Posts Tagged ‘Southern Poverty Law Center’

SPLC Intelligence Report: Neo-Nazi Building White Supremacist Compound in Idaho

Friday, November 30th, 2012

More than a decade after the headquarters of the neo-Nazi Aryan Nations was shuttered and demolished, a protege of the group’s late founder is building a new compound in Idaho that is already attracting white supremacists for Ku Klux Klan cross burnings, according to the Winter 2012 issue of the Southern Poverty Law Center‘s Intelligence Report, released today.

Shaun Patrick Winkler, 33, who studied the anti-Semitic Christian Identity religion under Aryan Nations founder Richard Butler, is building the compound not far from the site of the group’s former headquarters, which was a haven for white supremacists from across the country.

Winkler says he plans to allow families affiliated with the Klan or Aryan Nations to build residences on the property. Human rights activists are concerned Idaho may again serve as the epicenter of the white supremacist movement despite legal threats to Winkler’s plans.

“The Aryan Nations compound under Richard Butler was a place where terrorist plots were hatched and racist violence was spawned,” said Mark Potok, senior fellow at the SPLC and editor of the Intelligence Report. “So it’s quite disturbing that one of his acolytes now wants to re-establish that toxic environment.”

Butler’s 20-acre Aryan Nations compound in Kootenai County was auctioned off and its buildings demolished after an SPLC lawsuit resulted in a $6.3 million jury verdict in 2000 against the group, Butler and several members for terrorizing a woman and her son.

Also in this issue of the Intelligence Report:

“Massacre in Wisconsin,” the cover story, traces the path of skinhead Wade Michael Page from a North Carolina Army base that was home to a thriving neo-Nazi underworld in the 1990s to Oak Creek, Wis., where he attacked a Sikh temple and murdered six worshipers last August.

“The ‘Fourth Position’” examines how the American Front, a skinhead group whose leader was murdered last year, is now headed by a man who mixes racism with opposition to capitalism and globalism. In May, members of the group were arrested in Florida for planning acts of violence and preparing for “an inevitable race war.”

“Resurrection” profiles former Arizona sheriff Richard Mack, a hero of the 1990s militia movement. As founder of the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association, Mack has regained prominence on the radical right by spreading an antigovernment “Patriot” ideology to an audience that includes law enforcement officials and Tea Party groups.

“Aryan Brother” features a revelatory interview with John Greschner, a former “commissioner” of America’s most notorious white supremacist prison gang, the Aryan Brotherhood. More than 30 members of the gang’s Texas chapter were recently indicted by federal prosecutors in a racketeering case accusing them of carrying out murders, assaults and other crimes as part of an enterprise dating back to the early 1990s.

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GOP Rep. Appears on White Nationalist Radio Show

Tuesday, September 11th, 2012

A North Carolina Republican congressmanappeared on a notorious white nationalist radio program on Saturday to talk up legislation he coauthored accusing President Barack Obama of committing impeachable offenses. Rep. Walter Jones, a fiercely anti-war congressman who often breaks with his party on key votes, appeared on the Political Cesspool, a Memphis-based program hosted by ardent white nationalists James Edwards and Eddie Miller. The show has been condemned by groups like the Anti-Defamation League and Southern Poverty Law Center for promoting racist, homophobic, and anti-Semitic beliefs. Jones is the first member of Congress to appear on the program.

An avowed white nationalist who says David Duke is “above reproach,” Edwards has referred to African Americans as “heathen savages” and “subhuman” and suggested that slavery was “the greatest thing that ever happened” to blacks. The show’s mission statement is blunt: “We represent a philosophy that is pro-White and are against political centralization,” it declares. It then outlines a series of issues the show exists to promote. “We wish to revive the White birthrate above replacement level fertility and beyond to grow the percentage of Whites in the world relative to other races,” reads one plank. Another bullet point endorses the Confederacy: “Secession is a right of all people and individuals. It was successful in 1776 and this show honors those who tried to make it successful in 1865.”

Edwards’ rhetoric has caught the attention of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which arguesthat he has “probably done more than any of his contemporaries on the American radical right to publicly promote neo-Nazis, Holocaust deniers, raging anti-Semites and other extremists.” As the SPLC notes:

“The Political Cesspool” in the past two years has become the primary radio nexus of hate in America. Its sponsors include the CCC and the Institute for Historical Review, a leading Holocaust denial organization. Its guest roster for 2007 reads like a “Who’s Who” of the radical racist right. CCC leader Gordon Lee Baum, Holocaust denier Mark Weber, Canadian white supremacist Paul Fromm, American Renaissance editor Jared Taylor, neo-Nazi activist April Gaede, anti-Semitic professor Kevin MacDonald, Stormfront webmaster Jamie Kelso and League of the South president Michael Hill have all been favorably interviewed on the “Political Cesspool” this year, along with former Klan leader and neo-Nazi David Duke, the show’s most frequent celebrity racist guest, who has logged three appearances.

Edwards’ bigotry runs the spectrum. As Media Matters has documented, Edwards has alleged that Jews “run Washington, Wall Street, and the news and entertainment media” and that they’re “using pornography as a subversive tool against” Christians. He defended Mississippi voters who say that interracial marriage should be illegal. (He’s called interracial sex “white genocide.”) Jones is hardly the first prominent conservative to call into the Cesspool. Paul Babeu, a prominent anti-immigrant sheriff who was forced to step down as Mitt Romney’s Arizona co-chair after a gay sex scandal, praised the host in a 2010 appearance on the show. Conservative commentator Pat Buchanan has also appeared on the show; Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) had been booked to appear on Edwards’ show but canceled at the last minute, citing a scheduling conflict.

Jones, a shoo-in to win a 10th term in November, is an arch-conservative with an independent streak. An early supporter of the Iraq war—he even went so far as to rename French fries in the House cafeteria “freedom fries”—he had a change of heart (as we explained in a 2006 profile), in large part due to the burden shouldered by families in his eastern North Carolina district, which includes Camp Lejeune. (He supported Paul during the GOP presidential primaries.) Edwards, like Jones, is an avowed proponent of “noninterventionism” who, on his website, calls on the federal government to “stop interfering politically, militarily, and socially outside of the borders of the United States of America.” On the Cesspool, Jones briefly discussed his bill, HR 107, which states that President Obama’s handling of the military intervention in Libya is an impeachable offense.

Jones made a positive impression with his hosts, whom he engaged in friendly banter over the merits of musician Frankie Valli and the musical Jersey Boys“This is your debut appearance and hopefully the first of many to come,” Edwards said.

Multiple calls and emails to Jones’ office on Monday were not returned.

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Hey Anti Whites

Wednesday, August 29th, 2012

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Hey Anti Whites

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The Southern Poverty Law Center is a Defamatory Hate Organization

Friday, August 17th, 2012

One of the beautiful things about America is that we have an unencumbered right to free speech.  Unlike in many European countries where there are strict anti-defamation laws, in America one has the right to say hateful things about another person or group of people (as long as there is no incitement of violence).  Likewise, one has the right to accuse others of engaging in hateful and bigoted activities, irrespective of the veracity of the charge.

Nevertheless, just because we have the right to engage in libel and defamatory name calling, it doesn’t mean it’s the right thing to do.

Yesterday’s shooting at the Family Research Council brings to mind something that has bothered me about self-described civil rights organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center.  For years, the SPLC has ingratiated themselves to the public by evincing an image of a politically neutral organization that serves as the one-stop resource for information on bigoted and violent organizations.  But instead of focusing exclusively on true “hate organizations” like white supremacists and Islamic jihadists, the SPLC has pursued a political agenda in recent years to defame conservative organizations by lumping them in with neo-Nazis and skinheads.

The SPLC has prided itself as the preeminent authority on racism because they have gathered every last morsel of data on neo-Nazi organizations with a membership 3.4 people, most of which have never been heard from.  However, they use their reputation as the authority on white supremacist groups as a front to assail legitimate conservative policy organizations by seamlessly lumping them in with white supremacists and labeling them as hate groups.  They list people like David Horowitz and Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach in the same “hate reports” as white supremacists serving prison time for murder.

In 2010, SPLC labeled the Family Research Council as a hate group and listed them together with no-name neo-Nazi groups on their site.  They did the same for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, a group that simply advocates lower levels of immigration out of fiscal and national security concerns.  When did we get to a point where groups that have a different political agenda from the SPLC are branded as hate groups?

 

The SPLC would have you believe that an organization that doesn’t want their children to be exposed to a homosexual curriculum or opposes open homosexual promiscuity in the military is a hate group.  If you’re concerned about your children being exposed to literature about sex-change operations, you are a racist according to them.  Anyone who opposes their licentious agenda and upholds Judeo-Christian values – the very values upon which this country was founded – is tantamount to a white supremacist.  In their view, FRC is like the Westboro Baptist Church.  It’s surprising that they haven’t yet labeled God a hater or condemned the Bible from the public square.

If I were to stoop to the same intellectual level as the SPLC, I would label them a hate group for equating civil rights to the so-called plight of transgendered individuals.

They fatuously label people as racists simply for taking a different position on a specific piece of legislation.  Do you support the right of states to define marriage as …marriage?  You’re a racist.  Do you believe that the 14th amendment was conceived to protect native-born blacks from disenfranchisement and not the children of illegal aliens?  You are a hater.  Are you concerned about the pervasiveness of pedophilia among homosexuals?  You’re like the KKK.  We’re rapidly approaching the point when support for the Ryan budget will be labeled as bigoted activity.

Unfortunately, their tactic is highly effective.  Most people are conditioned to stay far away from any individual or organization that is even rumored to harbor racist views.  The SPLC effectively projects that bigoted image toward their political enemies so that people will automatically see their accusations the first time they research the organization.  Whatever you think of their politics, you don’t mix in people like Frank Gaffney and David Horowitz with David Duke.  On their website, they list “30 New Activists Heading Up the Radical Right.”  Gaffney is thrown in with Duke and Black Panther leader Malik Zulu Shabazz.  Yup, even though Shabazz largely supports the views of the SPLC, he is labeled as a radical right leader.

Yesterday’s shooting should serve as a watershed event.  While we all agree that Floyd Lee Corkins II is the only one responsible for the attack on FRC, it is clear that the libelous accusations from groups like the SPLC helped fan the flames of derision so that a loose cannon was able to associate this Christian organization with authentically bigoted groups.  The SPLC has the right to disseminate their propaganda at will, but they should understand that tarring a political opponent with the same brush as neo-Nazis is an incendiary exercise of political discourse.

Groups like the SPLC have gotten away with their defamatory McCarthyism for far too long.  It’s time we expose these radical intolerant liberal front groups as the political bottom-feeders that they have always been.

The SPLC purports to “provide educators with free resources that teach school children to reject hate, embrace diversity and respect differences.”

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Associated Press calls white supremacists a ‘white rights group’

Wednesday, August 15th, 2012

The Associated Press has come under scrutiny from liberal blogs after the news organization published an article that referred to the group European American Action Coalition as a “white rights group.”

 

The language was first used by the local Philadelphia newspaper Scranton Times-Tribune, according to Daniel Denvir of City Paper. When Denvir contacted the Associated Press for copy of their story, he was rebuffed.

 

“What possible purpose would there be for me to send you this story when you’re trying to cause trouble for how it was written?” Karen Testa, the East Region Editor at the Associated Press, told Denvir. “That’s a good way to build a journalism career,” she added before hanging up.

 

Crooks and Liars called the language a “frightening demonstration of the mainstreaming of white nationalism” and the article was also criticized by Pam’s House Blend.

 

The European American Action Coalition was founded by Steve Smith, who the Southern Poverty Law Center describes as a “longtime racist activist with a history of violence and top-level ties to numerous white nationalist hate groups.”

 

Smith announced on the white nationalist forum Stormfront that the 3rd Annual European American Heritage Celebration would take place at a park in Moosic, Pennsylvania.

 

But the event was later cancelled after borough officials said Smith lied about where he lived. The borough only allows local residents to use its park for organized events.

 

“I want to personally apologize to everyone that planned to make it to this event,” the group said on Stormfront. “The borough of Moosic has violated our freedom of speech and our right to peacefully assemble – action WILL be taken against the borough for their discriminatory acts against the EAAC.”

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NEW YORK TIMES FALSELY LINKS WHITE SUPREMACIST GROUPS TO TEA PARTY

Friday, August 10th, 2012

And of course, the offending organization was the New York Times.

In a story titled, “Music Style Is Called Supremacist Recruiting Tool,” the Times describes how “white power” music, referred to as “hatecore,” acts like a gateway drug to more extreme white supremacist groups and activities. The Times interviews another journalist and gratuitously prints this journalist’s unfounded opinion (which comes across as reported facts) about the Tea Party in another effort to malign the movement and make it out to be something (racist) that it is demonstrably not:

One reason for the disarray might be the growth of a more mainstream movement, the Tea Party, whose successful forays into electoral politics have siphoned energy and support from violent fringe groups, said Chip Berlet, a Boston-based journalist who writes about right-wing groups.

To the writers at New York Times, it is not conceivable that the “white power” music scene may be diminishing because there are fewer people who share those racist views. Instead, the decline has to be falsely attributed to the rise of the Tea Party.

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Arizona militia support intensifies with bill’s defeat

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

The recent defeat of legislation that would have created a citizens’ border group is driving up support for Arizona militias.

The Arizona Daily Star (http://bit.ly/MRB9JB ) reports the state’s border-militia groups are seeing members becoming more motivated after plans for a state-sanctioned organization were struck down in the Legislature.

Leaders of volunteer patrols along the Arizona-Mexico border said there is an invasion of smugglers and illegal immigrants that needs to be stopped. Supporters say they are giving up on getting assistance from lawmakers.

Jack Foote, a longtime Arizona border-militia leader from Cottonwood, worked with the group that penned the bill.

“We have now washed our hands of our state’s Legislature,” Foote said. “Now we are going to do things our own way.”

The proposed bill would have established a 300-member, armed Arizona Special Missions Unit to guard the border at the governor’s request. A provision in the bill included screening volunteers to weed out violent extremists.

Critics of the bill say a border militia is extremist in nature.

Mark Pitcavage, of the Anti-Defamation League, said extreme behavior is no longer found on the fringes of militia movements.

“Some are explicitly white supremacists,” Pitcavage said. “The others may not be white supremacists but may well be racists.”

Arizona militia groups were recently in the spotlight after Jason Todd “J.T.” Ready, a known neo Nazi and border-militia leader, shot and killed four people before turning the gun on himself. FBI officials were investigating Ready at the time. He had most recently led a group known as the U.S. Border Guard. James Turgal, the FBI special agent in charge who oversees Arizona, said Ready’s shooting of his girlfriend and her family members was “a domestic violence tragedy” unrelated to his political activities.

A regeneration of border-militia movements would contradict an earlier trend reported by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks groups it considers right-wing extremist. The center said earlier this year that the Minuteman border-watch movement that exploded in southern Arizona in the last decade has virtually disappeared. The study concluded the decline was due to its members’ concerns about illegal immigration have been adopted by state lawmakers.

Pat King, a rancher who lives near the border, said she has accepted help in the past from Minuteman groups. King said the group now uses cameras to report illegal activity rather than conduct patrols.

“You have to be very careful of who joins your ranks, that you don’t trash the whole organization,” King said. “Some people can join and have their own agendas. That gets kind of frightening.”

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White supremacists arrested on ‘race war’ charges in Florida

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Law enforcement officials in central Florida have been rounding up members of a white supremacist group who were allegedly training with weapons at a rural Osceola County compound. The training was reportedly in preparation for a coming “race war.”

The group was also planning a “disturbance” at Orlando City Hall to recruit new members, according to court documents.

The arrests of the 10 alleged members of the neo-Nazi skinhead group American Front, or AF, came after a confidential informant infiltrated its Osceola County chapter and shared information about the group’s plans with state investigators.

The arrests serve as one of numerous reminders of the efforts of law enforcement to monitor, and sometimes crack down on, the militia and hate groups whose numbers have ticked up since the election of President Obama.

In Alaska on Monday, a 12-member jury was selected in the trial of three militia members who are accused of planning to kill judges and police, according to the Anchorage Daily News. In Georgia on Tuesday, two militia members who had allegedly planned to attack government workers and buildings attended a pretrial hearing after two of their alleged conspirators agreed to cooperate with federal prosecutors, according to the Associated Press.

Seven of the arrests in Florida occurred over the weekend, with three more suspects arrested Monday, according to court documents and a statement from the office of Lawson Lamar, the state attorney based in Orlando.

Each of the seven, including the apparent ringleader, Marcus Faella, 41, faces state felony charges of attempting to shoot into an occupied dwelling, evidence of prejudice while committing a crime, and violation of a state “paramilitary training” statute. That statute makes it a crime to teach people to use deadly weapons or techniques with the knowledge that they will be “unlawfully employed for use in, or furtherance of a civil disorder in the United States.”

An affidavit in support of the arrests said that Faella “has been planning and preparing the AF for what he believes to be an inevitable race war,” adding that when the war comes, he would “kill Jews, immigrants and other minorities.”

Mark Potok of the Montgomery, Ala.-based Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks extremist groups, said the details of the arrest comport with a broader sense of anger and fear among far-right groups. Those feelings seem to have been exacerbated by Obama’s election in 2008.

Since then, the number of “patriot”-style militia groups has shot up from 149 to 1,274 nationwide. Many of these groups do not espouse hatred toward minorities, but are concerned about the expansion of federal government power, especially under a Democratic president.

The number of groups that overtly express hatred toward minorities seems to have grown as well, albeit more slowly. The reaction, Potok says, likely isn’t just to Obama, but to the broader demographic changes he represents.

“They are realizing they can’t win the demographic battle anymore,” Potok said, “that this country can’t return to the white-dominated country it’s been.”

Potok said the American Front group probably has fewer than 100 members, though its chapters are as far-flung as Sacramento and New Jersey. The affidavit alleges that members of chapters from around the country traveled to Faella’s Osceola County compound to train with weapons and prepare for what he assumed would be an inevitable racial conflagration.

The affidavit also alleges that Faella had been trying to make ricin, a deadly derivative of the castor bean plant that’s classified as a weapon of mass destruction.

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U.S. Hate And Extremist Groups Hit Record Levels, New Report Says

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

The number of domestic hate and extremist groups in the United States grew to record levels in 2011, led by a surge in anti-government radicalism, according to a report released today by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), a prominent civil rights organization based in Montgomery, AL. In 2011 there were 1,018 “hate groups” nationally, representing a slight increase from the previous record, one year earlier in 2010, when there were 1,002 hate groups tallied.

The 2011 figures are the eleventh consecutive annual increase and the highest number since the SPLC began enumerating hate group totals in the 1980s. In 2000 there were just 602 of these groups nationally. While 2011 hate crime numbers are not yet tabulated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the agency counted 6,624 hate crimes in 2010 in the United States, an increase of only 26 from a 14 year low recorded the previous year. A 2010 analysis by the Institute for Homeland Security Solutions found that from 1999-2009 white supremacist and anti-government domestic extremist plots were only surpassed by those undertaken by radical Salafist and al-Qaeda followers during the decade.

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Photo: Southern Poverty Law Center
 

California, the nation’s most populous state, led the nation with 84 hate groups last year according to the SPLC, followed by Georgia with 65, Florida with 55 and New Jersey with 47. The report broke down the number of hate groups in the United States by type and number for 2011:

  • Ku Klux Klan 152
  • Neo Nazi 170
  • White Nationalist 146
  • Racist Skinheads 133
  • Christian Identity 55
  • Neo-Confederate 32
  • Black Separatists 140
  • General Hate 190

While anti-gay and anti-Muslim groups experienced increases, the number of Ku Klux Klan groups actually declined significantly from 221 in 2010 to 152 in 2011. A handful of domestic Muslim hate groups, like the As-Sabiqun movement were not tallied, although the SPLC did an extensive analysis on these types of extremists late last year. The SPLC also saw a significant decline in extremist nativist groups that engage in confrontational activities beyond mere political organizing, such as harassing undocumented residents or undertaking border patrols.

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Photo: Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism

Sovereign Citizens and Patriots

Perhaps more disturbing than the small, yet sustained rise in hate groups, is the parabolic growth over the last few years in the number of anti-government “Patriot” and militia groups reported by the SPLC. These groups, which are categorized separately from hate groups, grew 55% to 1,274 in 2011, up from 824 in 2010. In 2008 such groups totaled only 149, while in 2009 the total increased to 512. Michigan had the largest number of “Patriot” groups with 79, followed by Texas with 76, California with 59 and Washington State, with 50.

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Photo: Southern Poverty Law Center

The SPLC and other analysts attribute these increases to widespread distress with the role of government as well as anger and conspiratorial rhetoric directed toward President Obama. Last year’s anti-government totals eclipsed the previous record of 858 groups in 1996: the year following the truck bombing of Oklahoma City’s Alfred P. Murrah federal building that left 168 dead. Despite the violent rhetoric and increasing number of extremist groups, there has been a paucity of successful violent attacks by both hard-core hatemongers and right-wing militants in the United States over the last decade. While hate groups and right-wing extremists, with some notable exceptions, have largely been unsuccessful in carrying out violence, analysts are increasingly concerned due to:

  1. A steady stream of thwarted violent plots,
  2. Several notable spontaneous violent encounters with police,
  3. The rapid increase in groups,
  4. Widespread political, economic and social distress

In addition to the Southern Poverty Law Center, government agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the FBI are increasingly concerned about the threat posed by a subset of anti-government radicals called “sovereign citizens.” According to Daryl Johnson, the author of a forthcoming book on extremism and a former DHS senior analyst, “The sovereign citizens belong to an extreme antigovernment movement that believes the government is illegitimate and has no authority over them.” In addition to their violent leanings he explains that: “The sovereign citizen movement has actively exploited the mortgage foreclosure crisis and promoted debt-elimination schemes and scams to financially desperate individuals.”

This subgroup is estimated to have between 100,000 and 300,000 adherents nationally. While many are well-armed and some have undertaken criminality, the overwhelming majority are nonetheless nonviolent. Just last month the FBI held a press conference in Washington, DC on the threat posed by sovereign citizens. Deputy Assistant Director of Counterterrorism Stuart McArthur explained, “We are focusing our efforts [on anti-government extremists] because of the threat of violence.” In a September 2010 report the FBI noted that six law enforcement officers were killed by lone wolf sovereign citizens since 2000. The report warned that:

The sovereign-citizen threat likely will grow as the nationwide movement is fueled by the Internet, the economic downturn, and seminars held across the country that spread their ideology and show people how they can tap into funds and eliminate debt through fraudulent methods. As sovereign citizens’ numbers grow, so do the chances of contact with law enforcement and, thus, the risks that incidents will end in violence.

 

In August 2011 at a major national conference convened by the National Counterterrorism Center and the Department of Homeland Security, California State University San Bernardino’s Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, also warned of the threat of sovereign citizens, particularly lone wolves and armed autonomous cells operating just outside the orbit of more established vocal, but nonviolent organizations. The Cal State Center noted an increase in disturbing activity and cited over one dozen illegal incidents or prosecutions in just the previous quarter. Most of these incidents involved spontaneous violent confrontations with law enforcement, threats, or financial and tax scams. The FBI states that over the last two years there have been 18 prosecutions annually, primarily related to money scams, up from 10 in 2010.

SPLC’s Senior Fellow Mark Potok explained some of the dynamics behind contemporary extremism in today’s report:

In Europe and the U.S. both, white dominated countries have become less so. At the same time, globalization has caused major economic dislocations in the West as certain industries and kinds of production move to less developed countries.

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Militant Black Groups Plan Armed Rally, Call for Vigilantism

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

The New Black Panther Party (NBPP) and New Black Liberation Militia (NBLM) are planning an armed rally in Sanford, Fla. later this month, Hatewatch has learned.

Speaking via phone from Jacksonville, where his group was holding a press conference with NBPP area spokesman Mikhail Muhammad, NBLM head Minister Prince Najee Shaka Muhammad today told Hatewatch that the armed rally, planned for April 21, is part of a crusade to obtain “justice” for Trayvon Martin, the black teenager whose shooting death in Sanford at the hands of a neighborhood watch volunteer has caused waves of outrage across America.

His hope is that today’s press conference will help mobilize “our people,” with the intent of “building up a black army and black militia” to “protect” the black community from aggression by “white supremacists” – which is, he said, “a trend.” Major topics of discussion at today’s gathering, he said, were the arrests yesterday of two white men in connection with a deadly and apparently racially motivated shooting spree that left three black people dead and two injured in Tulsa, Okla., and the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement’s (NSM) announcement that it planned to undertake patrols of Sanford. (Such patrols reportedly have not yet taken place.)

Jacksonville may not the only place where black separatists are rallying. According to a flier posted on the Facebook page of Tampa NBPP chapter president Clarence Steven Jones (who also goes by “Ali Muhammad”), NPBB National Chair Malik Zulu Shabazzwas to speak today at noon at an undisclosed location in the Tampa area. Both the Tampa and Jacksonville events are connected by last week’s announcement that today was to be a day of “action and absence” to “demand the arrest of George Zimmerman for the murder and racial profiling hate crime of Trayvon Martin.” (The shooting has not been declared a hate crime or even a crime at all – Zimmerman claimed self-defense and an investigation into allegations that he acted unlawfully is still under way.)

The NBPP and NBLM have been front and center among the many outsiders vying for the spotlight in the wake of Martin’s death in Sanford. As of late March, the NBPP was offering a $10,000 rewardfor Zimmerman’s “capture,” while the NBLM has announced plans to undertake a “citizen’s arrest” of Zimmerman.

NBPP had reportedly planned to conduct “self-defense” training for blacks in the Sanford area on the evening of April 7, but in an E-mail to Hatewatch, Sanford police said there were no reports confirming such activity.

Spokesmen for both NBPP and NBLM told Hatewatch they think Zimmerman was getting special treatment because his father is a former judge who is reportedly Jewish.

They also said they were not interested violence or vigilantism – denials which rang hollow in light of words like these, from Mikhail Muhammad to Hatewatch: “If you don’t do justice by the people, eventually people take justice into their own hands. … We live in a society where you either use the laws fairly and squarely or there aren’t going to be any laws that will be respected.”

The NBLM’s Najee Muhammad, a former NBPP “National Field Marshall” who told Hatewatch he founded the NBLM in 2010 because he felt constrained by the NBPP’s restrictions on military displays, was blunter. “When I found out about the [Jewish] background of that [Zimmerman] family, I said, ‘Uh-oh, ain’t nothing going to happen to that family unless we do it.’”

The militia leader, who bragged about “rolling” with members of the Crips and the Bloods and “rumbling” with police as a teen, grew up in Cleveland among radical black militants, many of them members of the Nation of Islam (NOI), a black separatist hate group whose rhetoric today is positively mild compared to that of the NBPP. He reminisced fondly about his father’s brother “Uncle Ahmed,” better known as Fred Evans, a black militant who died in jail after famously leading the “Glenville Shootout,” a 1968 Cleveland sniper attack on police that left several dead and caused a 5-day riot that the neighborhood in ruins.

Asked if he wanted to see another such event, Najee Muhammad equivocated. Insisting he respects authority and would not personally instigate violence, he said, “Uprising is going to happen by the nature of the cause.”

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