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12 votes
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Denmark is planning on withholding consular assistance to its citizens who travelled abroad to fight for extremist groups
8 votes -
How compassion helped one woman leave an extremist group
9 votes -
'Where's the line of free speech – are you removing voices that should be heard?': As YouTube struggles with extreme content, Susan Wojcicki talks about her role as the internet’s gatekeeper
11 votes -
The creator of the "Upcoming Reactionary Movement Venn Diagram" explains what led to its creation on Tumblr in 2014
7 votes -
Journalists often withhold details of mass shooters and suicides to discourage copycats. Should that “strategic silence” be extended to extremist speech, misinformation, and propaganda, too?
10 votes -
YouTube said it was getting serious about hate speech. Over six weeks later, why is it still full of extremists?
23 votes -
'ContraPoints' host says YouTube algorithm isn't 'sophisticated' enough to counter extremist content
16 votes -
New generation of political exiles leave Jair Bolsonaro's Brazil 'to stay alive'
3 votes -
Germany has a terrorism problem, foreign minister says
11 votes -
How did the Dallas courthouse gunman get radicalized?
5 votes -
YouTube just banned supremacist content, and thousands of channels are about to be removed
14 votes -
What if climate change and rising nationalism both had the same solution?
11 votes -
The powerful group shaping the rise of Hindu nationalism in India
6 votes -
Does the media need to report on extremist manifestos?
6 votes -
New Zealand prime minister on mosque shooter: “You will never hear me mention his name”
12 votes -
Anti-Muslim hate speech is absolutely relentless on social media even as platforms crack down on other extremist groups
6 votes -
Why tech companies failed to keep the New Zealand shooter’s extremism from going viral
9 votes -
The dangerous spread of extremist manifestos
7 votes -
The marketplace of ideas — or how to fortify democracy
8 votes -
FBI warned US law enforcement agencies of threat posed by non-existent 'pro-choice extremists'
6 votes -
Brain scans show social exclusion creates jihadists, say researchers
7 votes -
Back from the edge: It’s easy to blame online rhetoric for violence. The reality is much harder
7 votes -
Muslim leaders say they will boycott a proposed meeting with PM Scott Morrison after he said they should do more to combat extremism
5 votes -
Gab's demise is just the beginning of a horrific new era of far-right extremism
12 votes -
Political extremists are using YouTube to monetize their toxic ideas
26 votes -
Man arrested at New Mexico compound is son of imam with possible link to 1993 World Trade Center bombing
2 votes -
"Where were you radicalized?"
In all the discussions about whether "alt-right" should be tolerated, I tripped over the curiosity rock about what causes people to form or change political beliefs, what constitutes extremism,...
In all the discussions about whether "alt-right" should be tolerated, I tripped over the curiosity rock about what causes people to form or change political beliefs, what constitutes extremism, whether or not people come to realize they hold an extreme position, and how we can restore balance.
I got caught having a bad knee-jerk reaction here, and while I don't think my conclusion was wrong, it's taking a bit of work to unpack all of the knowledge, experience, and ideological biases that underlie it.
So, Tilders, was there a formative moment in your life (or close family/friend's experience) that set you on a course to uphold and defend a particular ideology, or did your position evolve over time?
Do you feel your adherence is "radical" or "extreme", and/or have others told you that you're an extremist/radical/ideologue?
What (or who) does your position make you unable to tolerate, if anything (or kind of person)?
Has your belief changed over time, or what do you think would change it?27 votes -
The case for quarantining extremist ideas
22 votes -
John Cleese vs extremism
10 votes