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6 votes
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Number of people killed in deadly attacks in the post-9/11 era, by ideology
9 votes -
Endnote 2: White Fascism
3 votes -
AfD official fired after saying migrants ‘could be shot or gassed’, German media reports
8 votes -
The system failed the test of Trump: The story of the recent years is of institutions that were unable to constrain the presidency
8 votes -
During Michigan's COVID-19 response, anti-social distancing protests were promoted by a small set of activists linked to the 2012-era, anti-union so-called "right-to-work" movement
8 votes -
The prophecies of Q: American conspiracy theories are entering a dangerous new phase
6 votes -
The paranoid style in American politics: It had been around a long time before the Radical Right discovered it (1964)
5 votes -
The normalization of far-right populism in Europe
8 votes -
The far-right Bolsonaro movement wants us dead. But we will not give up
12 votes -
Leader of US nazi terror group "The Base" revealed
8 votes -
With neither tyrants nor fascists: An anarchist analysis of the growing fight against anti-gun legislation in Virginia
12 votes -
The Danish centre-left aped the far right to win an election – there's a better way to deal with people's fears
9 votes -
Undercover in Patriot Prayer: Insights from a Vancouver Democrat who's been working against the far-right group from the inside
11 votes -
Noam Chomsky: Trump is consolidating far-right power globally
16 votes -
Why has India embraced the far-right?
12 votes -
Conservatism’s Austrian wunderkind is getting swallowed by the far-right
12 votes -
How Brazil and South Africa became the world's most populist countries
7 votes -
Revealed: The Donald Trump-linked ‘Super PAC’ working behind the scenes to drive Europe’s voters to the far right
12 votes -
The decline of the low countries
7 votes -
The Neoreactionary movement - The alternative alt-right
Someone posted an article on a subreddit I frequent. It was an extremely long and rambling hit piece against antifacism, littered with long academic words, written for a completely fake Sociology...
Someone posted an article on a subreddit I frequent. It was an extremely long and rambling hit piece against antifacism, littered with long academic words, written for a completely fake Sociology college in London. While checking the source's reputability, I found out that it's part of what is known as the Neoreactionary movement.
Here's an article about it: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/02/behind-the-internets-dark-anti-democracy-movement/516243/
Here's a more "fun" write-up from RationalWiki: https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Neoreactionary_movement
It's the most bizarre thing. They are basically a pseudointellectual alt-right who quite literally advocate for a monarchy. They are very secretive of their identities and write contrived "theses" under pen names (which, strangely enough, seem to be stolen from actual published academics both living and dead). They think they are a secret society attempting to overthrow existing governments, but in reality they are little more than a collection of fanfic authors.
Has anyone else come into contact with any of them? I am particularly interested if any of our Reddit moderators have anything to say.
19 votes -
How a Slovakian neo-Nazi got elected. In 2013, Marian Kotleba won a shock victory in regional elections. Four years later, he was voted out in a landslide. But now he’s running for president.
6 votes -
How the UN migration pact got trolled
5 votes -
Revealed: The hidden global network behind Tommy Robinson
9 votes -
Martin Sellner: The new face of the far right in Europe
13 votes -
Germany ousts spymaster over far-right violence row
10 votes -
The rise of Brazil’s far‑right
9 votes -
Fascist activists have spent the last year trying to win over police
17 votes