Gun laws in USA??
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Pies4shaw
pies4shaw
Joined: 08 Oct 2007
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Wokko wrote: | The hard right movement largely grew under Obama as a backlash to extreme leftist ideology |
When did you start doing stand up? |
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David
I dare you to try
Joined: 27 Jul 2003 Location: Andromeda
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Here's an almost direct rebuttal of some of the claims in this thread:
https://www.crikey.com.au/2019/08/08/el-paso-white-supremacist-violence/
Quote: | After El Paso, conservatives must disown white supremacist terror
Guy Rundle
Utoya… Christchurch… El Paso… that shrieking sound is the strings tightening, to snapping point. Three major white supremacist massacres, with a number of “smaller” ones, attacks on churches and synagogues, interspersed. As violent Islamic extremism has been contained and demobilised in the West — although it may be a pause, rather than a cease — hard-right white terrorism has become patterned and regularised.
Anders Breivik and the killers that have followed him have, at some point, made the decision to be lethal, but have deliberately distanced themselves from groups they’ve been involved in, in order to be more effective. Thus they look like loners, and can be written off as such, when they are in fact one-man cells: the ultra-violent wing of the broader political right, owned by it, and in dialogue with it.
The right should own up to that, and start to deal with their own garbage. Instead, they’re making every spurious bad argument they can, to separate themselves from what is an extreme expression of their movement.
First bad argument: the mental illness excuse, that anyone willing to kill multiple strangers is crazy by definition. That ignores the fact that civilian-directed lethal terrorism has been a tool, possibly the tool, of politics in the 20th century, applied by every side. White solo-cell terror is in that tradition. Breivik’s aim was to open a war against “cultural marxism”. Brenton Tarrant’s aim was to focus that war on Muslims in the West and turn out new cells. Patrick Crusius’ was to transform a porous border town of low violence into a racial war zone. They’ve all succeeded to a degree. They’ve all refined their predecessors’ methods. Their allegedly “rambling” manifestos are clear and effective propaganda. They are ruthless, bloodthirsty, but rational actors towards an end.
The second spurious line of defence: that the left is violent too. This has become truly pathetic. As the body count has mounted from solo killers with de-facto machine guns, the right looks for a stray punch-on by a couple of Antifa squaddies and exaggerates attacks.
One example is the entirely fictional suggestion that Portland right-wing journalist Andy Ngo had been attacked with liquid cement — he was hit with coconut milk. Those in the right-wing media promote the suggestion that the silly practice of “milkshaking” is somehow equivalent to suicide bombing. What’s remarkable is not any left violence, but the lack of it. In a multi-branching global movement with no central command, or even line, no group has yet fallen to the temptation of targeted, systemic lethal violence against the right.
The third prevarication? Because these killers make the occasional statement about environmental destruction, they’re eco-terrorists. No they’re not. If they were eco-terrorists, they’d kill indiscriminately, targeting people. They target leftists, Muslims, brown and black people, and Jewish people (portrayed as the puppet-masters of anti-elite forces).
Fourth and finally? This is “identitarian” violence, the right say. Yes it is. It’s right, white identitarian violence, following on from the identitarian violence of radical Islamism, which shares the white right’s social conservatism. What we don’t have is mass killings of the right or conservatives by LGBTQ terror groups or a lethal black supremacist movement.
Increasingly desperate, the right has tried to make the Dayton shooting — the day after El Paso, by a 21-year-old expelled from school for rape and death threats — a political event. This is because the shooter had made some pro-left, pro-antifa online comments (as well as a host of “incel” material). But he shot up a bar of random strangers (and his sister). It was a standard random/family killing, apple-pie American, with zero real political content.
It’s not the identitarianism that marks out political killings; it’s, as I may have mentioned, that they’re on the right.
It’s the right. It’s the right. These deliberate killers are theirs. They own them. For more than a decade now, the mainstream right have been pumping out “enemy within” politics directed at anyone with a mildly progressive agenda. They have spruiked racialised crime panics, and the “white replacement” arguments which — rather than fantastic neo-Nazi white supremacism — is motivating killers like Tarrant and Crusius. The outer-reaches of such commentary has connected with an actively violent subculture.
Really, there’s plenty of right-wing terrorists of yore to compare it to: Italian neo-fascists, Latin American death squads, Ulster sectarian killers. But let’s make it crystal clear by comparing it to the radical left terror of the ’70s. In that sorry episode, theories of imperialism, the state and the media as repressive institutions became crudified, and then, for a tiny minority, licensed a “strategy of tension” — the idea that a few atrocities would cause greater state repression, leading to increased working-class and other militancy. The proposition that such analysis licensed arbitrary lethal violence was condemned by the broader radical left of the time. It’s time the mainstream conservative right did the same now.
That most likely won’t happen, because the symmetry is limited. The left remains a rational movement, for all its missteps. The right we have today is a meltdown, an enraged shriek at the world coming into being, and a retreat into fantasy. Right-wing violent terror is disavowed — not disowned or condemned — by the right-wing establishment, but a “middle group” of people get satisfaction from it, and are happy to condone the strategy of tension that it expresses.
But that’s the thing about a strategy of tension. It tightens both ways. The lack of fragmentation on the left regarding targeted violence has been extraordinary, given the provocations. The more the right foment right-wing violence by omission or commission, the more likely they make the break-off of groups willing to renounce any implicit ban on violence.
Milkshakes is leftist violence, but machine-gunning Latino people in a Walmart is identity politics/craziness/eco-warriordom? Keep it up folks and it will snap, not in the direction intended. |
_________________ All watched over by machines of loving grace |
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stui magpie
Prepare for the worst, hope for the best.
Joined: 03 May 2005 Location: In flagrante delicto
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Interesting article.
A couple of points resonate with me.
1. He says the Right must own these people, and he compares them to Islamic extremists, but the opposite argument was applied to Muslims owning Islamic Extremists.
2. He argues that "The Left remains a rational movement" when it has always been based on ideology and emotive concepts with rationality applied as a veneer
3. He referred to el Paso as a "Porous" town. For some reason having been there, I take that as an insult although I'm unclear what he meant by that description so it may not be.
Otherwise, it's a reasonable bake. The percentage of white, male, right wing people who are white supremacists capable of this sort of stuff would likely be similar or less than the number of Muslims who are extremists capable of terrorist actions. By all means in both cases preventative steps need to be taken _________________ Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down. |
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watt price tully
Joined: 15 May 2007
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stui magpie wrote: | Interesting article.
A couple of points resonate with me.
1. He says the Right must own these people, and he compares them to Islamic extremists, but the opposite argument was applied to Muslims owning Islamic Extremists.
2. He argues that "The Left remains a rational movement" when it has always been based on ideology and emotive concepts with rationality applied as a veneer
3. He referred to el Paso as a "Porous" town. For some reason having been there, I take that as an insult although I'm unclear what he meant by that description so it may not be.
Otherwise, it's a reasonable bake. The percentage of white, male, right wing people who are white supremacists capable of this sort of stuff would likely be similar or less than the number of Muslims who are extremists capable of terrorist actions. By all means in both cases preventative steps need to be taken |
You should reading the article David posted by Guy Rundle _________________ “I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman |
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thesoretoothsayer
Joined: 26 Apr 2017
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Quote: | 1. He says the Right must own these people, and he compares them to Islamic extremists, but the opposite argument was applied to Muslims owning Islamic Extremists. |
Good point. The eternal double-standard of the political zealot. |
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Skids
Quitting drinking will be one of the best choices you make in your life.
Joined: 11 Sep 2007 Location: Joined 3/6/02 . Member #175
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Pies4shaw wrote: | Wokko wrote: | The hard right movement largely grew under Obama as a backlash to extreme leftist ideology |
When did you start doing stand up? |
For someone who; beats his own drum, blows his own trumpet and has more tickets on himself than Shane Warne, you still struggle to grasp facts. Very intriguing. _________________ Don't count the days, make the days count. |
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watt price tully
Joined: 15 May 2007
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Wokko
Come and take it.
Joined: 04 Oct 2005
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If I posted "Another Arab Muslim murders again" I'd be banned in a heartbeat. Your racism is disgusting. |
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watt price tully
Joined: 15 May 2007
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Wokko wrote: |
If I posted "Another Arab Muslim murders again" I'd be banned in a heartbeat. Your racism is disgusting. |
Rubbish and you know it is. Need to stop burying your head in the sand. There's a huge problem for the right in the West and that is racist white males being enabled and embloldened by fellow travellers. Don't tell me your're feeling a tad guilty?
Further to white right racist males feeling emboldened and empowered we don't need to look too far. In fact in our own backyards there is an upsurge (I don't know if I necessarily agree with the suugested prescription) however:
https://www.theage.com.au/national/swastika-epidemic-has-defiled-the-streets-of-melbourne-20190809-p52fkz.html _________________ “I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman |
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thesoretoothsayer
Joined: 26 Apr 2017
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Quote: | https://www.theage.com.au/national/swastika-epidemic-has-defiled-the-streets-of-melbourne-20190809-p52fkz.html |
Given that the swastika has been used for thousands of years in Buddhist, Hindu and Chinese culture one could argue that Dr. Abramovich's desire to impose a single, western interpretation of the swastika upon all of Australia's diverse ethnic communities is perhaps a touch "white supremacist". |
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watt price tully
Joined: 15 May 2007
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thesoretoothsayer wrote: | Quote: | https://www.theage.com.au/national/swastika-epidemic-has-defiled-the-streets-of-melbourne-20190809-p52fkz.html |
Given that the swastika has been used for thousands of years in Buddhist, Hindu and Chinese culture one could argue that Dr. Abramovich's desire to impose a single, western interpretation of the swastika upon all of Australia's diverse ethnic communities is perhaps a touch "white supremacist". |
Yes indeed, all those radical Hindus in the various right-wing neo nazi groups. Blair Cotrell is a well known Hindu. Jim Saleem is known to have Buddhist tendencies. _________________ “I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman |
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Wokko
Come and take it.
Joined: 04 Oct 2005
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think positive
Side By Side
Joined: 30 Jun 2005 Location: somewhere
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watt price tully
Joined: 15 May 2007
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watt price tully
Joined: 15 May 2007
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Not sure is he’s racist and right wing but what are the odds? (That’s a rhetorical question) 😉 but very sad to occur again _________________ “I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman |
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