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How Militias Became the Private Police for White Supremacists
Retweeted by David Fahrenthold: https://twitter.com/fahrenthold
Read @cjcmichel's story on "How Militias Became Private Police for White Supremacists." I and @jjmacnab are quoted.
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How Militias Became the Private Police for White Supremacists
In the Trump era, armed antigovernment groups have found common cause with Nazis, KKK and other white nationalists.
By CASEY MICHEL August 17, 2017
The bloody weekend in Charlottesville that began with several hundred chanting white supremacists on a torch-lit march will long be remembered for the searing image of a growling muscle car plowing through a defenseless crowd of counter-protesters. ... But there was another moment from the weekend that revealed a potentially more consequential truth about the long-term impact of the Unite the Right rally.
Not long after James Fieldsa white nationalist who had posted an image of Donald Trump as king (1) on his Facebook accountallegedly killed Heather Heyer with his Dodge Challenger, protesters linked arms along one of Charlottesvilles sidewalks. Three feet away, a line of men stood in camo pants and tactical vests, all carrying long rifles. The men were not police, whose job was to prevent violent confrontations but who largely stood to the side during the melee. They were militia-men, who had gathered in Charlottesville to act, as one expert on anti-government extremism said, as a third forceas a peace-keeping buffer, in theory, between far-right agitators and their opponents.
Despite the militias public statements of neutrality, evidence has mounted over the past six months that the militias have gravitated decisively toward one side in the street battles that have played out recently in cities across the country. Indeed, during these first months of Trumps presidency, these loose-knit organizations making up Americas militia movement are losing their anti-government ideological purity as they grow increasingly close with a segment of the right-wing from which many in the recent past had generally kept their distance. Their presence as a private security force for an increasingly public coalition of white nationalist factionsKu Klux Klan followers, neo-Nazis, and alt-right supportershas transformed a movement that has already demonstrated a willingness to threaten violence.
While there is evidence that some of the militia members stepped into the breach to try to keep the peace on Saturday, many critics contend their presence exacerbated tensions and prevented the restoration of order. When asked why police didnt do more to stop the bloodshed, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe pointed to the riflemen strolling the streets. Its easy to criticize, but I can tell you this: 80 percent of the people here had semiautomatic weapons, the governor said. You saw the militia walking down the street. You would have thought they were an army [The militia members] had better equipment than our State Police had. ... How these two powerful strands of the extreme right-wing linked themselves in the first months of the Trump administration explains the durability of his supportand also the potential for further violent conflict across the country.
....
Casey Michel is a writer living in New York, and can be followed on Twitter at @cjcmichel.
In the Trump era, armed antigovernment groups have found common cause with Nazis, KKK and other white nationalists.
By CASEY MICHEL August 17, 2017
The bloody weekend in Charlottesville that began with several hundred chanting white supremacists on a torch-lit march will long be remembered for the searing image of a growling muscle car plowing through a defenseless crowd of counter-protesters. ... But there was another moment from the weekend that revealed a potentially more consequential truth about the long-term impact of the Unite the Right rally.
Not long after James Fieldsa white nationalist who had posted an image of Donald Trump as king (1) on his Facebook accountallegedly killed Heather Heyer with his Dodge Challenger, protesters linked arms along one of Charlottesvilles sidewalks. Three feet away, a line of men stood in camo pants and tactical vests, all carrying long rifles. The men were not police, whose job was to prevent violent confrontations but who largely stood to the side during the melee. They were militia-men, who had gathered in Charlottesville to act, as one expert on anti-government extremism said, as a third forceas a peace-keeping buffer, in theory, between far-right agitators and their opponents.
Despite the militias public statements of neutrality, evidence has mounted over the past six months that the militias have gravitated decisively toward one side in the street battles that have played out recently in cities across the country. Indeed, during these first months of Trumps presidency, these loose-knit organizations making up Americas militia movement are losing their anti-government ideological purity as they grow increasingly close with a segment of the right-wing from which many in the recent past had generally kept their distance. Their presence as a private security force for an increasingly public coalition of white nationalist factionsKu Klux Klan followers, neo-Nazis, and alt-right supportershas transformed a movement that has already demonstrated a willingness to threaten violence.
While there is evidence that some of the militia members stepped into the breach to try to keep the peace on Saturday, many critics contend their presence exacerbated tensions and prevented the restoration of order. When asked why police didnt do more to stop the bloodshed, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe pointed to the riflemen strolling the streets. Its easy to criticize, but I can tell you this: 80 percent of the people here had semiautomatic weapons, the governor said. You saw the militia walking down the street. You would have thought they were an army [The militia members] had better equipment than our State Police had. ... How these two powerful strands of the extreme right-wing linked themselves in the first months of the Trump administration explains the durability of his supportand also the potential for further violent conflict across the country.
....
Casey Michel is a writer living in New York, and can be followed on Twitter at @cjcmichel.
(1)
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The militia movement is not part of the white supremacist movement. It comes from a different part of the far right.
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How Militias Became the Private Police for White Supremacists (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2017
OP
dalton99a
(81,656 posts)1. Kick.
pat_k
(9,313 posts)2. SPLC Hate Map
They appear to be converging in the Northwest. Survivalist, militias, neo-nazi, christian identity... we've got them all.
https://www.splcenter.org/hate-map