zweiteroktober90 – Die Gewalt der #Vereinigung – #kaltland #terror

Mit dem Online-Projekt zweiteroktober90 dokumentieren wir neonazistische Angriffe, die am 2. oder 3. Oktober 1990, also direkt vor oder an dem Tag der Vereinigung der beiden deutschen Staaten, stattgefunden haben. Mit dem Projekt möchten wir aufzeigen, dass der Tag der Vereinigung mit gewalttätigen, teils pogromartigen Ausschreitungen gegen Linke und Migrant:innen einherging, die medial und v.a. überregional wenig Erwähnung fanden und darum weitgehend unbeachtet blieben. Wir denken, dass die Beschäftigung mit diesen Angriffen dabei helfen kann, die Entwicklung der neonazistischen Gewalt in den 1990er Jahren, deren nicht nur zeitlichen Anfang sie markieren, besser zu verstehen. Darüber hinaus möchten wir den Betroffenen der Gewalt des 2. und 3. Oktober 1990 die Möglichkeit geben, nach nunmehr 30 Jahren gehört zu werden.

via zweiterolktober90: zweiteroktober90 – Die Gewalt der Vereinigung

siehe auch: Im Wendeschatten. Über 1000 Neonazis greifen geplant Linke und Migranten an. Forscher aus Jena belegen, dass die deutsche Vereinigung von pogromartigen Angriffen begleitet wurde. In der Nacht der Einheit zogen sie zur besetzten Mühle am Rande der Stadt. Alle in Zerbst wusste vorab Bescheid. Man konnte es ja sogar in der Lokalpresse lesen. «Informiert ist die Volkspolizei, daß es in der Nacht vom 2. zum 3. Oktober zu einem Zusammenstoß einer großen Anzahl rechtsgerichteter Jugendlicher aus Zerbst, Roßlau und Magdeburg mit linksgerichteten Jugendlichen aus Zerbst in der Kötschauer Mühle kommen soll», hieß es in der Volksstimme. Mindestens 200 Neonazis zogen gegen 22 Uhr zur Zerbster Mühle. Jeder mit ein bisschen Erlebnisdurst war eingeladen, dort hinzukommen und ein paar Menschen abzufackeln. Doch auch die alternativen Jugendlichen hatten sich vorbereitet. Sie hatten sonst nicht viel, also verteidigten sie ihre Mühle. Im Dunkeln fliegen Steine und Molotow-Cocktails hinab auf die anstürmenden Gestalten. Der Angriff von 200 Neonazis auf etwa ein Dutzend Jugendliche in der sachsen-anhaltinischen Kleinstadt Zerbst ist der brutalste von etlichen Übergriffen, die Forschende aus Jena zusammengetragen haben. Mit dem Online-Projekt «zweiteroktober90» dokumentieren Konstantin Behrends, Julian Kusebauch, Laura Peter und Thomas Wicher neonazistische Angriffe, die direkt vor oder am Tag der Vereinigung der beiden deutschen Staaten stattgefunden haben. «Die Gewalt zum Tag der Einheit lässt sich einordnen als ein – bisher kaum beachteter – vorläufiger Höhepunkt einer Entwicklung, die sich in den Pogromen von 1991 und 1992 vollends entfesselte», meint Behrends gegenüber «nd».

Twitter and Facebook shut down accounts linked to youth conservative group’s misleading social media campaign

Twitter and Facebook have shut down accounts on their platforms reportedly linked to a misleading social media campaign run by Turning Point Action, an offshoot of popular conservative youth activist organization Turning Point USA. The steps from the social media giants come after The Washington Post reported that Turning Point Action had paid teenagers to flood the platforms with conservative talking points, which included disinformation and misleading claims. The campaign, the Post reported, functioned like a troll farm but had evaded disruption because it was carried out by humans who used their own accounts without disclosing that they were posting on behalf of Turning Point Action. The group, whose founder Charlie Kirk spoke at the Republican National Convention last month, had produced thousands of social media posts — many that contained nearly identical content, throughout its operation in recent months, according to a review by the Post.
“It sounds like the Russians, but instead coming from Americans,” Jacob Ratkiewicz, a software engineer at Google, told the newspaper.
Facebook spokesperson Andy Stone told CNN the platform had removed multiple accounts for violating its policies on having and maintaining multiple accounts. A Twitter spokesperson confirmed multiple accounts had been removed for violations of their policies on platform manipulation and spam. Both platforms said they are continuing to review the accounts The Washington Post said were part of Turning Point Action’s campaign.
Austin Smith, the field director of Turning Point Action, explained to the Post in a statement “like everyone else, Turning Point Action’s plans for nationwide in-person events and activities were completely disrupted by the pandemic.”

via cnn: Twitter and Facebook shut down accounts linked to youth conservative group’s misleading social media campaign

Argumentationskarten gegen Rechtspopulismus | 3. Auflage

Seit die AfD auf der politischen Bühne aufgetaucht ist, haben sich die deutsche Gesellschaft und der politische Umgang verändert. Beleidigungen, Anfeindungen, auch Morddrohungen aus der extremen Rechten sind an der Tagesordnung. Viele Kommunalpolitiker*innen kennen das aus eigener, leidvoller Erfahrung. Einige haben deshalb ihre Mandate zurückgegeben, um sich und ihre Familien zu schützen. Das ist ein Angriff auf unsere Demokratie – und vor der Kommunalwahl am 13. September 2020 rückt er stärker in den Fokus. Zeit, genau hinzuschauen und die dritte überarbeitete Auflage unserer „Argumente gegen Rechtspopulismus“ zu veröffentlichen.

via dgb nrw: Argumentationskarten gegen Rechtspopulismus | 3. Auflage

Download Karten “Argumente gegen Rechtspopulismus | 3. Auflage”: DGB NRW_Argumentationskarten gegen Rechtspopulismus_III Auflage.pdf (PDF, 648 kB)
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Neo-Nazi Terror Leader Said to Have Worked With U.S. Special Forces – #terror #TheBase #RinaldoNazzaro

The leader of The Base, Rinaldo Nazzaro, worked as a private military contractor for the Pentagon in 2014, which included briefing special forces. The leader of one of the most violent neo-Nazi terror groups in decades was paid by the Pentagon and worked with U.S. special forces on targeting and counterterrorism, according to new information. VICE News has learned that the leader of The Base, 47-year-old New Jersey native Rinaldo Nazzaro, was a Pentagon contractor who in 2014 worked with Special Operations Command (SOCOM), one of the most secretive elements of the U.S. military and the tip of the spear in the war against jihadist terror groups like ISIS and al-Qaeda. A person familiar with the matter said Nazzaro, who had at least a top secret security clearance for a time, was among a group that briefed special forces officers on military targeting and counterterrorism efforts in the Middle East in 2014. (Previously, the BBC reported that Nazzaro was an FBI analyst and a Pentagon contractor.) This information matches up with details of his service that Nazzaro shared with other members of The Base in encrypted chats obtained by VICE News. “[I did] multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan over five years,” said Nazzaro in May 2019. Nazzaro said he “was a targeteer” and a “contractor,” and added that he was at Victory Base Complex, a cluster of military bases and operational buildings surrounding the Baghdad airport, and Camp Speicher in northern Iraq. “I did target packages as well,” he said, “[and] supported deliberate clearing ops.” An international terrorist leader who was once a specialist in combatting jihadist terrorism turning his expertise around and aiming it at the U.S. government speaks to the growing professionalization of the far right as it transforms into a dangerous national security threat on American soil. Nazzaro was the founder and leader of The Base, which authorities say intended to incite a “race war” through terror plots across the country. But a series of nationwide FBI raids in January, resulting in the arrest of seven of its members, narrowly thwarted chilling plots as wide ranging as an assassination, ghost-gun making, train derailments, and a mass shooting.

via vice: Neo-Nazi Terror Leader Said to Have Worked With U.S. Special Forces

siehe auch: The Base. The Base is a neo-Nazi, white-supremacist network that describes itself as an “international survivalist and self-defense network” that seeks to train their members for fighting a race war.* The network is active in North America, Europe, South Africa, and Australia. The Base is influenced by the race war called for in the book Siege by neo-Nazi James Mason. The Base is an accelerationist group that encourages the onset on anarchy so it can then “impose order from chaos.”* In a September 2018 episode of the podcast The Roper Report, Base founder Roman Wolf claimed The Base’s goal is to unite white nationalists for the coming race war that will overthrow the government and reshape society.* The Base has described itself as a “white protection league” and has organized training camps around North America for their members in weaponry and military tactics.* Wolf has called for members to focus on non-attributable actions that destabilize society. The Base has distributed to its members manuals for lone-wolf terror attacks, bomb-making, counter-surveillance, and guerilla warfare.* In November 2019, the FBI charged Base member Richard Tobin with orchestrating the vandalism of synagogues in Michigan and Wisconsin that September. Tobin told investigators that he envisioned a nationwide campaign, which he called Operation Kristallnacht after the 1938 night of pogroms against Jewish businesses in Germany that marked the beginning of the Holocaust.*
The name The Base is the English translation of al-Qaeda, though it is unclear if the link was intentional as the two networks share no other similarities. The Base heavily draws inspiration from the Atomwaffen Division (AWD) and Siege, the neo-Nazi manifesto written by James Mason that inspired Atomwaffen Division. The exact relationship between AWD and The Base remains unclear beyond inspiration.* The Base’s membership reportedly includes members of AWD and the far-right group Eco-Fascist Order.* Since the public revelation of the identities of The Base’s leadership and several high-profile arrests in January 2020, some U.S. media have claimed U.S. authorities dismantled The Base.* Also in January 2020, federal authorities arrested three men suspected of membership in The Base who were allegedly plotting to murder a couple, supposedly affiliated with the far-left antifa movement, in Bartow County, Georgia.* That same month, three suspected Base members were arrested for allegedly stockpiling weapons and training for an assault on a pro-Second Amendment rally in Virginia, reportedly in the hopes of sparking a civil war.* Despite these arrests and the revelation of The Base’s leadership, the group’s strategy of creating small, independent cells means it will likely adapt and continue.

Revealed: pro-#Trump activists plotted #violence ahead of #Portland rallies – #schauhin #terror

Patriots Coalition members suggested political assassinations and said ‘laws will be broken, people will get hurt’, leaked chats show. Leaked chat logs show Portland-area pro-Trump activists planning and training for violence, sourcing arms and ammunition and even suggesting political assassinations ahead of a series of contentious rallies in the Oregon city, including one scheduled for this weekend. The chats on the GroupMe app, shared with the Guardian by the antifascist group Eugene Antifa, show conversations between Oregon members of the Patriots Coalition growing more extreme as they discuss armed confrontations with leftwing Portland activists, and consume a steady diet of online disinformation about protests and wildfires. At times, rightwing activists discuss acts of violence at recent, contentious protests, which in some cases they were recorded carrying out. At one point, David Willis, a felon currently being sued for his alleged role in an earlier episode of political violence, joins a discussion about the use of paintballs. Where other members had previously suggested freezing the paintballs for maximum damage, Willis wrote: “They make glass breaker balls that are rubber coated metal. They also have pepper balls but they are about 3 dollars a ball. Don’t freeze paintballs it makes them wildly inaccurate” [sic.] Willis did not immediately respond to voice and text messages sent to his listed cellphone number. Another prolific poster is Mark Melchi, a 41-year-old Dallas, Oregon-based car restorer who claims to have served as a captain in the US army. Melchi has been recorded leading an armed pro-Trump militia, “1776 2.0” into downtown confrontations in Portland, including on 22 August. At several points in the chat he proposes violence in advance of those confrontations, and appears to confess to prior acts committed in the company of his paramilitary group.

via guardian: Revealed: pro-Trump activists plotted violence ahead of Portland rallies

Proud Boys Statement

Fred Perry does not support and is in no way affiliated with the Proud Boys. It is incredibly frustrating that this group has appropriated our Black/Yellow/Yellow twin tipped shirt and subverted our Laurel Wreath to their own ends. The Fred Perry shirt is a piece of British subcultural uniform, adopted by various groups of people who recognise their own values in what it stands for. We are proud of its lineage and what the Laurel Wreath has represented for over 65 years: inclusivity, diversity and independence. The Black/Yellow/Yellow twin tipped shirt has been an important part of that uniform since its introduction in the late 70s, and has been adopted generation after generation by various subcultures, without prejudice. Despite its lineage, we have seen that the Black/Yellow/Yellow twin tipped shirt is taking on a new and very different meaning in North America as a result of its association with the Proud Boys. That association is something we must do our best to end. We therefore made the decision to stop selling the Black/Yellow/Yellow twin tipped shirt in the US from September 2019, and we will not sell it there or in Canada again until we’re satisfied that its association with the Proud Boys has ended.
To be absolutely clear, if you see any Proud Boys materials or products featuring our Laurel Wreath or any Black/Yellow/Yellow related items, they have absolutely nothing to do with us, and we are working with our lawyers to pursue any unlawful use of our brand. Frankly we can’t put our disapproval in better words than our Chairman did when questioned in 2017: “Fred was the son of a working class socialist MP who became a world tennis champion at a time when tennis was an elitist sport. He started a business with a Jewish businessman from Eastern Europe. It’s a shame we even have to answer questions like this. No, we don’t support the ideals or the group that you speak of. It is counter to our beliefs and the people we work with,” John Flynn, Fred Perry Chairman 2017

via fred perry: Proud Boys Statement

https://twitter.com/jaydestro/status/1309446358336708608

Coronavirus: police break up anti-lockdown protest in London

Ten arrests and four police officers injured following clashes in Trafalgar Square. Police have broken up a protest in central London after thousands of people defied their advice and demonstrated against lockdowns, mass vaccinations, mandatory wearing of face masks and other coronavirus restrictions. The protest, organised by campaign groups including Save Our Rights UK, was called to mark six months since the passage of the Coronavirus Act, which gave the government wide-ranging powers to enact restrictions intended to curb the spread of the virus. Protesters began gathering from about midday, with the first speaker saying the demonstration was meant to to be peaceful, and that it had been negotiated beforehand with the Metropolitan police, with a full health and safety impact assessment filed in advance.

via guardian: Coronavirus: police break up anti-lockdown protest in London