White-Power Groups Are Banding Together, But For How Long?

FILE - In this April 23, 2016 file photo, a man walks during a protest at Stone Mountain Park, in Stone Mountain, Ga. Extremist groups are joining together with a shared goal for whites. A new Ku Klux Klan alliance ... FILE - In this April 23, 2016 file photo, a man walks during a protest at Stone Mountain Park, in Stone Mountain, Ga. Extremist groups are joining together with a shared goal for whites. A new Ku Klux Klan alliance formed in March 2017 has united chapters from around the country, and a consortium of organizations composed of white nationalists and white separatists is marking its first anniversary. Watchdog groups say white extremists typically can’t work together because of jealousy and infighting. But leaders say they’re united as never before. (AP Photo/John Bazemore) MORE LESS
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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — White extremists, almost by nature, are seldom good at working together.

Creating consensus among white nationalists, neo-Nazis, Ku Klux Klansmen and the like is akin to herding rattlesnakes, given the caustic personalities often involved. Members typically get mad at each other and split, sometimes within days, resulting in the near-constant creation of new groups and a churning of both leaders and followers.

That’s why it’s something of a feat that an alliance of white-power groups born in a KKK bar in Georgia is marking its first birthday this month. Composed of multiple extremist groups, the Nationalist Front had its anniversary Saturday.

Similarly, six Klan organizations from around the country announced a consolidation last month.

The common goal, as these alliances see it, is protecting the white race at a time when the Census Bureau projects whites will be a minority within three decades.

Watchdog groups that track hate organizations aren’t impressed. They say the Nationalist Front now lists 11 member groups, about half the number it had when it was formed.

“These things never last,” said Heidi Beirich, director of the hate-monitoring Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Beirich said that while white supremacists have been emboldened by President Donald Trump’s election, such groups have been trying on and off for decades to merge, generally to appear larger than they really are.

But leaders say there’s a difference this time: A spokesman for the Nationalist Front, Matthew Heimbach, said U.S. nationalists are trying to follow the example of far-right European groups that have learned to work together rather than bicker over ideology, theology and organizational structure.

U.S. nationalist groups have cooperated on projects such as video presentations and propaganda strategies over the last year, Heimbach said, and they worked together to support white nationalist Richard Spencer when he spoke at Auburn University earlier this month.

Originally called the Aryan National Alliance, the Nationalist Front renamed itself and dropped its use of the swastika in an attempt to broaden its appeal.

Some robe-wearing KKK members who were initially part of the Nationalist Front dropped out, and some Klan groups are now consolidating to build membership and power.

The American Alliance of Klans formed during a meeting in rural Florida in March. More Klan groups have joined since, leaders say.

Tom Larson of Delaware, imperial wizard of the East Coast Knights of the KKK, a part of the new alliance, said: “We want to see people stand up and make this country great again, like Trump is saying. We’re tired of seeing white people lose everything.”

None of these groups will provide membership numbers, but it’s safe to say none is huge. About 100 people have registered to attend a Nationalist Front gathering this weekend in Pikeville, Kentucky, Heimbach said.

Photos from the meeting where the Klan alliance was formed showed about two dozen people in KKK robes and black uniforms giving the Nazi salute, but organizers said that was only leaders and does not represent total membership.

Both the Nationalist Front and the Alliance of Klans are but shadow of the United Klans of America, an Alabama-based group that claimed membership in the thousands in the 1960s and was blamed for the 1963 Birmingham church bombing that killed four black girls. It was disbanded in 1987 after the Klan murder of a black man resulted in criminal convictions and a lawsuit that bankrupted the group.

The SPLC’s Beirich said she is less worried about new supremacist alliances than free-standing extremist entities like The Daily Stormer, which she describes as an anti-Semitic, misogynistic, racist website that entered the real world last year by forming “book clubs” that hold local meetings.

Beirich said a single hate-based website can reach millions.

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Notable Replies

  1. Fake news.

    We know from Trump’s own mouth that he is, as he informed a Jewish reporter for a Jewish magazine, “the least anti-Semitic person that you’ve ever seen in your entire life.”

    There is no way that our strong Law-and-Order, Über-Semitophile President would allow even a single neo-Nazi group to feel comfortable in America.

  2. I was just over at this website that is totally intense and here we have a very long very important piece on the New American Nationalism.

    J.M. Berger

    When extremists wield the full force of the federal government, American identity is profoundly threatened.

    https://warontherocks.com/2017/04/a-dangerous-new-americanism/

    https://2k8r3p1401as2e1q7k14dguu-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Deplorables.jpg

    The fascists have lived parasitically on the largess of the West for at least a century. At this point in time they’re back. One of the worst things that Trump did was to normalize the hate. Many times I have heard that so many connect with Trump because “he says what we’re all thinking, but are too afraid to say.”

    “An endless stream of the most undesirable immigrants pours daily into the United States,” the unnamed writer warned. Inadequately vetted, they pretended to be refugees, but they refused to assimilate and instead advanced a secretive agenda. … They were reportedly sneaking across the border from Mexico, bringing crime and corruption with them.

    Perhaps not all of them were bad. Some, the writer assumed, were good people.

    Those remarks were delivered in New York City June 2015, by a man who must employ tens of thousands of Mexicans, Central and South Americans.

    In 1920 it was this:

    “[We] will continue to assume that the majority of the Jewish people do not approve of criminal acts,” he wrote, but “the Jewish idea … eats the substance out of the civilization which it attacks, destroys its moral virility, throws down its reverence, saps its respect for authority, casts a shadow on every basic principle.”

    These excerpts were printed in The International Jew, a collection of newspaper columns published in the 1920s and attributed to business magnate and infamous anti-Semite Henry Ford.

  3. One of my life goals is to set these people at each others’ throats. I think that shouldn’t be terribly difficult. They’re all about purity, right? So, more rope, how pure is pure enough? Which group has the highest standards of purity? You can see where I’m going.

    It’s easy, I’ve found, to get them to narrow down their definition of “white” to the size of a pinhole. I’ve been doing it for years on social media forums. You start by asking them to define what’s white. At this point I mention that my Swedish heritage tends to produce a deep summer tan. Am I white or brown? Detecting that I’m not their friend, someone will immediately shrink the boundaries of what constitutes Europe and use that to define “=white”. Then I ask them about other unpalatable cases – for example immigrants into regions of Europe over various time periods. Soon, they’ve boxed themselves in to an impossibly small definition.

    Since every white supremacist’s definition of “white” includes himself (sic), you can fairly easily shrink each person’s definition down to a small circle of himself and what he believes about his family history. Since these folks live for the sake of suspecting and suppressing others, it shouldn’t be that hard to sow suspicion among them that they’re not all on the same team.

  4. Western and Southern Europe are impossibly contaminated by mixed breeding with subhumans. Oh noes! There are no white unicorns!

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