to engage street fights to support their fascist in the White House.

The announcement of the formation of the Fraternal Order of Alt Knights (FOAK) preceded, by a couple of days, a confrontation in Pikeville, Kentucky between white supremacists and anti-fascist (Antifa) demonstrators. Likely the FOAK army is still being formed up or they would have descended on poor Pikeville and incited a street war. Still, with armed Nazis and angry demonstrators wanting the white supremacists out of town, it was only superb law enforcement planning that prevented what could have been a bloody confrontation.

Approximately 70 representatives of the Traditionalist Workers Party, League of the South, and National Socialist Movement regarded as Americas most-prominent neo-Nazi organization held a rally for white people in or around Pikevilles historic courthouse. The white supremacists were eventually booed out of town by protestors opposing fascism. The Nazis screamed back and forth at anti-fascist demonstrators who were easily kept apart by stellar police planning and execution.

The incident in Kentucky represents an on-going war of words between Trumps alt-right (Nazi) supporters and demonstrators protesting the terrifying rise of fascism. But until the announcement of the FOAK street fighting fraternity, it appeared there would be little more than screaming matches. According to the FOAK founder and another militant arm of the alt-right fascists, screaming is going to give way to real violence.

The alt-right activist responsible for forming FOAK, Kyle Chapman, says his new militant, highly-masculine group will be the tactical defensive arm of the Proud Boys. The Proud Boys are a separate alt-right group that frequents pro-Trump rallies with the express intent of looking to rumble with counter-protesters. The Proud Boys will now have Chapmans fraternal assistance in rumbling with counter-protestors because Chapman boastfully claimed:

Im proud to announce that my newly created Fraternal Order of Alt-Knights will be partnering with Proud Boys; a partnership with the full-approval of Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes. Chapman was also proud to announce that his fraternal order doesnt fear the fight. We are the fight.

McInnes most recently has been a frequent guest on FOX News and a contributor to the overtly racist site VDARE. To get an idea of whether or not McInnes is a racist, he used VDARE to denigrate Muslims and call Asian Americans slopes and riceballs.

SPLC noted that McInnes Proud Boys are considered neo-masculine reactionary. McInnes calls his group a pro-West fraternal organization, while others call it the military arm of the alt-right. Any high-school student remotely familiar with world history would describe the Proud Boys and their tactics as Nazi brownshirts (Sturmabteilung).

Now the Proud Boys are joined by this FOAK, which Chapman describes as a fraternal organization whose emphasis will be on street activism, preparation, defense and confrontation.

We will protect and defend our right wing brethren when the police and government fail to do so. This organization is for those that possess the Warrior Spirit. The weak or timid need not apply.

He also wrote that the time for real action is now because Trump is in the White House. Chapman wrote:

No more keyboard warrior sh*t. No more crying about the state of our country while you do nothing to change it. Its all about action. President Trump has our back for the next 8 years. The timing couldnt be better. Lets do this!

Chapman also boasts that his organization will be its own fraternal order, but still a staunch Proud Boys affiliate chapter with its own bylaws, constitution, rituals and vetting processes. It is yet unclear what the vetting and initiation process entails for the street fighters in FOAK, but if it follows its Proud Boys affiliate, the vetting process will be bizarre indeed.

However, it is the fourth-degree of the initiation and vetting process, brawling with antifascists at public rallies, that should provide a clue that Trump has a veritable street army preparing to put a violent halt to the peoples right to peaceably assemble. Trumps fascist street armies will have to do the heavy lifting until Trump convinces Republicans to devise a means of abolishing that archaic document and its Bill of Rights once and for all; something Trump and his fascist supporters cannot allow to slow their march toward a fascist dictatorship.

1st Amendment, alt-right, anti-fascists, FOAK, Fraternal Order of Alt Knights, Gavin McInnes, Kyle Chapman, nazis, peaceable assembly, Pikeville Kentucky, proud boys, trump, trump fascism

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Opinion: Trump's Alt-Right Is Preparing For Violence To Defend Fascism - PoliticusUSA

Colbert responds to alt-right and LGBT backlash – Sky News

Stephen Colbert has responded to an online backlash from alt-right supporters and LGBT activists on his Late Show.

The US TV show presenter said he "would do it again", after being called "homophobic" and asked to apologise after making an on-air joke about Donald Trump and President Putin engaging in a sexual act.

"So while I would do it again, I would change a few words that were cruder than they needed to be," he said on Wednesday's show, days after the hashtag #FireColbert went viral on Twitter.

"I had a few choice insults for the president. I don't regret that. He, I believe, can take care of himself. I have jokes; he has the launch codes. So, it's a fair fight," he said.

The "insults" were seen as a step too far by Trump supporters and gay activists alike.

"The fact that Colbert can make homophobic statements shows his privilege & systematic oppression of minority groups," said gay activist and Republican Scott Presler.

"Colbert needs to apologise to the American people! Or someone needs to punch his lights out," wrote another user.

At the top of Wednesday's broadcast, Colbert mocked the trending topic, asking: "Still? Am I still the host?"

"I'm still the host!," he added.

"Homophobia for the right cause, with the right targets, is good homophobia, apparently," said journalist Glenn Greenwald.

A website called "Fire Colbert" was created, but many users boycotted the social media movement.

Star Trek veteran and gay rights activist George Takei said: "Now the little right wing mushrooms want to fire Colbert because he made fun of the Troll King. Waaaa! It'll go as well as boycott Hamilton."

"I'm not going to repeat the phrase," Colbert said on Wednesday's show.

"But I just want to say, for the record, life is short, and anyone who expresses their love in their own way, is to me an American hero. I think we can all agree on that," he added.

"I hope even the president and I can agree on that. Nothing else. But, that."

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Colbert responds to alt-right and LGBT backlash - Sky News

Culture wars come to Downingtown – Philly.com – Philly.com

If theres one lesson to be learned from the sidewalk confrontation between a Downingtown Area School District administrator and a teen anti-abortion protester on the sidewalk outside a local high school, its this:

The uncivil war raging in American society right now is taking its toll on all of us, and its victims include our children.

Last week Zachary Ruff, the STEM Academy dean of academics and student life, was put on administrative leave by the Downingtown School District after a heated exchange on April 21 with a pair of protesters, a brother and sister. One of the siblings filmed the exchange and posted it online.

Few have defended Ruffs behavior as documented in the video, though many have commented that they believe he was defending his students. He is, after all, an adult who was talking to two children. His epic rant included the use of profanity, mocking the protesters beliefs, singing loudly, and even apparently dancing. On the other hand, the protesters (who told several media outlets they had come to Downingtown because of a Holocaust symposium at West High School), in filming the episode, clearly hoped to milk any dramatic moments for future use.

In a statement shared with district parents and posted online, outgoing Superintendent Lawrence Mussoline condemned Ruffs outburst in no uncertain terms and announced that the district was beginning an investigation.

Local television stations have featured the debacle, as have anti-abortionmedia outlets eager to draw attention to their cause. Two pro-life teenagers just had a pretty amazingencounter with the forces of tolerance, snarked Fox anchor Tucker Carlson, before airing an interview with the home-schooled videographers.

Many parents and students in the approximately 12, 000-student district have rallied to support Ruff. By midday Tuesday a petition begun last week by STEM students had garnered more than 35,000 signatures (though many signees were from outside the area). Students are reportedly preparing statements in support of Ruff for the school board meeting on May 3.

Dorothy Kirk is a parent at STEM my son graduated from the school last year. Kirk hopes Ruffs longandfavorablehistory with the district will outweigh hisbrief regrettable sidewalk outburst as he tried to help students and parentssafelyexit onto the busy street that runs by the school.

Dr. Ruffs a good man, said Kirk. Hes devoted tohisstudents, well-liked, and well-respected in the community.It wasnt like him to lose his composure. We live in a social media society where individuals are not allowed to make a mistake even once for a few minutes a singular worst moment can be captured on video and forever posted online.

For many, this hideously pitch-perfect cage match undoubtedly confirms their worst stereotypes about the blind zealotry of the religious right, and the intolerance of the secular left.

One doesnt have to watch the entire 18-minute video to be profoundly disheartened about the political and cultural moment in which we find ourselves.

When the teens begin to talk about the holocaust of abortion, Ruff fires back, Theyre cells, adding that STEM is a science-based school. Jesus Christ will set you free from your sins says protester Conner Haines. Its a public school, we dont believe in that here, responds Ruff.

Polls taken by Gallup and others suggest that Americans are closely divided between those who identify between as pro-choice and pro-life, but that most the public remains reluctant to impose their personal views on fellow citizens.

We often dont know what we think. Were conflicted.Life is messy. While some of us may believe sincerely that fetuses are merely clumps of cells, and others are sure that you must repent and believe in Jesus to be saved, a lot of us arent so sure. In a society in which the extremes set a low bar for public discourse, many of us either find our voices drowned out or are forced to man the barricades for positions we secretly doubt we can wholeheartedly endorse.

Ryan Zindel, a senior at STEM, says he has loved the smaller and more collaborative environment at his school, which has been rated the top-ranked school in the state several times. But, he adds, his conservative views arent always welcome in the classroom. A couple of other kids had the same ideas that I did, and some kids chose not to engage at all, he said.

I think people are very divided right now Zindel adds. A lot of it comes from there being no discussion between opposite sides of the political spectrum. Were so divided that there is no consensus.

Hopefully, he says, this controversy will be used as a learning experience, adding, You cant just tell people that their beliefs are wrong.

While some will characterize the episode as one pitting a beloved (though intemperate) administrator against anti-abortion interlopers, I think we need to look deeper to find solutions.

Local educators may need some basic training in how to cope with protests, which have occurred in other school districts around the country without sparking a potentially career-ending crisis. But appropriate behavior isnt just the province of teachers and administrators. Whatever our beliefs,all of us are being challenged tofigure out where we can stand together. Sometimes thats as simple as admitting that we need one another to succeed.

The culture wars,likely to intensifyin this tumultuous political environment, haveerupted in Downingtown. In this conflicted moment, we can only hope that we will find the strength and true tolerance to buildon our heritage and create anewa community story, however broad, that includes us all.

Elizabeth Eisenstadt Evans is a writer in Downingtown.bellettrelliz@gmail.com

Published: May 3, 2017 3:01 AM EDT | Updated: May 3, 2017 10:44 AM EDT

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Culture wars come to Downingtown - Philly.com - Philly.com

Fairness for All: A Call for Culture Peacemakers? – Patheos (blog)

For nearly half a century, American Christians have, to greater and lesser degrees, embraced the role of culture warriors.

As evangelicals began to stake a claim on American culture and politics, they invoked the language of rights while lamenting the purported decline of Christian America. They pushed back against encroaching secularization and federal government overreach as they sought to carve out space to live out their faith in the manner they saw fit. Issues such as abortion, the ERA, school desegregation, school prayer, and media censorship were but a few of the flashpoints in the culture wars.

A short time ago it seemed as if conservative culture warriors were on the brink of defeat. The cultural sea change on gay rights in particular caught many conservatives off-guard. Even their own millennials seemed to be giving up the fight. In 2015, Obergefell v. Hodges seemed to seal the deal, enshrining same-sex marriage as the law of the land. Even the White House joined in the celebration, glowing with the hews of the rainbow to celebrate the achievement of what we always knew in our hearts, in the words of Valerie Jarrett.

But a lot can happen in a couple of years. Reports of the end of the culture wars, it turns out, had been greatly exaggerated.

The election of 2016 put to rest any such notion. Threats to religious freedom motivated many of the 81% of white evangelicals who threw their support behind Trump, and for many, the election emerged as a critical battle in the larger war.

In many ways Obergefell served as a catalyst for this resurgence, inducing panic among conservatives that they were not only losing their hold on American culture, but their very place in it. And on a practical level, it introduced same-sex marriage to red states that were unequipped with sufficient religious exemptions on the books. (With same-sex marriage illegal in those states, there had been no need to craft religious exemptions).

Religious freedom and LGBTQ rights were at loggerheads, it seemed, and the LGBTQ community appeared to have the upper hand, in the courts, and in the court of public opinion. A sense of impending catastrophe was heightened by new assaults on the freedom of religious institutions of higher education to prohibit same-sex relationships among students and staff. The identity and viability of religious institutions appeared to be at stake.

But then Donald Trump won the election. Suddenly, the threat to religious freedom didnt seem so dire. (With Betsy De Vos installed as Secretary of Education, the danger to educational institutions appeared to further subside.)

Indeed, if the rumors prove true, Trump is set to sign a religious freedom executive order today granting expansive religious-freedom exemptions, a move already being characterized by opponents as a license to discriminate against women or LGBT people. With the ACLU and LGBTQ activists gathering their forces, religious freedom and LGBTQ rights are once again pitted against each other in a zero-sum game. But this time its the LGBTQ community on the defensive.

Given the circumstances, it may come as a surprise that the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities (CCCU) is choosing this moment to extend an olive branch of sorts to LGBTQ rights activists.

The CCCU is about to go forward with a legislative initiative called Fairness for All, an effort to secure greater protections for their own religious institutions, while also expanding protections for LGBTQ persons. Essentially, FFA would ensure legal protections for LGBTQ persons in areas of employment, housing, restaurants, financial services, and jury duty, while also expanding religious exemptions in those areas.

The initiative seeks to enhance religious liberty and LGBTQ protections, rather than setting one against the other. In this way it avoids neglecting the concerns of both parties, which distinguishes this initiative from other efforts like the Equality Act, which seeks protections for sexual orientation and gender identity to the Civil Rights act without accompanying religious exemptions, or the First Amendment Defense Act (FADA), which promises broad protections for people or organizations defining marriage as between a man and a woman without addressing LGBTQ rights.

Why would the CCCU move forward with this delicate balancing act when they might well press for more expansive religious liberty protections without tradeoffs at this political moment?

There are pragmatic reasons, to be sure. If the political winds change, religious liberty may once again be under siege. And then theres the matter of public opinion. Highly publicized conflicts over religious liberty and LGBTQ rights can be bad for all involved, stoking hostility against the LGBTQ community in some quarters, and against religious institutions, and individuals, in others. (And, in the case of Indiana and North Carolina, conflict around these issues can take a significant economic toll. Or, in the case of Gordon College, public conflict can end up estranging a religious institution from its surrounding community).

But this is not merely a question of pragmatism. As Shapri LoMaglio, the CCCUs vice president for government and external relations, argued at Calvin Colleges Henry Symposium on Religion and Public Life last week, this is a moral question as well. By putting forward FFA, Christians would be signing off to rights for jobs, for housing, really common grace kind of things. Things that promote human flourishing. This is simply a way for Christians to care for their neighbors wellbeing.

She was joined in this sentiment by Robin Fretwell Wilson, a University of Illinois law professor who helped put together the Utah Compromisea model of collaboration between religious freedom and LGBT activists. Wilson insisted that Christians ought to think about what theyre messaging: If you continue to say LGBT people are not worth of respect, it will look like the face of hate. And by using the courts to push through expansive religious liberty protections without also looking out for the rights of the LGBT community, she warned, we will continue to hurt faith in our society.

This legislation will not please everyone. Many LGBTQ activists would prefer legal protections without broad religious exemptions. Some conservative organizations, such as the Alliance Defending Freedom, think that advocating for LGBTQ protections in any way is imprudent. But Shirley Hoogstra, president of the CCCU, sees it otherwise. The Constitution, she explains, provides an array of rights that sometimes collide. When they do, government steps in to provide lawful exemptions based on constitutional principles. In this way, exemptions serve a cartilage functionprovide flexibility between two opposing rights.

It seems that Christian colleges may be especially well poised to offer a different path forward. As institutions that take faith commitments seriously, that are committed to the idea that a robust religious life can contribute to a rich and diverse citizenry, and they are also communities where LGBTQ students make their home. As institutions of higher education, they are not (arguably) primarily in the business of dictating beliefs. Rather, they are spaces where the exchange of ideas can take place within a religious framework, and within a supportive community.

By backing down from the culture war stance, by giving as well as receiving, Christian colleges may well find themselves better suited to serve their students, the church, and perhaps their country as well.

What might it look like if culture warriorson both sideslooked for opportunities to defuse the culture wars? If they refuse to see battles over rights as necessarily a zero-sum game. If they seek to be peacemakers rather than warriors?

What if Christians see this moment, one in which they may have the upper hand, as a moment not to press their advantage, but rather to put away their swords and look out for the needs of their neighbors? As Mark Galli urged his fellow Christians recently in Christianity Today, If it really comes down to a choice of protecting our liberty or the civil rights of others, a long stream of Christian ethics beginning with Jesus (e.g., Mark 8:34-35) argues we should deny ourselves. Although Galli believes the nation will be stronger if people of faith and not just of Christian faithare free to teach and enact their beliefs in the public square without fear of discrimination or punishment by the government, in the end, this is a question of Christian witness. Perhaps, if asked to bake a cake for a gay wedding, we might offer to bake two (Matt. 5:41).

If the culture wars do come to an end, perhaps it will not be an end marked by one-sided victory or defeat, but rather an end brought about by a truce. A truce that balances the protection of rights with love of neighbor, a commitment to peaceful resolution that seeks to promote human flourishing across cultural, political, and religious difference.

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Fairness for All: A Call for Culture Peacemakers? - Patheos (blog)