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'White Lives Matter' rallies flop as hardly anyone shows up
In semi-private, encrypted chats, neo-Nazis and other far-right extremists
planned rallies in dozens of cities Sunday to promote their racist movements and spread their ideologies to larger audiences.
Hyped by organizers as events that would make “the whole world tremble,”
the rallies ran into a major problem: Hardly anyone showed up.
The “White Lives Matter” rallies, the first major real-world organizing
efforts by white supremacists since 2018, were planned on the encrypted app Telegram after many aligned groups were alleged to have taken part in the
Jan. 6 storming of the U.S Capitol.
The poor showing underscores how the country’s unpopular and disorganized
extremist movements have been driven underground by increased scrutiny from the media, law enforcement agencies and far-left activists who infiltrate
their private online spaces and disrupt their attempts to communicate and
organize.
Few “White Lives Matter” marchers showed up Sunday, but anti-racist and
anti-fascist groups gathered just the same.
In Raleigh, North Carolina, a small crowd of antifa and anti-racist
protesters gathered at the park where the “White Lives Matter” march was
planned. They marched around downtown behind a large white sign that read,
“WE ACCEPT YOUR SURRENDER.”
The lackluster events were documented by livestreams and photos posted to
Twitter.
In Philadelphia, activists tweeted photos of a counterprotest picnic with
pizza and Tastykake snacks. In New York City, over a dozen counterprotesters stood seemingly unopposed across the street from Trump Tower, where a “
White Lives Matter” rally was expected.
Police in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico, formed a circle around a lone
protester to separate him from a large crowd of counterprotesters. Three
protesters assembled around a “White Lives Matter” banner outside City
Hall in Fort Worth, Texas, where a police line separated them from a couple of dozen counterprotesters.
Hundreds of counterprotesters, bystanders and media members gathered at a
counterprotest at the scheduled start time of a “White Lives Matter” march at Huntington Beach Pier southeast of Los Angeles.
Throughout the afternoon, counterprotesters could be seen on several
livestreams chanting “Unity and community” and “Black lives matter.” A
few single protesters, one of whom wore a full hood and a T-shirt with a
white supremacist slogan, were run off by the crowd, who yelled “Go home,
Nazis!”
According to fliers for the event — which recycled images from old
propaganda from the disbanded neo-Nazi organization Vanguard America — the marches were meant to “take a stand” against the media, government and
educational institutions that are “anti-white.” The slogan “White Lives
Matter” has been promoted on fliers and banners by white supremacist groups, including neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan groups, since 2015 as “a racist
response to the Black Lives Matter movement,” according to the Anti-
Defamation League.
In 2016, “White Lives Matter” was designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Several “White Lives Matter” rallies were held that
year: Confederate flag-waving protesters gathered outside NAACP headquarters in Houston, and arrests were made in Austin, Texas, when a group of “White Lives Matter” protesters clashed with counterdemonstrators.
Sunday’s round of racist rallies seemed destined for failure, said Megan
Squire, a computer science professor at Elon University in North Carolina
who tracks online extremism.
The online organizers of the North Carolina rally were uninformed about
state law governing protests, including laws that disallowed firearms,
Squire said. The organizers were also generally inept at using Telegram,
where the event was announced, and unable to identify “obvious trolls in
their midst.”
The efforts behind Sunday’s rallies were “haphazard and ill-informed,”
Squire said. “They’re not sending their best.”
The “White Lives Matter” rallies were disrupted in several cities after
activists infiltrated their online groups and leaked internal chats to
journalists. Those chats were reported to have indicated that the events
were being planned by the extremist group the Proud Boys and by self-
described fascists and Nazis who framed the rallies as peaceful events
unaffiliated with known hate groups to recruit more mainstream members.
Organizers in several cities canceled events because of sabotage by antifa
activists. Raleigh’s organizer called off a rally Friday, telling
subscribers, “It turns out that the 11th is a disaster.”
Two of the largest Telegram channels dedicated to events in Philadelphia and New York City were shown to be traps created by an anti-fascist activist,
who posted a warning Saturday to would-be rallygoers: “Given how riddled
these chats are with antifascists ... it might be time to rethink whether
you really want to trust a bunch of anonymous internet weirdos to show up
with you in your city."
The ineptitude of organizers notwithstanding, experts say that the U.S.
extremist movement is at an inflection point and that would-be participants are discouraged by the increased negative attention and the prosecutions of members in such movements after the Capitol attack.
The white supremacist movement faced a similar reckoning in 2017 after the
“Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Instead of unifying distinct brands of white supremacist groups, the murder of counterprotester Heather Heyer and the full-throated hate on display from tiki-torch-wielding neo-Nazis invited national condemnation, legal troubles and in-group
squabbling that fractured individual organizations and the hate movement
overall.
After Charlottesville, there were “weak attempts to revisit former glory,” Squire said, recalling rallies where a handful of white supremacists who
had led the alt-right movement were outnumbered by anti-racist
counterprotesters. “The wind was knocked out of their sails, and the legal cases brought that fall certainly didn’t help.”
Hate hasn’t disappeared, but membership in formal extremist groups may have been disincentivized. So far, 369 federal cases have been brought against
people accused of involvement in the Capitol siege, according to a database maintained by the Program on Extremism at George Washington University.
About three dozen of those charged are members and associates of the Proud
Boys, the pro-Trump street fighting gang, and the Oath Keepers militia group. Both are accused of coordinating between far-right groups, and they face
the most serious federal charges related to Jan. 6, including conspiracy to breach the Capitol.
Beyond legal consequences, self-described antifa activists have made it
costly to be associated with far-right and racist groups, many of them using online sleuthing to match participants at extremist rallies to their real-
life identities and employers.
Mainstream online platforms where extremists were once welcomed have also
tightened their policies about violent extremist content and groups.
“Not only have organized larger groups splintered, but so, too, did their
social media footprint,” said Brian Levin, director of the Center for the
Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino. “Some extremists continued a whack-a-mole migration underground to encrypted, affinity-based platforms, while others exited these movements altogether.”The realignment and the lack of cohesive leadership don’t lessen the threat from extremist groups, however.
The risk now, Levin says, can be found in “loners and cells, who act on
their own combination of hatreds and idiosyncrasies often cobbled together
from a constant all-you-can-eat buffet of stereotyping and conspiracies that still populate online discourse.”