Archive for August, 2017

The road to hate: For six young men of the alt-right, Charlottesville is only the beginning – Chicago Tribune

For all that he did in Charlottesville, Virginia, chanting anti-Semitic slogans, carrying a torch through Emancipation Park, he wasn't even aware that the alt-right existed one year ago. It wasn't until Hillary Clinton condemned the movement in a campaign speech last August that he first learned of it, and from there, the radicalization of William Fears, 29, moved quickly.

He heard that one of its spokesmen, Richard Spencer, who coined the name "alt-right," was speaking at Texas A&M University in December, so he drove the two hours to hear him speak. There, he met people who looked like him, people he never would have associated with white nationalism - men wearing suits, not swastikas - and it made him want to be a part of something. Then Fears was going to other rallies across Texas, and local websites were calling him one of "Houston's most outspoken Neo-Nazis," and he was seeing alt-right memes of Adolf Hitler that at first he thought foolish - "people are going to hate us" - but soon learned to enjoy.

"It's probably been about a year," he said, "but my evolution has been faster and faster."

Last weekend's Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, which ended with dozens injured, a woman struck dead by a car, a president again engulfed in scandal and another national bout of soul-searching over race in America, was a collection of virtually every kind of white nationalist the country has ever known. There were members of the Ku Klux Klan, skinheads and neo-Nazis. But it was this group, the group of William Fears, that was not so familiar.

The torch-lit images of Friday night's march through Emancipation Park revealed scores like him: clean-cut, unashamed and young - very young. They almost looked as though they were students of the university they marched through.

Who were they? What in their relatively short lives had so aggrieved them that they felt compelled to drive across the country for a rally? How does this happen?

The answer is complicated and unique to each person, but there are nonetheless similarities, according to lengthy interviews with six young men, aged 21 to 35, who traveled hundreds of miles to Charlottesville to the rally. For these men, it was far from a lark. It was the culmination of something that took months for some, years for others. There were plot points along this trajectory, each emboldening them more and more, until they were on the streets of Charlottesville, ready to unshackle themselves from the anonymity of online avatars and show the world their faces.

- - -

From New Orleans, one man journeyed 965 miles. Another arrived from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania - 247 miles. Another drove all night, more than 20 hours in all, from Austin, Texas - 1,404 miles. One more traveled from Dayton, Ohio - 442 miles.

The road to Charlottesville, 540 miles away from his home in Paoli, Indiana, began decades ago for Matthew Parrott, who at 35 calls himself "the first alt-righter," referring to a small and decentralized movement of extreme conservatives, many of whom profess white-supremacist and anti-Semitic beliefs and seek a whites-only ethno state.

AJ Mast / For The Washington Post

Parrott was socially awkward and had been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome at 15. So his family pooled their money and got him a computer with access to the Internet - a rarity in his neighborhood of mobile homes - which he came to see as his "secret portal in my bedroom." In chat rooms, he developed a taste for intellectual combat, always taking the contrarian side, obsessing over how to dismantle progressive arguments until, as he puts it, he "ended up self-radicalizing."

That radicalization was rooted, he said, in his own feelings of alienation, which intensified when he went to Indiana University and confronted an elite he soon came to disdain. "They made fun of my accent and overbite and they called me white trash and hillbilly," Parrott said. "I was never able to identify with a single person."

He dropped out after his first semester, and his disillusionment festered until, at age 23, he went to the national conference of the Council of Conservative Citizens, a white-nationalist organization based in St. Louis. He considers this moment when comparing what white nationalism once was and what it has become. "I was the youngest one in the room," he said. Old men, "asked me, 'Whose grandson are you?' They were baffled. . . . And now those guys are too frail to understand what's going on."

What was going on: The same alienation and purposelessness that once defined his life had come to characterize that of so many others. An economy capsized, a job market contracted, a student-loan crisis erupted, and feelings of resentment and victimization took hold among some members of Parrott's generation.

"This is not some hypothetical thing," said Parrott, who soon established the white nationalist Traditionalist Youth Network and started recruiting. "This is, 'I'm stuck working at McDonald's where there are no factory jobs and the boomer economy is gone and we have got this humiliating degrading service economy. . . . They feel the ladder has been kicked away from them."

And who was to blame for all of this? Those who joined the alt-right did not view impersonal economic factors or their own failings as culprits.

"In some respects, it's not that different from Islamist extremists," Ryan Lenz of the Southern Poverty Law Center said. A similar set of conditions - disaffected young men, few jobs for them and a radical ideology promising answers - have fueled recruitment for the alt-right movement. These young men, Lenz said, were told "they were sold a raw bill of goods. The government is working against them and doesn't give a s--- about white people, and they were told this during a period when the first African-American president was in the White House."

There came a moment for every young man interviewed when they felt whites, and particularly white men, had become subject to discrimination, a perception that formed the foundation of their new identities.

Peyton Oubre, 21, of Metairie, Louisiana, perceived it after graduating from high school when he was looking for a job. "Where I live, go to any McDonalds or Walmart, and most of the employees are black," said Oubre, who is unemployed. "And I could put in 500 applications and receive one call. Every time I walked into Walmart, there were no white people, and how come they are getting hired and I can't?"

"White privilege," he said. "I'm still waiting on my privilege."

For Tony Hovater, 29, of Dayton, Ohio, it came after he had dropped out of college and was touring with his metal band, for which he played drums, and he passed through the small towns of the Rust Belt and Appalachia. He started thinking that so much of the national narrative focuses on the plight of poor, urban minorities, but here was poverty as desperate as any he had seen, and yet no one was talking about poor whites. "You see how a complete system failed a group of people and didn't take any responsibility for it and has done nothing to help," he said.

For Connor Perrin, 29, of Austin, who grew up upper-middle class, it was during college when he felt campus liberals were ostracizing his fraternity because it was white. "If only people would stop attacking us," he said."I can't say anything just because I'm white. I can't talk about race, and I can't talk about the Jews because I'll be called an anti-Semite, and I can't say I want to date my own race."

For Eric Starr, 31, of Harrisburg, Pa., who has been convicted of disorderly conduct for fighting and possession with intent to manufacture or deliver, it was growing up white in a poor black neighborhood. "I got bullied and I got made fun of and I got beat up," he said. "Cracker, whitey, white boy."

And for William Fears, who has been convicted of criminal trespass, aggravated kidnapping and possession of a controlled substance, it happened while he was incarcerated. "I don't think any race experiences racism in the modern world the way that white people do in a jail," he said. "In jail, whites come last."

From these disparate geographies, social classes and upbringings - rich and poor, rural and urban, educated and not - they converged on a single place last weekend, Charlottesville, with a shared belief that they, white men, are the true victims of today's America.

- - -

"I wanted to be in the fight," Perrin said.

"I need to be more aggressive," Parrot said.

"We never fight for anything," Fears said.

The violence that they would mete out and receive on the streets of the picturesque college town was the most pivotal moment to date in the evolution of the alt-right movement, the men interviewed believe. The alt-right has always been a diffuse movement, but it has also been intensely communal. People make and share memes that glorify President Trump and make jokes of Hitler and the Holocaust. They discuss events on 4chan, Reddit and Discord. They get to know one another despite a distance of hundreds of miles. They learned not to fear being called a racist or a Nazi, and in fact, some found those descriptions liberating, even "addicting," as Parrott described it.

But Charlottesville represented an opportunity to further transcend what they called confining social taboos. Many came prepared for violence, like Fears, who was wearing a blue business suit, a helmet, gas mask and goggles. He rode a van with a group of other alt-right members, and described it as "being transported into a war zone." Bottles burst against the van's windows, he recalled. People hit the van. It stopped before Emancipation Park, and everyone started yelling to get out as quickly as possible. Gripping a flag like a weapon, Fears strode to the front and melted into the melee. He threw punches. He took punches. He felt disgust. "Someone hit me in the head with a stick," he said, "and it split my goggles off."

"Little savages," Starr said of the counterprotesters.

"Subhuman," Perrin said.

Neither the day's events leading to the car crash that killed Heather Heyer and injured 19 others in Charlottesville, nor the condemnation from politicians and people across the country that followed, has persuaded those interviewed that their beliefs are wrong. For some, it only confirmed their sense of victimhood. They felt silenced and censored, deprived of their rights. They felt as if the death of Heyer had changed everything, and that uncontrollable forces had been unleashed.

"It was like a war, and some people died, and it was an eerie feeling," Fears said. "Things are life and death now, and if you're involved in this movement, you have to be willing to die for it now, and that was the first time that had happened."

Soon after the rally, Fears started the long trip home to Houston, where he is a construction worker. He talked to his family, who "pretty much agree with me." He tried to calm down his little brother, who was "shaken up by it." He thought about what would happen if he died. "If I'm killed, that's fine," he said. "Maybe I'll be a martyr or something, or remembered."

He knows there will be another Black Lives Matter event soon, and he has plans to go. "I'll take a megaphone and see what they have to say," he said. "I would like there not to be more violence. . . . But it might be inevitable, so let's get this out of the way. If there is going to be a violent race war, maybe we should do it, maybe we should escalate it."

The Washington Post's Alice Crites contributed to this report.

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The road to hate: For six young men of the alt-right, Charlottesville is only the beginning - Chicago Tribune

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George Eads tells why he chose MacGyver after CSI – News.com.au – NEWS.com.au

Take a look at the brand new revamped series of 'MacGuyver'. Courtesy: CBS

George Eads stars in MacGyver after years in CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.

GEORGE Eads has fallen on his feet. The former CSI: Crime Scene Investigation star found a new television role shortly after quitting the long-running crime drama in 2014.

The 50-year-old Texan, who played Nick Stokes, was the only original cast member left on the show after the departures of William Petersen, Gary Dourdan, Marg Helgenberger and Paul Guilfoyle.

Many stars fade into obscurity after leaving a hit show but Eads has bounced back as Jack Dalton in the reboot of MacGyver.

George Eads and Lucas Till in the remake of MacGyver. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

Dalton, a former Delta Force soldier, is the brawn behind intelligence operative Angus Mac MacGyver (Lucas Till) who uses his brains, paperclips and a Swiss Army knife to outwit baddies.

And the way Eads tells it he is having a blast.

They called me and the name alone had me running as fast as I could to get over there (to sign on), Eads says.

George Eads was one of the original cast members of "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" (l-r) actor Marg Helgenberger with Chandra West, William Petersen, George Eads, Gary Dourdan and Paul Guilfoyle May 2001.Source:News Limited

I was familiar with the original program (with Richard Dean Anderson as MacGyver) and always thought it was an idea that would stand the test of time.

You hear of a lot of reboots that dont blow your skirt up but when I heard of this one I knew it wasnt going to be boring.

I saw all the action and I saw that I was going to play an ex-military kind of junkyard dog, which was such a departure (from Stokes on CSI) so I was in.

Richard Dean Anderson in the original version of MacGyver. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

After an abortive pilot episode, Peter Lenkov, one of the people behind the successful Hawaii Five-O reboot with Aussie Alex OLoughlin, was brought in to get things back on track.

Aussie producer director James Wan (Furious 7, The Conjuring) is also part of the team overseeing Eads show.

Lucas Till in a scene from MacGyver Photo: CBS Broadcasting. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

A bromance quickly developed between Eads and Till despite the age difference. Till has just turned 27.

I never saw the original MacGyver running like this guy (Till) runs, Eads says. Hes like a deer it is amazing.

Theres a lot of action on this show and I think his (Tills) stuntman is the highest paid stuntman that doesnt do much because he (Till) wont let him.

When you have a star thats enthusiastic about all the action, it really helps. He doesnt want to stand there. He wants to do it. It inspires me.

MacGyver, Monday, 7.30pm, One.

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George Eads tells why he chose MacGyver after CSI - News.com.au - NEWS.com.au

Ann Coulter: ‘The media is running the staffing at the White House now’ – Washington Examiner

President Trump is allowing his "little tiny ego" to get in the way of White House staffing decisions, according to conservative commentator Ann Coulter.

"I'm ticked off at the Emperor God," Coulter told the Daily Beast, referring to Trump.

After White House strategist Steve Bannon's firing Friday, Coulter is warning Trump that he now must show "he didn't get the good ideas from Bannon" by putting the "pedal-to-the-metal on deportations, the wall, that tax hike on people who make more than $5 million a year."

Coulter, who has mostly been a staunch supporter of Trump's, also dinged the president for being "obsessed" over people giving Bannon credit for the 2016 election victory.

"Every time he's asked about Bannon, the Emperor God goes, He didn't win it for me! He only came in August! I already wrapped up the nomination!' You don't have to be a very sensitive person capable of reading body language to understand that Trump is obsessed by that. It's driven him crazy," she said.

"We all know that [Jared] Kushner is the one who won the White House for him," Coulter added, also giving credit to interim communications director Hope Hicks and former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski for Trump's political success.

Coulter suggested that the media manipulated Trump into firing Bannon by putting the former chief strategist on the covers of magazines and by the way he was portrayed on "Saturday Night Live."

"All you have to do with whatever White House staffer the media would like to get fired just put him on the cover of a magazine and call him President Whatever the Guy's Last Name Is.' It's not good to show the media that you are so easily manipulable The media is running the staffing at the White House now," Coulter said.

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Ann Coulter: 'The media is running the staffing at the White House now' - Washington Examiner

Ann Coulter applauds Trump on Charlottesville: ‘We got our leader back!’ – The Hill

Conservative commentator Ann Coulter praised President Trump'scomments at a press conference on Tuesday, saying "we got our leader back" after Trumpsaidthere was "blame on both sides" forviolence in Charlottesville, Va., over the weekend.

Coulter tweeted a video of Trump's remarks at the Trump Tower press conference held on Tuesday, comparing Trump to the biblical military leader, judge and prophet Gideon.

"We were Gideon's army without Gideon. Today, we got our leader back!@realDonaldTrumppress conference," Coulter tweeted.

She shared another clip as well, captioning it, "includes fun part at the end where [Trump] brags about his winery in Charlottesville."

We were Gideon's army without Gideon. Today, we got our leader back! @realDonaldTrump press conference: https://t.co/NiR2kwJkjT

Better video! Includes fun part at the end where @realDonaldTrump brags about his winery in Charlottesville - https://t.co/AAEzI5ym9h

During his Tuesday press briefing, Trump appeared to defend white supremacistand neo-Nazi groups protesting the removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee in Charlottesville.

"George Washington was a slave owner. Was George Washington a slave owner? So, will George Washington now lose his status?" Trump said Tuesday. "Are we going to take down ... statues to George Washington?"

Trump made the remark in a heated news conference, in which he defended himself against bipartisan criticism that he was too slow and equivocal in condemning white supremacistgroups for inciting violence during the Charlottesville protests.

In that press conference, the president sparred with reporters and criticized the "alt-left" for being "very, very violent" in confronting white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups.

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Ann Coulter applauds Trump on Charlottesville: 'We got our leader back!' - The Hill