Friday, June 19, 2020

"White On White": Trump and the Surge of the Alt-Right



The Alternative Right, commonly known as the 'alt-right,' is defined as a set of far-right ideologies, groups and individuals whose core belief is that 'white identity' is under attack by multicultural forces using 'political correctness' and 'social justice' to undermine white people and 'their' civilization.”

Southern Poverty Law Center

The term “alt-right” emerged in 2010 and started to gain widespread traction in 2016. White supremacist Richard Spencer, President and Creative Director at the National Policy Institute, a tiny white supremacist organization, coined the term “alternative right” in August 2008 in an article in Taki’s Magazine, a far-right publication.

The term encompasses diverse groups of people, some of whom engage in online trolling as a way to spread inside jokes, hate speech and inspire anger. Some are media personalities and influencers who espouse racist, misogynistic and/or anti-multicultural views. The desire to return to a past when diversity wasn’t embraced and white culture and power was the unquestioned norm is the one belief that unites the alt-right.

Martin Luther King Jr., a fraud and degenerate in his life, has become the symbol and cynosure of White Dispossession and the deconstruction of Occidental civilization. We must overcome!”

– National Policy Institute column, January 2014

Why even discuss the existence of such a far-right ideology? Aren't these people just one more isolated group of kooks with limited influence who must be tolerated in a free-speech democracy? In truth, many feel the white power movement is surging. Evidence shows this significant growth of the alt-right coincides with the election of Donald Trump. Whether he likes it or not, Trump is a hero to the alt-right.

Richard Spencer believes white and black people should live separately and has condoned a "peaceful ethnic cleansing." He has said that the U.S. "belongs" to white people. Not longer after Trump was elected, Spencer led a group of white nationalists in celebrating Trump's victory with a Nazi salute in a moment that was caught on video that went viral.

Alt-right activists applied the “cuckservative” slur to every major Republican primary candidate except Trump, who regularly rails against “political correctness,” Muslims, immigrants, Mexicans, Chinese and others. The activists coined “cuckservative” (a combination of “cuckold” and “conservative”) to castigate Republican politicians who are seen as traitors to their people. They think these so-called cuckservatives are selling out conservatives with their support for globalism and certain liberal ideas. They have also worked hard to affix the alt-right brand to Trump through the use of hashtags and memes.

The alt-right believes in the uselessness of mainstream conservatism. They oppose immigration such as the resettlement of Syrian refugees in America, and they oppose the Black Lives Matter movement. Most tend to blame Jews for the perceived plight of white culture. And, their propaganda campaigns also have been organized around hashtags such as #WhiteGenocide, a reference to the myth that white people are being subjected to an orchestrated eradication campaign.

Immigration is a kind of proxy war—and maybe a last stand—for White Americans, who are undergoing a painful recognition that, unless dramatic action is taken, their grandchildren will live in a country that is alien and hostile.”

-- National Policy Institute column, February 2014


Bernard E. Harcourt, professor of law and political science at Columbia University and the author of The Counterrevolution: How Our Government Went to War Against Its Own Citizens, explains how Trump fuels the Fascist right …

President Trump makes constant use of the language and logic of the 'new right,' a toxic blend of antebellum white supremacy, twentieth-century fascism, European far-right movements of the 1970s, and today’s self-identified 'alt-right.' And his words and deeds have empowered and enabled an upsurge of white nationalists and extremist organizations – from Atomwaffen to the Proud Boys to the Rise Above Movement – that threatens to push the country into violent social conflict. Amplified by social media, this new right rhetoric is inciting unstable men to violence through pipe-bomb mailings and temple shootings. It is crucial for the American people to identify and oppose this radicalization, in order to steer the country back to a steadier path.”

(Bernard E. Harcourt. “How Trump Fuels the Fascist Right.”
New York Review Daily. November 29, 2018.)

Harcounrt explains that when Trump repeatedly accuses a reporter of “racism” for questioning him about his embrace of the term “nationalist,” Trump is deliberately drawing from the toxic well of white supremacist discourse and directly addressing that base.

Also, Trump's use of the term “globalist” is a is a knowing use of an anti-Semitic slur. And, Trump’s self-identification as a “nationalist,” especially in contrast to “globalists” like George Soros, extends a hand to white nationalists across the country. His pointed use of the term “politically correct,” especially in the context of the Muslim ban, speaks directly to followers of far-right figures such as William Lind, author of “What is ‘Political Correctness’?”

George Shaw, an editor at a leading new right publishing house and the editor of A Fair Hearing: The Alt-Right in the Words of Its Members and Leaders (2018) – a collected volume intended to give voice to the self-identified “alt-right” – says the main goal of the American new right is to discuss “the one topic that white conservatives are not allowed to discuss,” namely “race.”

How does Trump respond to allegations he may be enabling racist behavior. This exchange occurred during questioning by Yamiche Alcindor of PBS Newshour, when she asked President Trump whether calling himself a “nationalist” might embolden white nationalists. Here is the exchange:

Alcindor: “On the campaign trail, you called yourself a ‘nationalist.’ Some people saw that as emboldening white nationalists. Now people are also saying…”

Trump: “I don’t know why you say that, that is such a racist question.”

Alcindor: “There are some people who are saying that the Republican Party is now supporting white nationalists because of your rhetoric.”

Trump: “Oh, I don’t believe that, I don’t believe that, I don’t believe that. Why do I have my highest poll numbers ever with African-Americans? Why do I have among the highest poll numbers with African-Americans? That’s such a racist question.”
[Alcindor tries to speak.]

Trump: “Honestly, I know you have it written down and everything. Let me tell you, that is a racist question.”

(Bernard E. Harcourt. “How Trump Fuels the Fascist Right.”
New York Review Daily. November 29, 2018.)

Empowered by President Trump, the new right is being dangerously radicalized. They support such violent means as “physically removing” leftists. The alt-right leadership deliberately encourages and mobilizes extremists, and thus those who pander to their movement help normalize the group as a crucial political constituency.

Richard Spencer, the notorious former leader of the alt-right says …

"Trump did become kind of a messianic figure and it was cool and edgy to like Trump. There’s no question that he was a vehicle for us … There is no question that Charlottesville wouldn't have occurred without Trump. It really was because of his campaign and this new potential for a nationalist candidate who was resonating with the public in a very intense way (May 2019).”

(John Haltiwanger. “CNN faces backlash after interviewing white nationalist Richard Spencer about Trump's racist tweets.” Business Insider. July 17, 2019.)

While many of the key figures and groups associated with the alt-right have turned on Trump, others have not. Former Trump advisor Roger Stone even asked the Proud Boys – a far-right neo-fascist organization that admits only men as members and promotes and engages in political violence – to work as his security detail at a political conference in Oregon in March 2018.

Racism is not a fringe element of the Alt-Right; it’s the movement’s central premise. At the heart of the movement of white identity is hatred – hatred of anything that is not white. Steve Bannon, who refashioned the website of conservative icon Andrew Breitbart into “the platform for the Alt-Right,” has encouraged activists to “turn on the hate” and “burn this bitch down.”

The alt-right rejects American exceptionalism – the notion that America’s unique founding on a idea rather than a people gives it a special character and role in the world. Trump's failure to distance himself from the alt-right speaks to his desire to maintain part of his base no matter their sick, racist beliefs. Trump can never be the architect of unity and equality because he cannot deny his own aversive racism – his personal negative feelings and beliefs about blacks.

The Alternative Right asks conservatives to trade God for racial identity,
liberty for strongman statism, and the unique American idea that 'all men
are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
rights' for a cartoon Nazi frog.”

Michael J. Knowles, author of Reasons to Vote For Democrats


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