Archive for the ‘Alt-right’ Category

Trump tweets 2020 campaign logo linked to alt-right and …

The similarity was spotted by journalist Dustin Giebel and Twitter user @Rukhnamalives, who collaboratively reported that the lion logo at the end of the video closely resembled a logo that surfaced in 2016 as the symbol of the Lion Guard, thedigital vigilantes who aim to suppress anti-Trump supporters online (the name comes from a Mussolini quote Trump once tweeted: Better to live a day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep.).

The lion logo has also been used by the white nationalist website Vdare, which you can see in this archived tweet from the groups Dutch Twitter account (the account has since been suspended for supporting white supremacy). Vdares website is still up and running, and its content is being circulated among the Trump administration: the Justice Department sent a link to one of the sites anti-Semitic, racist blog posts to immigration judges last week.

According to writer Horace Bloom, who independently published a book comparing Trump to Hitler, the lion logo is known as the Fascist Lion. He writes that the Lion Guard has used this same lion symbol in a seal that is remarkably similar to ones used in Nazi Germany.

All things considered, its a remarkably apt logo for the president, given his long history of supporting white supremacists. It appears the video was produced by aTwitter user called @som3thingwicked, who often makes pro-Trump memes and whose handle appears in the corner of the video. While it may be a fan-produced ad, Trump tweeted the video without any other explanation about its origins. It has been viewed 2.4 million times on Twitter as of Thursday morning.

Trumps 2016 campaign logo was widely mocked for an intertwined T and P (the latter representing Mike Pence) where the T appeared to be penetrating the P. Trump soon pulled the logo.

Fast Company has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment and will update this post if we hear back.

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Trump tweets 2020 campaign logo linked to alt-right and ...

alt-right – Wiktionary

English[edit]Alternative forms[edit]Etymology[edit]

Abbreviation of alternative right, due to it being an alternative to conventional American right-wing and Republican ideologies. The word took its current meaning from a website called 'Alternative Right' created by Richard Spencer and Colin Liddell in 2010, being used only sporadically prior to 2010. The word became prominent in 2015 with the rise of Donald Trump.

alt-right (uncountable)

So a right without a Buckley will probably be smaller, and uglier to boot. I would expect this alt-right to be a lot more vigorously opposed to the civil rights movement than OTL's. It will also be much less relevant, and probably not snag a certain Californian actor. I predict, then, that America, on the whole, looks a bit more like a Western European social democracy, but with a right wing that looks (hmm...thinking...) well, looks almost fascist.

alt-right (comparative more alt-right, superlative most alt-right)

Borrowed from English alt-right.

alt-rightn (uncountable)

alt-right (not comparable)

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alt-right - Wiktionary

The Alt-Right On Campus: What Students Need To Know …

MATTHEW HEIMBACH

Born in 1991, Matthew Heimbach is considered the face of a new generation of white nationalists. He is a regular speaker on the radical-right lecture circuit.

While a history student at Towson University in Maryland, he founded the White Student Union and organized a student night patrol with flashlights and pepper spray to counter what he described as a black crime wave. In 2012, race realist Jared Taylor spoke to the White Student Union at Heimbachs invitation. Taylor is the founder of the white nationalist New Century Foundation.

After Towson graduated in 2013, his White Student Union was folded into the Traditionalist Youth Network, a new white nationalist organization cloaking itself in traditionalism that was founded by Heimbach and his father-in-law, Matthew Parrott. In late 2014, Heimbach assumed a leadership role in the League of the South as the neo-Confederate hate groups training director.

Uninhibited and raw in his rhetoric, Heimbach has suggested that African Americans could find a homeland in the South or areas like Detroit, charitably adding: [W]e dont have to be antagonistic towards them. He has also said that we shouldnt give up California just yet. Because it truly is beautiful in terms of weather, but its full of Mexicans and thats sort of a problem.

MIKE ENOCH

If you can stomach the ugly bigotry, Mike Enochs website, The Right Stuff, is a primer for some of the lingo used by neo-Nazis and the alt-right. From niggertech (mediocre, gaudy objects) to ovenworthy (anything improved by immediate incineration) to the echoes meme (putting triple parentheses around the names of people online suspected of being Jewish), it can be found on The Right Stuff.

Raised in a New Jersey suburb, Enoch, whose real name is Mike Peinovich, produces a podcast, The Daily Shoah, in which he rails against Muslims, establishment conservatives and Jews. The podcast, which has reportedly garnered as many as 100,000 regular listeners, allowed Enoch, who is in his 30s, to be considered one of the most influential purveyors of alt-right propaganda. The online magazine Salon described Enoch as someone who routinely cracked jokes about killing Jewish people and forcibly deporting Muslims and people of African descent.

When anti-fascist activists alleged in January 2017 that his wife was Jewish, The Daily Shoah co-host Bulbasaur tweeted that Enoch belonged in a gas chamber himself. Enoch appeared months later at an alt-right rally in Washington, D.C., as a speaker and railed against the Jews. When you talk about Jewish privilege, which is objectively provable, we can prove it, he said. Whos in control of the Federal Reserve Bank? Whos in control of the media? Whos in control of our foreign policy? Jews. We know that its Jews.

ANDREW ANGLIN

Born in 1984, Andrew Anglin is the founder of the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer, the nations leading extremist website, which aptly takes its name from the gutter Nazi propaganda sheet known asDer Strmer.True to that vintage, Anglin is infamous for the crudity of his language and for mobilizing his online troll army to harass perceived enemies.

Anglin grew up in Ohio and was radicalized after discovering the work of Texas radio show host Alex Jones, one of the most prolific conspiracy theorists in contemporary America.

Created as a news site, the Daily Stormer encourages online trolls and a militia for a coming race war. The website, which has established 31 physical chapters in the United States and more in Canada, has been designated a hate group by the SPLC.

Those who have posted on the website include Dylann Roof, who massacred nine African Americans in Charleston in 2015. Among Anglins favorite trolls is Weev, the pseudonym of Andrew Auernheimer, who has hacked printers on university campuses to unleash a flood of swastikas and white supremacy fliers.

In December 2016, Anglin joined Richard Spencer and Mike Enoch (pseudonym for Mike Peinovich) on a radio show in which they referred to themselves as The First Triumvirate. The move was a bid for unity among three leaders of the fractious alt-right. Following the high-profile doxing of several hosts from The Daily Shoah, one of the alt-rights most popular radio programs, Anglin took to the Daily Stormer to take up for Peinovich after it was alleged that his wife is Jewish.

In 2017, the SPLC, along with its co-counsel, filed suit in federal court against Anglin for orchestrating a harassment campaign that relentlessly terrorized a Jewish woman and her family with anti-Semitic threats and messages. The lawsuit describes how Anglin used the Daily Stormer to publish articles urging his followers to launch a troll storm against the family, which received more than 700 harassing messages.

NATHAN DAMIGO

A 30-year-old former Marine corporal, Nathan Damigo started the group Identity Evropa after reading the work of former KKK chief David Duke while serving five years in prison for armed robbery. His group, whose fliers have appeared at dozens of campuses across the country as part of its #ProjectSiege, is a reimagining of the defunct National Youth Front, the youth arm of the white nationalist American Freedom Party, which Damigo also led. Members must be of European, non-Semitic heritage.

Identity Evropa was founded in March 2016. It hit the ground running just months later over the July Fourth weekend, when supporters posted fliers promoting European identity and solidarity in 17 cities. Addressing a class at Cal State Stanislaus, Damigo called himself an identitarian a reference to a racist European movement and rejected terms like racist and supremacist as anti-white hate speech.

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5 Things You Learn Being Attacked By The Alt-Right …

"Donald Trump's statements this morning are just the latest in a string of incidents where he has used his massive media presence, especially his Twitter account with over 6 million followers, to elevate extremist ideas and individuals. Despite being called out by journalists and organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center, these incidents continue."

For his part, Rick Wilson says: "... probably 50 percent are just assholes on 4chan ... but half of them genuinely believe we're in some sort of white power moment in our history, and race is the single defining characteristic of being an American ... Trump is the white father figure who's going to turn the country into something they want."

4chan

4chan

And what they mostly want is for their enemies -- of whom there are so, so many -- out of social media and away from the public sphere. And their strategy usually works. Said Laila: "... this kind of mass harassment has happened to other women I know, and it's effectively silenced them."

Even supporting victims makes you a target: "... on the really bad days, every time I would retweet a supporter, 10-15 trolls would harass them, and they'd be forced to private their account ... report and block those trolls that are sending harassment ..."

Rick is worried about the effect mobs like this can have on free speech. A dyed-in-the-wool conservative, he's afraid the alt-right could stop new voices from rising up in politics. Is it worth speaking out at all, if you know it's instantly going to net you constant harassment, threats, or worse?

Rick Wilson

The vast majority of people from all walks of life think these folks are terrible. The fact that two of our sources for this article were a Republican political strategist and a female Muslim journalist should highlight that. But as Laila pointed out, knowing the masses are behind you doesn't help if they don't do anything: "In an instance of mass harassment and bullying, it's not really consoling to know that there's a silent majority [supporting you]. Because it's silent ... I really think that silence and apathy is more destructive than the hate comments I received."

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Alt-Right: From 4Chan to the White House: Mike Wendling …

Now more than ever it is imperative to understand the inner workings of the nebulous alt-right, which became a household name as Donald Trump entered the White House. Mike Wendling's meticulous study traces its origins, delves into its language, and dissects its sectarian divides to reveal the true face of a movement seeking to make racism great again. Alt-Right is an urgently needed dose of clarity for anyone hoping to understand the twists and turns of far right politics beyond the Khakis and Tiki torches.

By paying close, critical attention to the alt-rightmost important, doing so long enough to see through its fog of lies, misdirection and trolling[Wendling] has developed a well-rounded understanding of the movement, and created an important guide to one of the most disturbing political developments of our time.

[A] concise survey of the 21st-century far right. . . . The most illuminating insights in the book are Wendlings brief but revealing interviews with various ordinary people who identify as alt-righters. Taken collectively they constitute a somber and pathetic portrait of stunted and self-pitying manhood finding consolation in chauvinism.

Anyone hoping to get a deeper look at the alt-right will find this accessible, enjoyable, and informative.

Wendling writes clearly, bolstering his argument with the words and activities of fringe figures . . . . A thoughtful distillation of research that is sadly relevant to our current political moment.

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Alt-Right: From 4Chan to the White House: Mike Wendling ...