BeaverFever Posted July 19, 2023 Report Posted July 19, 2023 'Active club' hate groups are growing in the U.S. — and making themselves seen In this Aug. 12, 2017 file photo, white nationalist demonstrators clash with counter demonstrators at the entrance to Lee Park in Charlottesville, Va. Steve Helber/AP In late May, a group of young, male neo-Nazis converged outside a bookstore in Bozeman, Mont., to protest a drag queen story hour. Later that day, they hit another similar event in Livingston, Mont. The second weekend in June, the groups targeted the Lewis County Pride Festival in Centralia, Wash. A week after that, it was the Wind River Pride event in Lander, Wyo.And the following weekend, they were at Oregon City Pride, not far from Portland, Ore. These men, dressed in tactical gear and masks, were members of so-called "active clubs" — a term that may be relatively new to American audiences. They are a strand of the white nationalist movement that has grown quickly during the last three years and that has recently taken their message of hate into more public view. These decentralized cells emphasize mixed martial arts training to ready their members for violence against their perceived enemies. Stephen Piggott, a researcher with the Western States Center, a national civil rights organization, has closely tracked their evolution in the Pacific Northwest. "They are really focused on a couple of things," said Piggott. "One is centering, organizing and trying to recruit people through combat sports ... but also, preparing for political and racially motivated violence." Those that protested those LGBTQ gatherings in the Pacific Northwest states call themselves the Northwest Nationalist Network; they have been among the most emboldened to bring their activities into the streets. But groups in Arizona, California, Pennsylvania and Tennessee have also been notably active. And recently, two new networks have been announced: The Dixie Alliance, for groups in Southern states, and the Midwest Network. "These clubs are decentralized and they're forming on their own," said Morgan Moon, an investigative researcher at the Anti-Defamation League, which estimates that there are active clubs now in at least 30 states. "We're starting to see [the active club model] pop up in Europe as well as Canada now." European 'hooliganism' for American neo-Nazis Those who have closely tracked the active club scene in the U.S. largely attribute its establishment and growth to a single individual: Robert Rundo. Rundo, a self-professed fascist and white nationalist who frequently traffics in anti-Semitic tropes, has spent much of the last five years on the run from law enforcement. In the spring, he was arrested in Romania, and a court recently ordered that he be extradited to face charges in California for rioting and conspiring to riot at political rallies. "What Rundo did was take a model of European far-right extremism: decentralized, [and] quite honestly, borrowing — if not stealing from — far-right football hooligan subcultures, right down to aesthetics and plopping that down into an American context as something new and innovative," said Michael Colborne, a researcher, investigator and journalist at the investigative journalism website Bellingcat. Colborne's investigations helped to uncover Rundo's whereabouts in Serbia in 2020 and 2021, and then in Bulgaria in 2022. Rundo's alleged criminal activity in the U.S. dates back chiefly to 2017 and 2018, when he ran an active club in Southern California called the Rise Above Movement. Despite that crew's dissolution and his absence from the U.S. during the last several years, Colborne said Rundo has retained a central role in the growth of the active club scene. Rundo sells merchandising online and uses podcasts to instruct others on starting their own crews. Colborne said Rundo's advice to adherents centers on what he calls the "three F's" — fashion, fitness and fighting. "He really saw the power of that aesthetic, that power of bringing young men together into these hyper masculine subcultures where they could train up for physical combat against their their perceived ideological foes," said Colborne. Rundo has also spent his time deepening trans-Atlantic ties with similar-minded hate groups. Colborne said he spotted Rundo at events hosted by ultranationalists in Budapest, Hungary, and Sofia, Bulgaria, in early 2020. These gatherings and connections have reinforced a common goal, said Colborne. "It's not explicitly politically focused," he said. "It's about building ... what they perceive as a far-right countercultural movement to try to mainstream their ideas, their ideologies, their symbols, to make them more ... acceptable in society over time." The neo-Nazi question Active clubs are not the first instance where a decentralized model of crews for young men committed to becoming "white warriors" has been exported from Europe to the U.S. Almost four decades ago, the same happened with the neo-Nazi skinhead scene. In fact, Colborne said in some places, like Canada, active clubs have been established by former members of the white supremacist group Hammerskins. "They are trying to cloak the very same neo-Nazi ideas that their [neo-Nazi skinhead] forbearers had with their jackboots and swastika T-shirts, you know, 10, 20, 30 years ago." Colborne said Rundo's obsession with the aesthetics of active clubs has steered away from that imagery because ultimately, it didn't play well with American audiences. Plus, it could immediately attract law enforcement scrutiny — particularly in Europe. "In countries where there are some pretty open far-right scenes, like Serbia, you cannot display swastikas. You cannot be that obvious. You literally cannot do it in Germany or Austria because it's a crime," said Colborne. "[Rundo] was very familiar with how far-right extremists across Europe had to be more clever and coy with the way that they were try to communicate their ideas, and the way that they would try to spread their ideology." Despite that, groups that have formed in the U.S. have taken their own approach on whether or not to openly embrace neo-Nazism. "Their praise of National Socialist tenets and of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime is very apparent," said Piggott. "If you look at their social media, it's full of pro-Nazi, pro-Hitler rhetoric and and iconography." Law enforcement detains and arrest 31 members of the white nationalist group Patriot Front on suspicion of conspiracy to riot after they were removed from a U-Haul truck near the LGBTQ community's Pride in the Park event in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, last June. Jim Urquhart for NPR At anti-LGBTQ gatherings during the last two months, active clubs in the U.S. have allied with other white nationalist organizations. Among those are Patriot Front, which saw 31 members arrestedand charged with conspiring to riot at a Pride event in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, last summer. Also, White Lives Matter groups have reportedly attended "fight nights" hosted by active clubs in San Diego and in Washington state. But not all far-right groups have welcomed the increased public activity of these crews. A viral video taken near the Oregon City Pride event last month showed Proud Boys, a violent neo-fascist group, beating members of an active club on a sidewalk. In the video, Proud Boys are heard calling the active club members "racists" and Nazis. The fight, which has been attributed to an interpersonal conflict between the groups, has opened up hostilities between the two extremist factions, mostly online. Extremism experts caution that there is little comfort to take from seeing two far-right groups in conflict with each other. In this case, both had shown up in furtherance of the same cause: to intimidate members of the LGBTQ community at a Pride event. And the fact that both were there may signal a common perception that this moment in America, when anti-LGBTQ hostility is heightened, maybe be an opportunity to spread their extreme ideologies. Quote
NYLefty Posted July 19, 2023 Report Posted July 19, 2023 Unlike in pre WW2 Europe these lowlife jerk offs will be beaten down and have their arses handed to them. Americans hate Nazis. Being a Nazi in America is dangerous and could cause bad things to happen to you and your family. Nazis be warned. Quote
NYLefty Posted July 19, 2023 Report Posted July 19, 2023 Beating down Facsist should be every Americans duty. It's a necessity and almost any jury will not hold you accountable ?? Quote
NYLefty Posted July 19, 2023 Report Posted July 19, 2023 Rocks, hand sized hurled by numerous participants from a distance is good therapy for Nazis. Peened in the head with a good peice of NY granite makes Nazi Fascist see the light Quote
West Posted July 20, 2023 Report Posted July 20, 2023 Lol.. leftists in the US are so paranoid and need to take some medication Quote
NYLefty Posted July 20, 2023 Report Posted July 20, 2023 To me there's nothing more comical than a Nazi being peened in the head by a rock thrown by a black man. Love America for that Quote
NYLefty Posted July 20, 2023 Report Posted July 20, 2023 29 minutes ago, Contrarian said: Yes, but are you Judge Dredd? You can make an evaluation on the spot as to whom the nazi is? The nazis might be your friends tomorrow, and your friends might be the nazis today, you don't know, just ask Al Sharpton, he led a mob, killed a Jewish man that had nothing to do with the Orthodox, the man was so smart, he probably hated the Orthodox, yet, he was at the wrong place at the wrong time. Why? Because Al Sharpton had folks like you in the mob, all races were there, angry, at the order of Al Sharpton, I am willing to guess if you were old enough, you would follow him. You have a lot of anger in you, it seems. Nazis are the ones with swastikas printed on their clothing or wearing white robes that spew venomous hate. The ones who have rocks bounced off their heads at rallies and get sucka punched while standing on street corners spewing hate. Is that clear enough for Ya??? Quote
Guest Posted July 20, 2023 Report Posted July 20, 2023 10 hours ago, NYLefty said: Beating down Facsist should be every Americans duty. Isn't a fascist anyone who disagrees with the hard left? Who gets to determine who is a fascist? Or is it like in the Simpsons. Just point and scream "fascist!", and enjoy watching someone who said something you don't like being beaten by a mob of mostly brainless and rage filled people? Quote
NYLefty Posted July 20, 2023 Report Posted July 20, 2023 1 hour ago, Contrarian said: No, I think you allow your mind to follow the mob, you are the type of man if someone knocks on your door and makes you a colonel tomorrow, gives you a uniform, you would dress up and go after folks? McCarthy did that against communists, so it seems, you want to take over the power and have courts against fascists? Would you call them the Bernie courts? I think AOC courts would work better, for marketing purposes. This is you. A real tap dancer Quote
NYLefty Posted July 20, 2023 Report Posted July 20, 2023 Well my litmus test for finding this groups Neo Nazis has once again proved spot on results. Like laying a piece of dog dung on a hot sidewalk. Shitflies just can't resist. A little insult or threat to their Nazism and the the Wack A Mole game begins. They just can't help it. Quote
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