Since the election of Donald Trump, liberals and leftists      have been discussing how to best respond to American      conservatisms transformation from a shopworn, Cold War,      anti-government philosophy into something else.    
    To the anarchists and socialists who consider themselves part    of the global antifa movement (an abbreviation for    anti-fascist), the transition currently taking place on the    right is all too familiar. The rise of the alt-right and white    nationalism within the U.S. is something the mainstream left    doesnt take seriously enough, they say, even as many Democrats    compare Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler.  
    If it is actually true that the civic nationalism of Trump and    his top strategist Steve Bannon are helping to lay the    groundwork for a more radical right  intentionally or    otherwise  then their self-described opponents on the left    need to do more than wear safety pins and post Facebook    denunciations of the president they didnt vote for.  
    As Natasha Lennard wrote earlier this year at the Nation,    coming to such a realization is difficult for many on the left.    (Lennard is a former staff writer for Salon.) Despite their    posture of desiring radical change, most are actually    conservative in a certain sense:  
      Liberals cling to institutions: They begged to no avail for      faithless electors, they see evisceration in a friendly      late-night talk-show debate, they put faith in investigations      and justice with regards to Russian interference and business      conflicts of interest. They grasp at hypotheticals about who      could have won, were things not as they in fact are. For      political subjects so tied to the mythos of Reason, it is      liberals who now seem deranged.    
    Instead of merely talking among themselves about opposing    racism, say the antifa activists, leftists need to take direct    action to make being a white nationalist as difficult as    possible. Thats why many antifas have concentrated their    efforts on such tactics as doing targeting the financial means    of support of websites they see as enabling or promoting    fascist views, and even engaging in physical acts of assault    against members of the far right.  
    Only by fighting and destroying fascism can we actually defeat    it, an anonymous members of the website Its Going Down    told Salon via email.  
    The antifas anonymity is one of several superficial    characteristics they share with their bitter rivals on the    alt-right. Another is that they take politics much more soberly    than their less extreme counterparts. For the antifas,    understanding that white nationalists are deadly serious about    instigating a racial holy war is the key to countering them.  
    During the rise of the Nazi regime in Germany, while    anarchists and communists were literally fighting the fascists    in the streets, the liberals and social democrats attempted to    debate the Nazis point for point in the halls of power, the    anonymous activist continued. This did nothing, and also    normalized the positions of the Nazis and also made them into    legitimate positions.  
    The center-leftsdesire for an open society is    itscritical weakness, a Nebraska-based antifa collective    told Salon via email.  
    Liberalism    [has] proven itself unable to prevent the rise of fascism over    and over again, the activists said. By the time liberals are    comfortable with cracking down on fascism, its almost always    too late. Antifa wants to make sure that no roots can take    hold; that every attempt to organize and recruit for the    fascist agenda is physically confronted and shut down.  
    Beyond targeting far-right activists financial means and    showing up to physically confront them at their events, many    antifas have made it their mission to expose the true    identities ofpopular alt-right figures so they cannot    hide their views behind pseudonyms. The Nebraska activists    provided an example of theis tactic last December when they    exposed the identity of     Cooper Ward, a University of Nebraska student who was outed    as the co-host of a popular neo-Nazi podcast. He quit the    program after being identified and has not returned.  
    Building a fanbase as an overt racist has become much easier in    the eyes of some antifa thanks in part to the mainstream media,    several antifa activists told Salon.  
    There    is nothing objective about writing [an] article about    alt-right neo-nazis without including perspectives of their    ideological opposites, argued the Nebraska activists. We have    noticed a marked lack of Antifa views in the mainstream media;    we are denied a voice while they are elevated and made to seem    mainstream.  
    That alleged refusal to allow the antifa voice to be heard    within mainstream journalism pieces about the alt-right is    indicative of a systemic bias on the part of the press, Its    Going Down wrote:  
        The world the Alt-Right wants is not that much different        from the one we live in now, just one where the class,        gender, and racial divisions are more crystallized.      
        Anarchists, who fight for a world where power is        horizontally organized and political power is taken out of        the hands of a centralized State and decentralized into        human communities, where people dont work for wages but        instead human labor is put towards needs and job, and where        industrial production is destroyed in favor of        sustainability  is such a radical vision, and one that        truly seeks to liberate all poor and working-people from        the sinking Titanic that we now currently inhabit, most        journalists dont want to touch it.      
      Antifa activists also take issue with liberals who think that      letting people with racist or anti-Semitic views state them      publicly somehow serves as a method of relieving societal      pressures. Instead, as an anonymous essayist on the anarchist      website CrimeThinc expressed it, such expressions merely      increase the reach and influence of the far right:    
        Fascists are only attempting to express their views        peacefully in order to lay the groundwork for violent        activity. Because fascists require a veneer of social        legitimacy to be able to carry out their program, giving        them a platform to speak opens the door to their being able        to do physical harm to people. Public speech promoting        ideologies of hate, whether or not you consider it violent        on its own, always complements and correlates with violent        actions. By affiliating themselves with movements and        ideologies based on oppression and genocide, fascists show        their intention to carry on these legacies of violence         but only if they can develop a base of support.      
      The antifas brutal approach to politics has earned them no      love from many liberal and leftist quarters. Even Occupy.com      has featured       a highly critical essay of the anonymous activists for      being a a devolution in the philosophy of the left.    
      Radical and even violent action against the far-right      probably does alienate some people, antifas are quick to      admit, but it is also clear that direct street action also      attracts support in ways that political speechifying or angry      letters to the editor simply cannot. It is certainly true      that more extreme supporters of the Black Lives Matter      movement have made many right-wingers more antagonistic      toward advocates of police reform. Its also true that both      the mainstream Democratic and Republican hierarchies were      completely ignoring the issue before fires began burning in      Ferguson and Baltimore.    
      An anonymous essayist writing at IGD late last year explored this point in detail:    
        Liberals and much of the Left claim that confrontational        tactics hurt us more than they help, from breaking windows        to blocking streets. But in reality, each and every time        this plays out in our communities, it is simply not the        case. In fact, confrontation and disruption, in other        words: physically fighting, brings more people in than sign        holding or writing letters to the editor ever did. If        anything, the wet blanket and attempts to control things by        protest managers and liberals kills social movements, not        combative actions which can be disruptive and at times        violent.      
        We see this playing out in every social struggle and        movement. The riots, blockades, and clashes with the police        in Occupy Oakland grew the size and scale of the movement,        and were themselves informed by the Oscar Grant riots and        student occupations of several years prior.      
        The Ferguson Insurrection inspired youth across the country        and led to other uprisings and rebellions which pulled in        tens of thousands. Despite leaders within the Black Lives        Matter movement attempting to endorse the Democrats,        channel the movement back into politics, and reduce it to        simple reforms, the movement continues to evolve and remain        combative and disruptive over a period of several years.       
        Liberals and Leftists claim that confrontational actions        scare away people from getting involved. But we find the        opposite to be true. When people see a struggle is real;        when there is skin in the game, something to fight for, and        people are putting their bodies on the line, they often        come out in droves. It is symbolic and legalistic protest        which is pointless and doesnt work and ends up turning        many people away.      
      By definition, the antifa arguments are both radical and      controversial. The unanswered question is whether liberals,      moderates and others who oppose the radical right can learn      something from the antifas confrontational stance. Or will      the violent tactics advocated by the antifas only worsen      tensions in a divided society and beget more violence?    
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Anti-fascist radicals: Liberals don't realize the serious danger of the alt-right - Salon