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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Sunday, 12 February 2017
Britain’s extremist bloggers helping the ‘alt-right’ go global, report finds
A rightwing network of British bloggers and social media activists
has emerged as an increasingly influential voice for white nationalists
and for those who oppose multiculturalism. The network is also credited
with helping propel Donald Trump to the presidency, a new report has claimed.
In its annual audit of the far right, Hope not Hate,
the UK’s largest anti-racism and anti-extremism movement, said that
although conventional far right groups such as the English Defence
League continue to fracture, new forces have surfaced that can reach a
vast international audience and bolster support. for the “alt-right”, which is defined as the far right with a fringe
“white nationalist element” that opposes multiculturalism and defends
“western values”.
Analysis of the global far right network during 2016 – a year that witnessed Brexit and a marked populist resurgence throughout
Europe and the US – identified 28 far right groups active in the UK but
also named a cohort of Britons that it said were instrumental in
propagating “alt-right” views and masterminding attacks on liberal
democracy.
“It was a year where a new far right threat became more evident, one
that played out largely on social media and to an international
audience,” the report states. “It is a threat that has been at the heart
of the global fake news phenomenon and one that can engage and mobilise
far greater numbers of people across Europe and north America.”
An example of these activities is provided by London-based Paul
Watson, described as “editor, staff writer” for the conspiracy website
InfoWars – whose most popular article on Friday morning was headlined:
“Trump destroys leftist judges.” Watson, who has 483,000 Twitter
followers and 764,872 subscribers on YouTube, is named as a central
disseminator of the conspiracy theory concerning Hillary Clinton having
debilitating health issues in the runup to the US election, including
the “Is Hillary Dying?” hoax.
Scottish Calvinist Jim Dowson set up pro-Trump websites from a hub in Hungary. Photograph: YouTube
During a series of unashamedly conspiratorial videos that were viewed
millions of times, Watson, originally from Sheffield, suggested Clinton
might have had syphilis, brain damage and Parkinson’s disease as well
as alleging she was a drug abuser. Watson’s conspiracy theories were
also taken up by Fox News, the right-leaning US broadcaster.
Another Briton said to have had an influential intervention in the US
elections is 52-year-old Jim Dowson, a Scottish Calvinist who founded the far right, anti-Muslim party Britain First.
Dowson, from a hub in Hungary, set up a network of US-focused websites
and Facebook groups with the intention of promoting Trump and
denigrating his rival during the US election.
Dowson’s websites include Patriot News Agency – whose
postings have been viewed and shared tens of thousands of times in the
US – and whose articles on Friday include a critique of a new Netflix
series which it accused of stoking anti-white racism. An investigation
by the New York Times
in December claimed that although a sizeable volume of US election fake
news emanated from central and Eastern Europe, Dowson’s operation was
the only obviously politically inspired intervention.
Among the increasingly internationalised far right movement, Dowson
is considered adept at building an online fanbase, managing to attract
1.4 million Facebook followers to Britain First. Dowson himself has
described his strategy as spreading “devastating anti-Clinton, pro-Trump
memes and sound bites into sections of the population too disillusioned
with politics to have taken any notice of conventional campaigning”.
Former BNP leader Nick Griffin was a visitor to Jim Dowson’s anti-immigrant group. Photograph: Thanassis Stavrakis/AP
According to Hope not Hate’s report, Dowson spent much of 2016
building an international network of far right parties, militia groups
and religious extremists. His anti-immigrant group Knights Templar
International opened a “branch” in Budapest, Hungary, where former BNP
leader Nick Griffin was witnessed as a frequent visitor along with known
far right faces from Sweden and the US.
Hope not hate expects Dowson’s influence to grow this year as he
fosters relationships with Russia and far-right agitators in Europe and
the US. A recent Dowson alliance involves Aleksandr Dugin,
a facist with alleged links to the Kremlin and who is understood to be
helping Dowson construct a new office in the Serb capital Belgrade that
will promote far right news sites entirely in Cyrillic script.
Nick Lowles, chief executive of Hope Not Hate, said: “The fact that a
young man sitting in a small flat in south London can create headlines
in the US or a British extremist can use the Hungarian capital as a base
to influence politics in central, eastern and southern Europe makes
monitoring and countering these groups very difficult.”
Another Briton named as a highly effective voice for the far right,
even though he has attempted to distance himself from the movement, is
Milo Yiannopoulos, technology editor of Breitbart News, the US website
which claimed to have 45 million unique readers in the weeks up to and
during the aftermath of Trump’s election.
Milo Yiannopoulos, the Breitbart technology editor who
was banned from Twitter for his role in online abuse. Photograph: Drew
Angerer/Getty Images
The former executive chairman of Breitbart News, Steve Bannon, is now Trump’s “chief strategist”, a man promoted to the National Security Council and who Time
magazine referred to last week as possibly the second most powerful man
in the world. In a speech to a conference at the Vatican in 2014,
Bannon made it a political objective to undermine liberal democracy in
Western Europe through the advancement of nationalist movements.
Yiannopoulos, banned from Twitter
in July for “inciting or engaging in the targeted abuse or harassment
of others,” reportedly recently signed a £200,000 book deal with Simon
& Schuster. The 33-year-old from Kent, recently defended by Trump as
a symbol of free speech after demonstrators violently protested against
his planned speech at the University of California, Berkeley, has more
than 525,000 fans on YouTube.
Other
key British figures include vlogger Colin Robertson, who produces white
supremacist YouTube videos from his parents’ home in West Lothian,
Scotland. Despite such humble surroundings, Robertson was invited to
speak at the notorious far right rally in
Washington DC last November that was organised by nationalist thinktank
the National Policy Institute (NPI), and where crowds chanted “Hail
Trump” and made Nazi salutes.
The 34-year-old also spoke at an inaugural meeting last year of the
rightwing Seattle Forum, a branch of a UK network which, according to
Hope not Hate, is expanding rapidly. The London Forum
held five meetings last year, the latest in September, with speakers
including Holocaust denier David Irving and US far right writer F Roger
Devlin who contributes to the white nationalist journal Occidental Quarterly.
Other Britons who addressed the NPI event in Washington included
Matthew Tait, a former British National Party organiser who organised a
series of “alt-right” socials in Holborn, London, at the end of last
year.
Another development was the government’s decision to proscribe
the neo-nazi group National Action as a terrorist organisation.
Supporters of the group celebrated the murder of the Labour MP Jo Cox
who was killed
last June by rightwing extremist Thomas Mair, 53. The authorities are
understood to have intelligence that some of its senior activists were
trying to encourage younger recruits to conduct acts of terrorism and
were required to place antisemitic stickers on Jewish buildings and
neighbourhoods as part of their initiation.
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