A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby American Dream » Sun Jun 29, 2014 2:35 pm

http://nycantifa.wordpress.com/2014/06/ ... -hipsters/

Nipsters: German Neo-Nazi Hipsters

ImageRolling Stone has published a fascinating story about hipster Nazis in Germany. As many antifascists have warned for years, fascists are abandoning the old bonehead-and-white-robes approach for one that is closer to the cultural tastes of the radical left. The apolitical or right-wing political tendencies of the largely white hipster culture make this no surprise that it’s now become a focus for recruitment. Some highlights of this article include:

“In recent years, a number of extreme-right hip-hop acts have emerged in Germany — with names like Makss Damage and Dee Ex. Despite the awkward politics of using hip-hop to preach the virtues of German identity, they’ve amassed a small, but significant presence within the scene. Dee Ex, for example, has over 7,000 likes on Facebook and posts photos of herself in a revealing outfit on her blog. There is now neo-Nazi techno (biggest act: DJ Adolf) and neo-Nazi reggae.”

Some of the Nipsters argue that “young neo-Nazis should be allowed to dress however they want, as long as they have the ‘right’ anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim, anti-Semitic ideas. This newly relaxed approach allows neo-Nazi leaders to attract young people from different subcultures and makes neo-Nazis more difficult for their opponents to identify.”

“Daniel Koehler, director of research at the Institute for the Study of Radical Movements in Berlin, says the nipster is less new than many people think — he’s been seeing them at extreme-right rallies for the past two or three years. ‘When we first saw it, it was something weird,’ he says, ‘but now it’s pretty normal.’”

“In February, Tim and Kevin started Balaclava Kueche, Germany’s first Nazi vegan cooking show. In each episode, the two chatty, fast-talking men wear facemasks and earnestly explain to viewers how to make an array of vegan dishes (the first episode: mixed salad, tofu scramble). ‘The left-wing doesn’t have a prior claim to veganism,’ says Tim. ‘Industrial meat production is incompatible with our nationalist and socialist world views.’”

“The current German wave of, for instance, hip, vegan neo-Nazis functions in a similar way. [Simone Rafael, the editor-in-chief of Netz Gegen Nazis, a blog that monitors the extreme right] says they attempt to slide into debates where young people wouldn’t expect them, and then sell their politics as a palatable outlet. ‘They use subjects like globalization and animal protection as entry points, and then offer a very simple worldview that makes complex subjects very easy to understand,” says Rafael. ‘Of course, in the end, it’s always about racism and anti-Semitism and nationalism.’”

You can read the whole article here: Thomas Rogers, Heil Hipster: The Young Neo-Nazis Trying to Put a Stylish Face on Hate Inside the tote-bag friendly, “Harlem Shake”-happy world of Germany’s “nipsters”
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby AhabsOtherLeg » Sun Jun 29, 2014 10:02 pm

This is a disturbing turn of events.

A family-day music festival in a London park (Markfield Park, Tottenham) was attacked by around 20 far-right Polish immigrant nationalists calling themselves Zjednoczeni Emigranci Londyn (Emigrants United London). They've apparently been noted for their aggressive, abusive, and anti-social behaviour in the area before - street robberies and graffiti, mainly, like a normal London gang - but have only now turned openly violent as a group. One man from the festival was stabbed, many others suffered minor injuries.

Before UKIP or Britain First could get all excited about this, it was revealed that the Polish immigrant fascists had (in part) been fought off by a number of other Polish immigrants who did not share their extreme nationalist views, to say the least.

The police, in traditional fashion, did bugger all.

What's weird - apart from the idea of extreme nationalists attempting to target ethnic minorities while themselves living as a minority in a country other than their own - is that this happened in Tottenham, a place where the native extreme right were long ago thrashed into silence by highly organised local Antifa. To be an open racist there, you would have to be very naive, and perhaps blind to your surroundings too. But these guys seem to have no qualms.

It's especially disappointing after the Hungarian neo-Nazi party, Jobbik, were shown in no uncertain terms that they were unwelcome on their own day-trip to London.

It wasn't a major incident (except for the man who was stabbed - his injuries appear to have been superficial) but it's very worrying if this is a sign of things to come. Unfortunately, the most comprehensive source for these events so far is... Vice magazine. Sorry.

http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/fascists ... n-saturday
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby AhabsOtherLeg » Sun Jun 29, 2014 10:13 pm

American Dream » Sun Jun 29, 2014 1:35 pm wrote:“In February, Tim and Kevin started Balaclava Kueche, Germany’s first Nazi vegan cooking show. In each episode, the two chatty, fast-talking men wear facemasks and earnestly explain to viewers how to make an array of vegan dishes (the first episode: mixed salad, tofu scramble). ‘The left-wing doesn’t have a prior claim to veganism,’ says Tim. ‘Industrial meat production is incompatible with our nationalist and socialist world views.’”


Has Nick Griffin's cookery programme been posted here yet?

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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby bluenoseclaret » Mon Jun 30, 2014 5:26 pm

Report: French Jewish Defense League stages attacks on 'anti-Semites'

Militant group says it targeted people who used the 'quenelle' gesture conceived by a Holocaust denier.


French police have arrested six Jews they believe staged vigilante attacks against suspected anti-Semites.

The attacks occurred on December 21 in Lyon and December 22 in nearby Villeurbanne and are believed to have been perpetrated by members of France’s Jewish Defense League, or Ligue de Defense Juive (LDJ), the local branch of the militant group associated with the late Rabbi Meir Kahane.

The victims were targeted on social networks and tracked down for performing the “quenelle,” a gesture conceived by the anti-Semitic comedian and Holocaust denier Dieudonne M’bala M’bala, the Le Progres daily reported.

On Tuesday, LDJ wrote on its Twitter account: “Two major punitive actions were carried out Saturday and Sunday in Lyon against people who performed the quenelle. The little Nazis are no longer at ease!”

The December 22 attack involved six young members of LDJ, the newspaper reported. The report said they beat a man suspected of performing the quenelle and locked him inside the trunk of a parked car. The report, which named neither the suspects nor the alleged victim, said two of the six were arrested that night and the remaining four were arrested the following day. Two were remanded to police custody Tuesday on suspicion of assault, Le Progres reported. The report did not say how badly the man was hurt.

In recent weeks, the quenelle has been widely discussed in French media because many French Jews see it as sign of mounting anti-Semitism.

According to Le Progres, the December 21 attack was directed at an employee of the Mama Shelter Hotel in Lyon. A few small teams entered the hotel looking for the employee, who was not named, while their friends stayed outside, the report said.

In total, a few dozen men were involved in the incident, witnesses told the newspaper. The hotel’s security agents fought off the intruders and prevented them from attacking the employee. Several dozen guests were briefly evacuated from the hotel, according to the report.

In June, LDJ announced that its “soldiers” had put a young Arab in hospital, calling it “a rapid and effective response” to the man’s attack on Jews at Saint-Mande, just east of Paris. The announcement drew calls to ban LDJ. As criticism mounted, LDJ retracted the statement and denied any involvement in the violence.


The comments are quite interesting.

http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jew ... s/1.565443
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby American Dream » Mon Jun 30, 2014 5:29 pm

I was just getting ready to post this here:


http://nomattimen.wordpress.com/2012/03 ... andomness/

Greyzone in Germany: The Cult Of Randomness

Once more the Greyzone will be the number one topic of this summer’s festivals, especially with those who won’t attend them anyway – because they don’t feel like partying with those that partied with Nazis the weekend before and only came to enjoy songs with pub level debate lyrics in a subcultural setting. So why do Greyzones get more and more accepted in “alternative” surroundings? This question inevitably leads us to the topics alternative/subcultural business, aesthetic criticism, men’s worlds, skinhead cult and to the search of meaning behind political labels.


The increasing establishment of the Greyzone means a decrease of emancipatory values. Oi-festivals provide a stage for defamation of “asylum seekers” and gays, Hardcore-concerts are stomping grounds of testosterone gym gorillas and shouting the names of the firm they belong to. It’s a subject that polarizes. Antifascist watchblogs like Oireszene are busy collecting information while being criticized for filing too many bands as Greyzone. Those being criticized by Oireszene feel they are being wrongly accused and go digging for “mistakes” in publications in order to discredit “The Antifa”.

Public discussion was entered in October 2008 by “Rotes Hetzpamphlet” (“red agitation” pamphlet”), a (polemic) text highlighting and documenting the involvement of a self-proclaimed “anti-racist” band in (extreme) right wing circles. Stomper 98 are shooting stars of Oi, still they are only an example of dozens of bands who are not only structurally intertwined, but also share major images and characteristics. Especially Tattoo-cult and (male) brutish aesthetics are the meeting points of right-wing, anti-right-wing, and “unpolitical”. We will be looking at these kinds of aesthetics in detail in issue #92.

Right-wing Environments And Greyzones
“Right-wing Environments” are protopolitical levels where a persons own actions and conduct are often not only perceived as “political”, but rather apolitical, but is still are determined by patterns and values that can only be considered right-wing. “Greyzones” are social environments within (Music-)Cultures that pretend to be apolitical or even “anti-right-wing”, but are intertwined with the (extreme) Right structurally, socially and as regards to content. The Punk and Oi Greyzone is a heterogeneous structure of cliques and fan-circles with fractions and boundaries, but nonetheless in mutual contact. It has its own network and common grounds: staged masculinity, values ranging between conservative and reactionary transported by lyrics, statements, symbols and aesthetics.

In our opinion, having shared the stage at festivals once or twice with bands fitting that description is NOT enough to be considered as belonging to the Greyzone, same goes for having the odd dodgy facebook-friend. “Guilty by association” can only be one indication in a line of argument. Focusing on (assumed) friendships does only lead to a fruitless clash of opinions of what is allowed and what is “verboten”. It also obstructs the view on the contents that are being represented – by Stomper 98 for example, who we’re gonna look at in the following article.

Political Labels As Image Enhancers
“Unpolitical” band Gerbenok are going to play the “Back on the Streets” festival on the Loreley. According to their own statement, they play “Oi music the way it has to be”. Here’s a sample from the lyrics of their song “The new Hippies”: “It may sound racist, but that much is true: asylum seeker selling drugs in train station loos. Long hair and tanned they lean against advertising pillars, make children work the streets (…)”. In 2009 Gerbenok was scheduled to play a festival in Greifswald that was self-labeled “Love Music Hate Racism”. Antifascist intervention prevented the gig.

This is just one example of how devoid of meaning such labels are being used. Labelling yourself “against Racism” has advantages: it takes the wind out of critics’ sails, and works as a mood enhancer for social workers at the youth club in charge of okaying a location for an event. And sometimes one self genuinely believes to be “anti-right-wing”.

Increasingly, and not only in cultural scenes, we come across an understanding of politics that reduces “politics” to those who define themselves politically (political parties, parliaments, “the antifa”) and can at the very most find something “political” in unmistakable Neo-Nazi slogans. Government-decreed “Anti-Extremism”, the equation of the left and the right and defining right-wing by focusing on self-confessed out-of-the-closet Neo-Nazis is on the rise in subcultural environments. There’s less and less awareness of the multiple levels and ways in which social discrimination and exclusion expresses. Rock-against-the-Right concerts are too often only a way to enhance the image of a municipality or institution, or a band or a promoter, and are a way to prove the endeavour to “do something against the Right”.

Smart, Volkisch And Three Sheets To The Wind
This is how the (extreme) Right infiltrates “left” environments and locations: by coding their racism and homophobia or keeping them on pub talk level. According to himself, veteran English Skinhead and “Pub Musician” Frank Marshall aka Franky Flame who also sings in Oi band “Superyob” claims to make “music under no political banner”. “Our shows aren’t political gatherings, they’re entertainment for working class people like ourselves. But that doesn’t keep him from naming “massive uncontrolled immigration, “economic migrants” and race war between different ethnic groups” as England’s problems in an interview with fanzine “Der Trinker”.

Asked by right wing Fanzine “Feindkontakt” why he is wearing a Thor’s Hammer (pendant) he answers in the diction of the volkisch Right: “„(…) and I am aware of my history, the traditions, the language and script (runes) and the origin and development of the peoples of northern Europe. I am one of them and they are my people! (…) What interests me is our heritage, not hating others because they aren’t like me, but first I take care of my people, because it feels right and natural to do so!” Asked why he became a skinhead Franky explains: “The Hippies and the peace, love and drug culture they brought about made us sick and we wanted to be different, do something against that and lead our lives the way we wanted: proud of ourselves and our country, and staying smart, fit and hard!”.

There is indeed hardly a photo of Franky Flame without him obviously hammered and with a beer in hand. One can picture Franky and his boys rambling the city, pissed and bawling Oi-hymns („Knock it back, have another one, drinking and driving is so much fun“, The Business), getting sick at the sight of hippies smoking pot at the bus stop. The glorification of legal, masculine drunken stupor and demonization of illegal, hippiesque use of Marihuana is the primacy of the ultraconservative at the regular’s table.

In 2007 Franky Flame played an “Oi-Meeting” at the Conne Island in Leipzig, together with Stomper 98. In 2009 he played the Conne Island again, then a St. Pauli Fan Pub in Hamburg, and also “Endless Summer Festival”. Between those concerts he also played several gigs in Neonazi-locations “Skinhouse Menfis” in Thuringia, and the Kastelein / Moloko Bar in Brugge, Belgium. For 2011 he is announced for “Back on the Streets Festival on the Loreley, one of the sponsors being Punk Mailorder “Nix Gut”.

Pragmatism And False Labeling
Some fans of “unpolitical” Oi have a wardrobe that can be adjusted to the flavor of the event. Hannah who belongs to the circle of right-wing Oi-Band “I don’t like you” wears a Skrewdriver Shirt when she goes to Skinhouse Menfis and chooses a shirt with a smashed swastika for Punk Festival “Force Attack”. She is only one example. Sometimes, the label “unpolitical” is only a means to camouflage a right-wing fun fair that would otherwise be subject to repression and law enforcement.

To illustrate this method of false labelling this issue of AIB features an article about “Bootboys Hildesheim”, leading organizers of “unpolitical” right-wing rock-events, and another one on Neonazi band “Endstufe”, who also play at “unpolitical” parties. An event labelled “unpolitical” is easier and less risky to arrange than a right-wing rock (i.e. RAC) concert – there’s no need for conspirative mobilization or alternative locations in case of prohibition by the authorities. Those legal events reach more people and enable the RAC business to break into new markets. While the number of Neonazi-concerts drops, the number of right-wing or greyzone events rose significantly over the past few years.

But interpreting the phenomenon of subculturally-orientated right-wing extremists turning to the “unpolitical” as moral fraud and tactics only would fall short of the fact that the extreme Right is changing. NPD and Kameradschaften (militant Neonazi groups or “Brotherhoods”) are losing ground and coherence. Less and less scenesters subscribe to a ideological frame dictating all aspects of life. While the NPD bore their audience with political speeches in between band’s performances, Oi and Hardcore meetings provide an excessive party experience without police monitoring the event and enforcing bans and regulations by the book.

Delusions Of Grandeur And Paranoia
“The Cult” is a movement turned to stone. It offers self-assurance and on top leaves no room for doubts, questions, development, changes. It surrounds itself with anti-attributes and is never in favour of anything, except a nebulous “Way Of Life” and free beer. The Bands and Fans of the cult summon their scene, but as soon as criticism pops up it is being discredited as an accusation from an external source. Greyzone band “Combat 77″ whose name refers to the founding myth of the Punk movement (1977) say making an issue of the Greyzone is “a witch hunt, and certain promoters or bands seem to forget the real enemy and are dividing their own scene without reason”. Stomper 98 see themselves as “always standing in the dock” and badmouth their critics as “brave stalinists”.

The purely fictional accusation of their critics “holding a whole scene responsible by means of “sippenhaft” (a form of collective punishment practised in Nazi Germany towards the end of the Second World War) works a charm to close their ranks. It wasn’t the photo of the band’s singer arm in arm with a well known Neonazi that enraged their fans. It was the fact that it was commented („Reclaim the Scene and kick out Stupidity“) and circulated as a sticker by Antifa. The mere highlighting of contradictions becomes illegitimate and a threat to internal peace. They seal themselves off, stage themselves as victims, feel affirmed to be outcasts and wallow in smugness.

Delusion of grandeur and paranoia are the stuff that right-wing environments are made of. The resemblance to role-models “Boehse Onkelz” is striking.

Faking Rebellion, Living Stagnation
There’s one trait all exponents belonging to the Greyzone have in common: they are staging a rebellion that isn’t rebellious and isn’t meant to be. Punk, Oi and Hardcore are selling a rebellious image that comes at no cost for the individual, creating the possibility to reproduce a petty bourgeois way of life while pretending to be counter-culture.A quote from an 2011 interview (http://punkrock77thrutoday.blogspot.com ... rview.html) with Combat 77 illustrates that kind of nonsense perfectly: “„Nowadays a lot of people seem to forget that Punk is just rebellion and not extreme left wing propaganda.“

It’s the paradoxical construct of Oi that dwells on rebellious attitudes while preaching “unpolitical”. By the way: rebellion is by definition resistance against authority, thus it is opposes – political – circumstances. The actualities of musicians from that scene have some peculiar similarities: marriage and relationships with traditional gender roles, work ethic and being proud of being accepted as a Punk or Skin due to being a labourer – self-stylized “outcasts” almost begging for participation and recognition – because they have no alternative draft to offer.

Ambitions And Reality Of The Left
No more beating about the bush – those who knowingly distribute CDs like the 4 Skins 2010 CD “The Return” containing a song with racist lyrics are spreading hate speech. This does not only apply to “Greyzone” labels and mail-orders like Bandworm Records or Randale Records. Those who provide a stage for Gary Bushell, singer of “cult” band the Gonads and candidate of right-wing part “English Democrats” in 2008 are sponsoring a radical political right-winger, even if’s he’s only booked for making music (at 2009s Punk and Disorderly Festival).

In the end the Greyzone is only a subcultural mirror of public mainstream that has over time spread to alternative milieus. Commerce, Anti-Extremism, Fit for Fun, anything goes, which also means to always be able to take the path of least resistance. The appeal for well thought through actions remains unheard, the Left’s new openness becomes randomness. Antifascist circles mingling with hooligans create the need for a music culture providing war chants and an aesthetic for a collective battling on the streets. It’s plain to see why even political bands like Slime do play festivals with bands that reek of Greyzone: Broader audience, more fans, more money.

The establishment of the Greyzone in environments labelled “left-wing” is a result of commercialization and a drift of left-wing subcultures towards the bourgeoisie. To stop these developments we need forces that fill “leftist” logos and environments with values and live – not label – radical criticism of society.



This is a translation of http://aib.nadir.org/index.php/archiv/5 ... bigkeit-91
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby bluenoseclaret » Mon Jun 30, 2014 6:35 pm

Mária Schmidt...."Hungarian prime minister’s chief ideologist"...

An interesting women...


"In the June 26 issue of Válasz, formerly Heti Válasz, a fairly lengthy article entitled “In the captivity of the past” appeared. It was written by Mária Schmidt whom I earlier described as the “chief ideologist of the current government’s very controversial views on history.”

In this latest article Schmidt, the official historian of the Hungarian “Jewish question” in Viktor Orbán’s regime, does not even try to hide her aversion toward the Hungarian “left-liberal” intellectual elite. Moreover, a careful reading of the article reveals that in that hated group the Jews play a prominent role. The whole article is basically an attack on those “infallible,” mostly Jewish intellectuals who have been keeping Hungarian public opinion “under intellectual terror” for decades. Singled out for especially vituperative attack is the older generation of that intellectual elite.

It is hard to understand Schmidt’s vehemence against this aging group since at the very beginning of the article she confidently states that “since the 2014 election the influence and intellectual terror of the left liberal elite has slowly dwindled to nothing.” The election proved that “these clever ones” simply don’t understand the twenty-first century which, according to Schmidt, “began in 2008.”

What kinds of people are these old-fashioned liberals who understand nothing of the present because they are locked in the intellectual framework of 1968? They are, according to the court historian of Viktor Orbán, anti-Christian, anti-Hungarian, Marxist internationalists who talk about a future beyond nations. They are accused of launching a hate campaign, and “in our country only atheistic, intolerant, Marxist groups” are capable of such a hate campaign. These people are unable to understand the very concept of “Hungarian interest.” Instead, they talk about progress and internationalism while actually “they become servants of foreign interests. While there was the Soviet Union, they represented Soviet interests, now they serve the West, that is, the United States, the European Union, and Germany.” She continues: “Every member of this group is against the nation.” For them the nation is dangerous, repugnant, old-fashioned, pre-modern. They like to talk about “the preferred topics of the empire,” meaning the European Union: Holocaust, racism, Roma, homosexual marriage. And where can these people be found? “In the new SZDSZ, the Demokratikus Koalíció.”

Once she sets the stage she moves on to a specifically Jewish topic, or at least what she considers to be a topic that elicits opposition only from the Jewish community. Of course, this is not the case; about half of Hungarians consider the monument the government intends to erect to commemorate the occupation of Hungary by the Germans on March 19, 1944 a falsification of history. Schmidt’s tirade against those who oppose the depiction of Hungary as an innocent victim of German aggression begins with a side swipe at the United States. She says that some people find the proposed statue aesthetically inferior, but after what “the U.S. Embassy did with one of the most beautiful public places of Budapest” one should refrain from such criticism. This is a reference to the alterations made to the building after 9/11 for security reasons.

Then Schmidt embarks on listing the arguments that were brought against the erection of the monument, finding all of them bogus. Naturally, according to her, it mattered not that although the German army did move into Hungarian territory, it came not as a foe but as a friend, an ally.

The second argument that the memorial’s message blurs the distinction between victim and perpetrator also receives short shrift from Schmidt. Monuments often do that. There is, for example, the Soviet Memorial standing on the same square. It is a memorial to the soldiers who died in Hungary in the course of the war, but, adds Schmidt, they were the same soldiers who raped 100,000 Hungarian women. (I don’t want to be irreverent, but surely in this case the perpetrators of the rapes were not the ones whose death is memorialized by the Soviet Memorial.)

The third argument is that Hungary cannot be depicted as an innocent victim because “there were Jewish laws and Hungary deported some people who couldn’t prove their citizenship.” But this doesn’t make the occupation any less of a tragedy. The victim becomes a victim not because he is innocent but because of the aggression of the stronger. It happens often enough that “some of the victims later become perpetrators.” Because I am familiar with other writings of Mária Schmidt, I know exactly whom she has in mind: some Jewish survivors who later became willing supporters of the Rákosi regime and whose activities are so vividly depicted in the House of Terror, whose director is Mária Schmidt herself.

With this introduction about “victims” and “perpetrators” Schmidt specifically addresses the Hungarian Jewish community. She claims that “in the last couple of decades the status of the victim became absolute. We got so far that there are groups that would like to look upon their ancestors’ tragic fate as an inherited privilege and expand the victimization to generations whose members have not suffered any atrocity.” In her opinion this view, held by some members of the Hungarian Jewish community, has “serious consequences” because if the status of victim can be inherited then so can the status of perpetrator. “We lived through two dictatorships. We are full of former perpetrators and their descendants.” Schmidt claims that the soon to be erected monument was created to be “the monument of reconciliation and propitiation.”

As if this were not enough, Schmidt goes on attacking the Hungarian Jewish community. “Those very people who laid the foundations of and represented the historiography of the dictatorship want to prevent us now, seventy years after the tragedy, from placing the flowers of reverence before all the Hungarian victims. They still want to prescribe whom we can mourn and whom we cannot; for whom we can cry and for whom we cannot. They prescribe empathy from us every day of the year, while they remain blind and deaf toward other people’s sorrows. … With this act they exclude themselves from our national community.“

Well, this is at least straightforward talk, not the usual coded anti-Semitic discourse. This is the real thing from the chief ideologue of the Orbán regime. And a threat. At least the members of the Hungarian Jewish community now know what they can expect from the Hungarian nation, from which they just excluded themselves. ..


http://hurryupharry.org/
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby American Dream » Mon Jun 30, 2014 10:27 pm

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/hungary-7-quot ... ht-1451588

Hungary: 7 Quotes That Show Jobbik is 'Far-Right'

By Gianluca Mezzofiore
June 6, 2014


Image
Members of Jobbik attend the inauguration ceremony of the "Hungarian Guard" in Budapest
(Reuters)


Hungary's far-right Jobbik party has won a court case in the country's supreme court against a broadcaster that described it as "parliamentary far-right party".

The ruling, which stated that commercial TV channel ATV breached the law as it expressed an opinion and not a well-known fact, plays into Jobbik's newly-polished image which seeks to curb the anti-Roma and anti-Semitic rhetoric of the past.

Seizing on the anti-EU and anti-establishment wave that is shaking Europe, the party came third in Hungary's parliamentary elections with 21% of the vote. It stopped short of demanding Hungary exit the EU and managed to send three representatives to the European pariament in May's elections.

Jobbik, led by the eccentric Gabor Vona has pledged to create jobs, be tough on crime and renegotiate state debt. However, its radical anti-Roma campaign makes it hard to believe it that it has shrugged off its past extremist reputation.

Here are 7 quotes that seem at odds with the judgement conferred by Hungary's Supreme Court.

1. Sandor Porzse, a prominent member of Jobbik, told a French website in a 2012 interview that Hungarians "are victims of a Jewish conspiracy to colonise our land and rob our resources".

2. Marton Gyongyosi, another member of the party, caused a controversy in 2012 when he called for a list of Jews who pose a "national security risk"

3. Gabor Vona, the party leader, said in 2010 that "the Land Law has to be amended so that the Solomons cannot buy land in Hungary".

4. The Magyar Garda, the 3,000-strong paramilitary group founded by Vona and later disbanded by a court, started calling the capital "Judapest". Orthodox Jews in the supermarket were saluted with a raised arm "Heil Hitler" and posters of the socialist party were defaced with Stars of David.

5. In 2014 Tibor Ágoston, the deputy chairman of Jobbik's Debrecen and Hajdú-Bihar County organisation, referred to the Holocaust as "holoscam".

6. Krisztina Morvai, an MEP for the party and Jobbik's presidential candidate once ranted: "So-called proud Hungarian Jews should go back to playing with their tiny little circumcised tails."

7. However, Jobbik's main target is Hungary's Roma, or gypsy, minority which accounts for around 8-9% of the population. Jobbik says it wants to stop "gypsy crime," create ghettoes for Roma "deviants" and create a rural "gendarmerie" of the sort last seen in Hungary before World War II.
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby American Dream » Tue Jul 01, 2014 8:35 am

http://www.leftfootforward.org/2014/01/ ... ot-allies/

Neturei Karta: enemies not allies

By TOM HARRIS | Published: JANUARY 31, 2014
Tom Harris is a member of the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts (NCAFC)


ImageWhen Jobbik leader Gábor Vona visited London last weekend, I was one of over a hundred people to assemble at Holborn station to give him a piece of my mind.

Though Gabor himself had been swiftly whisked away to safety, around 50 supporters of the Hungarian fascist party found themselves stranded inside the tube station’s ticket hall, a thick line of police protecting them from the angry anti-fascists outside.

After a couple of hours or so, the police marched the increasingly dejected Jobbik men back down onto the platforms, from where they were subsequently escorted to a re-located rally in Hyde Park.

Though the fascists eventually got to have their meeting in peace, the anti-fascist mobilisation was one of the more encouraging ones I’d experienced. Jobbik had had their day badly disrupted and their activists badly humiliated – standing in sulky, impotent silence while a large crowd of lefties chanted ‘Auschwitz, Sobibor, never again!’ at them. Hearteningly, many Hungarians, as well as some British Jews from decimated Hungarian families, had bolstered the crowd.

So it was in good spirits that I left the demonstration to make my way home. As I crossed the road, I noticed a small group of Haredi Jews in the uniform of side-locks, fur hats and frock coats that distinguish the ulta-orthodox. They stood in a line behind a banner – ‘Authentic Judaism Opposes Zionist Aggression’ while people from the periphery of the Jobbik protest took pictures and smiled with approval.

I recognised them as members of Neturei Karta – a small, bizarre Haredi sect that has made a name for itself through it’s militantly anti-Zionist stance, it’s refusal to recognise the Israeli state and it’s willingness to line up for photo opportunities with the likes of George Galloway, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hamas.

If you’ve ever been on a demonstration in support of the Palestinians, or if you have a sizeable number of lefties among you’re Facebook friends, you’ll probably have seen pictures of them, the juxtaposition of religious Jewish garb and Palestinian flags making for quick-and-easy symbolism. “Look at this”, the Facebooker will often say, “even these super-religious Jews think Israel has gone too far this time”.

But Neturei Karta’s opposition to Israel has nothing to do with left-wing values, internationalism or a humane critique of state aggression, nor does its support for the Palestinians stem from humanitarian concerns for an occupied people.

Instead, it opposes the Israeli state on purely theological and reactionary grounds. According to them, only the returned Messiah can rebuild scattered Israel, and when he does, he will do so not as a relatively secular parliamentary democracy, but as a godly kingdom. For Neturei Karta, the current Israel is an atheistical abomination, poisoned by modernism and godlessness.

In other words, they oppose Israel not from the secular left but from the theocratic far-right.

But what they were doing here, at a protest against Hungarian neo-Nazis, not Israel? When I asked they explained that “the Zionist movement slanders many of its critics as anti-semites”. Slow on the uptake, I still didn’t understand.

And then it clicked 0 they were here for the Jobbik protest after all, but not against but in favour of them. Hungarian Nazis hate Israel, therefore Neturei Karta like Jobbik. And all around them, incomprehending lefties were taking their picture and wishing them well.

Of course, Neturei Karta are a small and largely inconsequential sect. I’m also sure many of the protesters cheering them on did so out of well-meaning ignorance rather than anything sinister.

Nevertheless, George Galloway, the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign and others prominent on the left have shared platforms and taken photo opportunities with this noxious cult, just as the Socialist Workers Party were once willing to promote the Holocaust-denying jazz saxophonist Gilad Atzmon for his ‘anti-Zionist’ credentials.

Next time they try it, they should be reminded of last weekend.

The lesson for the left is obvious. The struggle against Israeli militarism and for justice for the Palestinians is an urgent and necessary one, but it is discredited by allying ourselves with religious crackpots, anti-semites and reactionaries.
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby American Dream » Thu Jul 03, 2014 2:00 pm

As Neo-Nazis Rally, Sweden Poised for Election-Year Shift of Power Balance from Right to Left

Sweden is in the middle of a "super election year" with elections taking place for the European Parliament, as well as local and national elections. After eight years of a right-wing government, ...

Read More →
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby American Dream » Thu Jul 03, 2014 2:08 pm

http://nycantifa.wordpress.com/2014/07/ ... americans/

NYC’s Golden Dawn Targets Greek-Americans
Posted on July 2, 2014


It is always a great irony that New York City chapter of the Greek neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn organizes support for racist, anti-immigrant policies in their home country – exactly the place where they don’t live! You’d think as immigrants or children of immigrants they’d be a little more aware of how ridiculous this is… but, then, a thoughtful fascist is hard to find.

The irony-deficient NYC chapter has responded with typical vitriol to a new, short documentary about them – or rather, one filmmaker’s failed attempts to interview them. (In their place he interviewed members of the local Greek community and business leaders, as well as some anti-fascists from, for example, AKNY.)

As Lamprini Thoma describes it, NYC Golden Dawn has responded with:

A witch-hunt with a chiefly anti-Marxist slant…. In an act of ‘retaliation’, as they themselves called it, against the ‘criminals’ and their ‘conspiracy’, the Greek-American Golden Dawn published personal details, phone numbers and addresses of whomever they put in their sights…. They dub [the film] ‘a propaganda film against Golden Dawn pretending to be a documentary’ and attack all those who speak against the group in it. They don’t restrict themselves to slander however. They proceed to publish personal details, asking that their readers call them and… take to task all those who dared speak out.


Read the whole story, with a link to the documentary on Youtube, here:

Lamprini Thoma, “Golden Dawn witch hunt targets members of the Greek-American community.





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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby slimmouse » Thu Jul 03, 2014 4:19 pm

Divide and Conquer AD.

Its as old as the hills.
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jul 03, 2014 4:32 pm

ALL pawns in their game ...



Forget about the reasons and
The treasons we are seeking
Forget about the notion that
Our emotions can be swept away
Forget about being guilty
We are innocent instead



You seek up a big monster
For him to fight your wars for you

Intentions are not wicked,
Don't be tricked into thinking so

Soon we will all find our lives swept away






yes solace I see you ...yes I am posting in this thread..... :wink:
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby coffin_dodger » Thu Jul 03, 2014 7:46 pm

This thread is some kind of fascist-fetishist wet dream. Burly, angry white men in action poses, swastikas, Hitler, horror and hatred. Exuded from every sweaty pore.
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Re: A New Europe: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, Nation-State

Postby American Dream » Fri Jul 04, 2014 8:12 am

http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?st ... 0225130728

National Anarchists: Rebranding Fascism

December 20 2008


By Spencer Sunshine
Public Eye Magazine
Vol. 23, No. 4


Image

On September 8, 2007 in Sydney, Australia, the anti globalization movement mobilized once again against neoliberal economic policies, this time to oppose the APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation) summit. Just as during the protests against the World Trade Organization in Seattle, Washington, in1999, the streets were filled with an array of groups, such as environmentalists, socialists, and human rights advocates. And also just like in Seattle, there was a "Black Bloc"—a group of militant activists, usually left-wing anarchists, who wore masks and dressed all in black.

In Sydney, the Black Bloc assembled and hoisted banners proclaiming "Globalization is Genocide." But when fellow demonstrators looked closely, they realized these Black Bloc marchers were "National- Anarchists"—local fascists dressed as anarchists who were infiltrating the demonstration. The police had to protect the interlopers from being expelled by irate activists.

Since then, the National Anarchists have joined other marches in Australia and in the United States; in April 2008, they protested on behalf of Tibet against the Chinese government during the Olympic torch relay in both Canberra, Australia, and San Francisco. In September, U.S. National Anarchists protested the Folsom Street Fair, an annual gay "leather" event held in San Francisco.

While these may seem like isolated incidents of quirky subterfuge, these quasi anarchists are an international export of a new version of fascism that represent a significant shift in the trends and ideology of the movement. National Anarchists have adherents in Australia, Great Britain, the United States, and throughout continental Europe, and in turn are part of a larger trend of fascists who appropriate elements of the radical Left. Like "Autonomous Nationalists" in Germany and the genteel intellectual fascism of the European New Right, the National Anarchists appropriate leftist ideas and symbols, and use them to obscure their core fascist values. The National Anarchists, for example, denounce the centralized state, capitalism, and globalization — but in its place they seek to establish a system of ethnically pure villages.

In 1990, Chip Berlet showed in Right Woos Left how the extreme Right in the United States has made numerous overtures to the Left. "The fascist Right has wooed the progressive Left primarily around opposition to such issues as the use of U.S. troops in foreign military interventions, support for Israel, the problems of CIA misconduct and covert action, domestic government repression, privacy rights, and civil liberties."1 More recently, the fascist Right has also tried to build alliances based on concern for the environment, hard-line anti-Zionism, and opposition to globalization.

Fascism has become increasingly international in the post World War II period, particularly with the rise of the internet. One of the most obvious results of this internationalization is the continual flow of European ideas to the United States; for example, the Nazi skinhead movement originated in Britain and quickly spread to the United States. In trade, Americans have exported the Ku Klux Klan to Europe and smuggled Holocaust denial and neo Nazi literature into Germany.2

The National Anarchist idea has spread around the world over the internet. The United States hosts only a few web sites, but the trend so far has been towards a steady increase. But it represents what many see as the potential new face of fascism. By adopting selected symbols, slogans and stances of the left wing anarchist movement in particular, this new form of postwar fascism (like the European New Right) hopes to avoid the stigma of the older tradition, while injecting its core fascist values into the newer movement of anti-globalization activists and related decentralized political groups. Simultaneously, National Anarchists hope to draw members (such as reactionary counter culturalists and British National Party members) away from traditional White Nationalist groups to their own blend of what they claim is "neither left nor right."3

Despite this claim, National Anarchist ideology is centered directly on what scholar Roger Griffin defines as the core of fascism: "palingenetic populist ultranationalism." "Palingenetic," he says, is a "generic term for the vision of a radically new beginning which follows a period of destruction or perceived dissolution." Palingenetic ultranationalism therefore is "one whose mobilizing vision is that of the national community rising phoenix like after a period of encroaching decadence which all but destroyed it." 4

For the National Anarchists, this "ultranationalism" is also their main ideological innovation: a desire to create a stateless (and hence "anarchist") system of ethnically pure villages. Troy Southgate, their leading ideologue, says "we just want to stress that National Anarchism is an essential racialist phenomenon. That’s what makes it different." 5

Why should we pay attention to such new forms of fascism? There is no immediate threat of fascism taking power in the established western liberal democracies; the rise to power of Mussolini and Hitler in the 1920s and 1930s occurred in a different era and under different social conditions than those that exist today. Nonetheless, much is at stake.

These new permutations have the potential of playing havoc on social movements, drawing activists out from the Left into the Right. For example, when the Soviet Union collapsed, a number of non-Communist left wing groups suddenly emerged in Russia offering the promise of a more egalitarian society sans dictatorship. However, the group that became dominant was the National Bolsheviks, who are probably the most successful contemporary Third Position fascist group (see glossary). Catching the imagination of disaffected youth by taking up many left wing stances and engaging in direct action, they successfully obliterated their rivals by absorbing their demographic base en masse. The leftwing groups disappeared and the National Bolsheviks remain a powerful political movement today with a huge grassroots and youth base. As they grow older, they will remain influential in Russian politics for decades.

Even when small, Jeffrey Bale suggests it is important to pay attention to these fascist sects because they can serve as transmission belts for unconventional political ideas, influence more mainstream groups, and link up into transnational networks.

Over the years, the anti-globalization movement has also created an opening for these Left Right alliances. The Dutch antiracist group DeFabel van de illegal pulled out of the anti-globalization movement in 1998 because of its links with far right forces. Pat Buchanan, the paleo-conservative politician who holds racist and anti-Semitic views, spoke on a Teamsters Union platform during the demonstrations against the IMF/ World Bank in Washington D.C. in April 2000.7 Meanwhile, racists like Louis Beam (who has worked with the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and Aryan Nations) and Matt Hale (of the World Church of the Creator) praised the Seattle demonstrations against the World Trade Organization in 1999.8

At the same time, parts of the anti-imperialist Left (including many anarchists) have built alliances with reactionary Islamist movements such as Hamas and Hezbollah, called for open acceptance of anti-Semitism, and embraced nationalist Artist’s rendering by Debbie Hird struggles.9 This history prompts many cosmopolitan anarchists to worry that the overtures of new-style fascists to radical Leftists could meet with some success.

Sect History and Strategy

The National Anarchists have their origin in the National Front, a far right British party with an impressive 1977 dark horse electoral success based on their xenophobic anti-immigrant platform. After the election, the group fractured into many internal factions before splintering into different sects. Troy Southgate, the main English language National Anarchist ideologue, is a veteran of this internecine maze. He joined the National Front in 1984, and subsequently joined a splinter group that eventually split again before becoming the National Revolutionary Faction (NRF), a small cadre organization openly calling for armed guerilla warfare.10

In the late 1990s however, the NRF started to morph into the National Anarchist movement; the two were referred to interchangeably for a number of years, until the NRF disbanded in 2003.11 Southgate’s ideology does not seem to have changed substantially with the shift, and he continues to circulate his NRF era essays.

The NRF’s only known public action as "National Anarchists" was to hold an Anarchist Heretics Fair in October 2000, in which a number of fringe of the fringe groups participated. However, when they attempted a second fair, a variety of anarchists and anti-fascists blocked it from being held. After the same thing happened in 2001, Southgate and the NRF abandoned this strategy and retreated to purely internet based propaganda.12

The fair reflected Southgate’s adaptation of the Trotskyist practice of entrism — the strategy of entering other political groups in order to either take them over or break off with a part of their membership.13 Southgate argues, "The NRF uses cadre activists to infiltrate political groups, institutions and services... It is part of our strategy to do this work and, if we are to have any success in the future, it is work that must be done on an increasing basis."14 He claims that the NRF infiltrated the 1999 Stop the City demonstration and the 2000 May Day protest, as well as activities of the Hunt Saboteurs Association and the Animal Liberation Front.15

Beyond its tactical uses, entrism is a philosophy for the National Anarchists as they recruit members from the Left and in particular anarchist groups. Instead of simply calling themselves "racist communitarians," they purposely adopt the label "anarchist" and specifically appropriate anarchist imagery. Examples include the use of a purple star (anarchists typically use either a black star, or a half black star, with the other half designating their specific tendency, i.e., red for unionists, green for environmentalists, etc.), or a red and black star superimposed with a Celtic cross (the latter being a typical symbol of White Nationalists). The allied New Right factions in Australia and the UK also use the "chaos symbol" —an eight pointed star —which they adapt from leftwing counter cultural anarchists.

The fascist use of the "black bloc" political formation at demonstrations is also an appropriation of anarchist and far left forms. In recent years, German fascists calling themselves Autonomous Nationalists have marched in large black blocs, waving black flags (a symbol of traditional anarchism), and even appropriated the symbolism of the German antifascist groupings.16

As far back as 1984, Pierre André Taguieff, an expert on the European New Right, condemned the "tactic of ideological scrambling systematically deployed by GRECE," a rightwing think tank that embraced some leftist critiques of advanced capitalism while promoting core fascist ideas.17 Here we see that ideological scrambling deployed on a grassroots level.

It needs to be stressed that, despite the name, National Anarchists have not emerged from inside the anarchist movement, and, intellectually, their origins are not based in its ideas. Anarchists typically see themselves as part of a cosmopolitan and explicitly antinationalist leftwing movement which seeks to dismantle both capitalism and the centralized state. They seek instead to replace them with decentralized, non-hierarchical, and self-regulating communities. Although similar to Marxists, anarchists are just as adamant in their opposition to racism, sexism, and homophobia as they are to capitalism. In the United States, anarchists were key players in the formation of labor unions, were the only political faction to support gay rights before World War I, were leaders in the free speech movement, and were active in helping to legalize birth control. The White Nationalists’ embrace of the anarchist label and symbolism is more than little ironic, since anarchists have a long history of physically disrupting White Nationalist events, for instance by groups like Anti Racist Action. Anarchist military units were even formed to fight Franco in Spain and Mussolini in Italy.

The Question of "Fascism"

The National Anarchists claim they are not "fascist." Still, Troy Southgate looks to lesser known fascists such as Romanian Iron Guard leader Corneliu Codreanu, and lesser light Nazis like Otto Strasser and Walter Darré. Part of Southgate’s sleight of hand is to claim to be ‘against fascism’ by claiming he is socialist (as did Nazis such as Strasser) and by supporting political decentralization (as do contemporary European fascists such as Alainde Benoist). Sometimes he proclaims fascism to be equivalent to the capitalism he opposes, or promoting a centralized state, which he also opposes.

Southgate is undoubtedly sincere in his aversion to the classical fascism of Hitler and Mussolini, and has cited this as a reason for his break from one of the National Front splinter groups. He sees the old fascism as discredited, and an abandonment of the true values of revolutionary nationalism. But his ultimate goal, shared with the European New Right, is to create a new form of fascism, with the same core values of are vitalized community that withstands the decadence of cosmopolitan liberal capitalism. This cannot be done as long as his views are linked in the popular mind to the older tradition.

Third Position

One of the two main influences on National-Anarchists is a minor current of fascism called Third Position. The origins of Third Position are in National Bolshevism, which originally referred to Communists who sought a national (rather than international) revolution. It soon came to refer to Nazis who sought an alliance with the Soviet Union. The most important of these was "left-wing Nazi " Otto Strasser, a former Socialist who advocated land redistribution and nationalization of industry. After criticizing Hitler for allying with banking interests, he was expelled from the party. His brother, Gregor Strasser, held similar views but remained a Nazi until 1934, when other Nazis killed him in the Night of the Long Knives.

A number of postwar fascists continued this train of thought, including Francis Parker Yockey and Jean-François Thiriart. 18 They saw the United States and liberal capitalism as the primary enemy, sought an alliance with the Soviet Union, and promoted solidarity with Third World revolutionary movements, including Communist revolutions in Asia and Latin American, and Arab anti-Zionists (particularly those with whom they shared anti-Semitic views). Thiriat’s followers in Italy formed a sect of "Nazi-Maoists" based on these principles, and after a gruesome August 1980 bombing in Bologna which killed 85 people, 40 Italian fascists fled to England, including Robert Fiore.

Fiore was sheltered by National Front member Michael Walker, editor of the Scorpion.19 This paper subsequently spread Third Position and New Right ideas into Britain’s National Front, and Troy Southgate openly credits it as a major influence.20 Third Position ideas also spread through the National Front via the magazine Rising.21 After a 1986 split, this new influence resulted in a reconfiguration of the party’s politics. Prominent members visited Qadafi’s Libya, praised Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini and forged links with the Nation of Islam in the United States.

Southgate claims to have abandoned Third Position fascism. 22 This is a duplicitous claim. He has rejected a centralized state, and therefore its ability to nationalize industry or create an "ethnostate." Nonetheless, National-Anarchists retain the two main philosophical threads of Third Position. The first is the notion of a racist socialism, as a third option between both capitalism and left-wing socialism like Marxismor traditional anarchism.23 The second is the stress on a strategic and conceptual alliance of nationalists (especially in the Third World) against the United States. Just as the National Front praised the Nation of Islam and Qadafi, the National-Anarchists praise Black and Asianracial separatist groups, and support movements for national self-determination, such as the Tibetan independence movement. Unlike many White Nationalists (such as the British National Party), National-Anarchists are pro-Islamist —but only "if they are prepared to confine their struggle to traditionally Islamic areas of the world."24

As Chip Berlet and Matthew Lyons note, Third Position fascism influenced U.S. groups such as the White Aryan Resistance (WAR), the American Front and the National Alliance; Christian Identity pastor Bob Miles also held similar views.25 Often overlooked by commentators is the American Front’s affiliation with Southgate’s NRF, which he boasted of for years.26 Like the National Front, U.S. fascists Tom Metzger and Lyndon LaRouche also forged ties with the Nation of Islam.27 More recently, the National Alliance has incorporated Third Position politics. They attempted to cross-recruit left-wing activists by launching a fake anti-globalization website, and, in August 2002, held a Palestine Solidarity rally in Washington D.C.28

An early attempt to directly transplant National-Anarchist ideology to the United States was made by political provocateur Bill White. Starting his political odyssey as a left-wing anarchist, White briefly adopted a National-Anarchist stance at the height of the anti-globalization movement. He penned an infamous article for Pravda online in November 2001, which falsely claimed that National-Anarchists were part of anarchist black blocs.29 Later White linked up with the National Alliance before embracing the undiluted Nazism of the National Socialist Movement.

Currently there are two U.S. websites directly affiliated with the National-Anarchists. 30 One is the work of a prolific Christian ex-Nazi skinhead, while the Bay Area site has established a regional "network." It is this small group that claims to have taken part in demonstrations for Tibetan independence and protests against the Folsom Street Fair.

Additionally, as an identity within the White Nationalist scene, National-Anarchists continue to attract a number of followers in the United States. For example, one of the early collaborators of the Oregon- based magazine Green Anarchy affiliated with their perspective.31 U.S. National-Anarchists also frequently enter into discussions on Stormfront, the main internet gathering place for White Nationalists. There they defend their racial-separatist and anti-Semitic credentials to traditional fascists, many of whom look upon Third Position politics with skepticism, if not outright hostility. Apparently hearing White Nationalists promoting Islamist, Communist, and anarchist thinkers is as difficult for some of the Right to digest as it is for the Left.

Benoist and the European New Right

Besides Third Position fascism, the other major ideological influence on the National-Anarchists is the European New Right, especially the thinker Alainde Benoist. National-Anarchists have adopted his ideas about race, political decentralization, and the "right to difference."

Benoist founded the think-tank GRECE, and has spent his life creating an intellectually respectable edifice for a core of fascist ideas. Like Southgate, Benoist loudly proclaims that he is not a fascist, but scholars such as Roger Griffin disagree. Griffin says that the New Right "could by the end of the 1980s be credited with the not inconsiderable achievement of having carried out a ‘makeover’ of classic fascist discourse so successfully that, at least on the surface it was changed beyond recognition." 32

Benoist extended the notion of an alliance of European nations with the Third World against their main enemies: the United States, liberalism, and capitalism. But against the fascists who desired a united Europe under a super-state, Benoist instead calls for radical federalism and the political decentralization of Europe. Roger Griffin describes this vision as:

The pluralistic, multicultural society of liberal democracy was to give way, not to a culturally coordinated, charismatic, and, in the case of Nazism, racially pure, national community coterminous with the nation-state, but to an alliance of homogeneous ethnic-cultural communities (ethnies) within the framework of a federalist European "empire."33

Benoist also incorporates many sophisticated left-wing critiques, sometimes sounding like a Frankfurt School Marxist. Today he denounces capitalism, imperialism, liberalism, the consumer society, Christianity, universalism, and egalitarianism; he defends paganism, "organic democracy," and the Third World. He questions the role of unbridled technology and supports environmentalism and a kind of feminism.34 He also rejects biological determinism and embraces a notion of race that is cultural.35 Southgate follows practically all of these positions, which are not necessarily present in Third Position.

Because of these views, the European New Right is very different from the U.S. New Right, whose Christianity and free market views are anathema to the Europeans. The Europeans are closer to the paleo-conservative tradition in the United States, and connect with The Rockford Institute, publisher of Chronicles.

Benoists’s main intellectual formulation is the "right to difference," which upholds the cultural homogeneity and separateness of distinct ethnic-cultural groups. In this sense, he extends the anti-imperialist Left’s idea of "national self-determination" to micro-national European groupings (sometimes called "the Europe of a Hundred Flags"). The "right to difference" has influenced the anti-immigrant policies of Jean-Marie Le Pen’s National Front in France, and a number of GRECE members joined this party, even though Benoist himself rejects Le Pen.36

Benoist has also influenced U.S. White separatism. Usually based around the demand for a separate White nation in parts of Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming, this became a popular idea in White Nationalist circles starting in the early 1980s.37 This decentralized regional perspective was matched by decentralized organizational schemas which emerged at the same time. Louis Beam advocated "leaderless resistance," and the "lone wolf" strategy for far-right terrorism 38, while Christian Identity Pastor Bob Miles started referring himself as a "klanarchist."

Inverting language, Benoist claims that he is an antiracist. Racism, he argues, is a function of universalistic ideologies like liberalism and Marxism, which purportedly wipe out regional and ethnic identities. He says "Racism is nothing but the denial of difference."39 But Taguieff, a keen observer of the European Right, identifies a "phobia of mixing" at the core of this form of racism. It is part of the "softer, new, and euphemistic forms of racism praising difference (heterophilia) and substituting ‘culture’ for ‘race.’"40

The influence of these New Right ideas on the National-Anarchists is explicit. In Australia, the National-Anarchist group is for all practical reasons coextensive with "New Right Australia/New Zealand" and at one point they claimed that "New Right is the theory, National-Anarchism the practice."41 In Britain, Troy Southgate has been involved in New Right meetings since 2005.42 But while Benoist claims that he does not hate immigrants, repudiates anti-Semitism, and endorses feminism, the National Anarchists show what New Right ideas look like in practice: crude racial separatism, open anti-Semitism, homophobia, and antifeminism. The "right to difference" becomes separate ethnic villages.

The New Right also has had a limited influence on elements of the Left intelligentsia. In the United States, the influential journal Telos (known for disseminating Western Marxist texts into English) moved rightward in the 1990s as its editor showed sympathy for Europe’s New Right and published Benoist’s works.43 It continues to publish Benoist, and explores the thought of Nazi legal theorist Carl Schmitt. Many Leftists now consider the once venerable journal anathema.44

Richard Hunt

Although Benoist advocates decentralized federalist political structures, the Australian National- Anarchists make clear that he does not go so far as to advocate anarchism itself.45 Instead the claim to "anarchism" apparently stems from Richard Hunt’s notion of "villages." Originally an editor at the British magazine Green Anarchist, which advocated an intensely anti-industrial environmental ethic, Hunt was expelled from the editorial collective for his right-wing views before founding Green Alternative, which is seen as an "ecofascist" publication.

Hunt adopted an apocalyptic, Mad Maxesque vision of a post-industrial society. Southgate comments that "to say that we have been hugely influenced by Richard Hunt’s ideas is an understatement," and Southgate took over the editorial helm of Hunt’s magazine when he fell ill.46

Hunt’s critique also reverberated with the environmental strain of classical fascism, such as the views of Hitler’s agriculture minister Walter Darré. Southgate openly gushes over Darré’s "Blood and Soil" ideology in one article47 while white-washing him in another, referring to him merely as a "nationalist ecologist."48 Many other contemporary fascist groups, especially WAR in the United States, also embrace environmentalism.

Homophobia, Antisemitism, Antifeminism

The National-Anarchists are quite open about their antifeminism and desire to exile queer people into separate spaces, but tend to hide their deeply anti-Semitic worldview. Troy Southgate says of feminism, "Feminism is dangerous and unnatural… because it ignores the complimentary relationship between the sexes and encourages women to rebel against their inherent feminine instincts."49

The stance on homophobia is more interesting. Southgate said:

Homosexuality is contrary to the Natural Order because sodomy is quite undeniably an unnatural act. Groups such as Outrage are not campaigning for love between males — which has always existed in a brotherly or fatherly form — but have created a vast cult which has led to a rise in cottaging, male-rape and child sex attacks… But we are not trying to stop homosexuals engaging in this kind of activity like the Christian moralists or bigoted denizens of censorship are doing, on the contrary, as long as this behaviour does not affect the forthcoming National-Anarchist communities then we have no interest in what people get up to elsewhere.50

What this means in his schema is that queer people will be given their own separate "villages." The recent National-Anarchist demonstrations in San Francisco were against two majority-queer events, the Folsom Street Fair and the related fair Up Your Alley. Their orchestrator, "Andy," declares that he is a "racist" who hates queer people.

Andy also denies the charge of anti-Semitism against National-Anarchists, claiming that they merely engage in a "continuous criticism of Israel and its supporters," 51 as do the majority of Leftists and anarchists. Once again, this is a typical disingenuous attempt by National-Anarchists to duck criticism. Anti-Semitism is an important element of the political world views of Southgate and Herferth.

Southgate actively promotes the work of Holocaust deniers, including the Institute for Historical Review, and holds party line anti-Semitic beliefs about the role of the international Jewish conspiracy. As a dodge, he sometimes uses the euphemism "Zionist"; for instance, he says "Zionists are well known for their cosmopolitan perspective upon life, not least because those who rally to this nefarious cause have no organic roots of their own."52 In another interview he says that, "there is no question that the world is being ruthlessly directed (but perhaps not completely controlled) by International Zionism. This has been achieved through the rise of the usurious banking system."53 And he describes the Protocols of the Elders of Zion (a forgery which is the world’s most popular anti-Semitic text) as a book which "although still unproven, accords with the main events in modern world history."54

Meanwhile, his Australian counterpart Welf Herferth is even more explicit in his neo-Nazi anti-Semitic views. In one speech, he describes the Holocaust as an "extrapolation" that "has been an enormously profitable one for the Jews, and one which has brought post-war Germany and Europe to its knees," before referring to Israel as "the most powerful state in the Westernworld." Herferth concludes that "by liberating Germany from the bondage to Israel and restructuring a new Germany on the basis of a new ‘volksgemeinschaft,’ the German nationalists will liberate Europe, and the West as well."55

Conclusion

Recently new groups of National-Anarchists, recruited through Southgate’s internet activism, have made the leap from contemplating their idiosyncratic ideas on the internet into making them the basis of really-existing politics, by joining demonstrations in Australia and San Francisco. Web pages and blogs continue to pop up in different countries and languages.

The danger National-Anarchists represent is not in their marginal political strength, but in their potential to show an innovative way that fascist groups can rebrand themselves and reset their project on a new footing. They have abandoned many traditional fascist practices—including the use of overt neo-Nazi references, and recruiting from the violent skinhead culture. In its place they offer a more toned down, sophisticated approach… Their cultural references are the neo-folk and gothic music scene, which puts on an air of sophistication, as opposed to the crude skinhead subculture. National Anarchists abandon any obvious references to the Hitler or Mussolini’s fascist regimes, often claiming not to be "fascist" at all.

Like the European New Right, the National-Anarchists adapt a sophisticated left-wing critique of problems with contemporary society, and draw their symbols and cultural orientation from the Left; then they offer racial separatism as the answer to these problems. They are attempting to use this new form to avoid the stigma of the old discredited fascism, and if they are successful like the National Bolsheviks have been in Russia, they will breathe new life into their movement. Even if the results are modest, this can disrupt left-wing social movements and their focus on social justice and egalitarianism; and instead spread elitist ideas based on racism, homophobia, anti-Semitism and anti-feminism amongst grassroots activists.



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