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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: White supremacists or anti-police libertarians? What we know about the 'boogaloo' Men showing up to protests wearing Hawaiian shirts and carrying military-style rifles. Facebook groups full of intense discussions about imminent civil war. Over the past year, online conversations about the boogaloo, an ironic term for a second civil war, have begun to coalesce into the beginnings of an actual movement, according to experts who monitor American extremists. Facebook has designated a network of boogaloo groups as a dangerous organization similar to the Islamic State, and banned them from both Facebook and Instagram. At least 15 arrests and five deaths have been publicly linked to boogaloo rhetoric, including the murders of two law enforcement officers in California. Related: Libertarian 2020 candidate appears on podcast tied to boogaloo movement But theres still plenty of confusion over how to accurately label this still-developing ideology. Heres a guide to what we know, and what we dont, about the politics of the boogaloo. Why experts classify boogaloo supporters as rightwing or far-right In response to a news story about the potential threat boogaloo attacks posed to people in Washington DC, Donald Trumps Department of Homeland Security (DHS) sent a tweet denying that the boogaloo is a leftwing OR rightwing movement, and claiming: They are simply violent extremists from both ends of the ideological spectrum. One CNN article on boogaloo supporters at protests included an interview with a man who claimed to be a left anarchist. But extremism experts agree that boogaloo ideology overall is, in fact, rightwing. How do they know? For one, they look at images of the boogaloo flag, which is sometimes emblazoned with the names of rightwing anti-government martyrs, including Americans killed in infamous standoffs with the police at Ruby Ridge in 1992 and during the occupation of the Malheur national wildlife refuge in 2016. The way we know the boogaloo movement is a far-right movement is because they draw a line directly from Waco and Ruby Ridge, said Alex Newhouse, a digital researcher at the Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism at Middlebury Institute for International Studies. They hold up things like the McVeigh bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building and the armed response to Ruby Ridge as heroic moments in American history, where citizens stood up to government oppression, Newhouse said. Like the rightwing anti-government militia and Patriot movements of the 1990s and 2000s, many boogaloo supporters see the current federal government as illegitimate, while remaining deeply patriotic. They revere the constitution and see themselves as the true descendants of Americas founding fathers. In their view, current US lawmakers are the equivalent of occupying British forces during the revolutionary war. Among the boogaloo merchandise for sale online are images of George Washington armed with a modern, AR-15-style rifle. Armed protesters demonstrate outside the Michigan state capitol. Photograph: Jeff Kowalsky/AFP/Getty Images Armed protesters demonstrate outside the Michigan state capitol. Photograph: Jeff Kowalsky/AFP/Getty Images Another clear sign that boogaloo boys are rightwing is their decision to show up with guns to guard private businesses, first during demonstrations against public health shutdown restrictions, and later during the protests over George Floyds killing, Newhouse said. While boogaloo supporters showed up to George Floyd protests saying they wanted to stand in solidarity with Black Lives Matter protesters against police violence, some also described going to protests to defend businesses including big national corporations against looters and destruction. Showing up with guns to protect big corporations from property damage is not something that most leftwing protesters would do, Newhouse said, since leftists would be more like to view corporate stores such as Hobby Lobby or Ross as part and parcel of capitalist exploitation. This emphasis on the importance of private property is part of what makes the boogaloo very much an extreme right libertarian ideology, Newhouse said. Related: How Facebook and the White House let the 'boogaloo' movement grow Support for unfettered gun rights, and fierce opposition to most or all gun control, is also central to boogaloo supporters, with some pro-gun advocates using the term boogaloo to refer specifically to the civil war that will break out if Democratic politicians ever try to confiscate Americans guns. While some anarchists have embraced boogaloo rhetoric, these are primarily are rightwing anarchists, who believe in unfettered capitalism, not leftwing anarchists, said Mark Pitcavage, a researcher at the Anti-Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism. The Department of Homeland Securitys claim that boogaloo is not a rightwing movement is playing politics, said Daryl Johnson, a former DHS analyst who was forced out of the department after Republican backlash against a prescient briefing about the growing dangers of rightwing domestic terrorism. This is an ultra-nationalist primarily white movement of people who belong to the militias, he said. Could there be somebody that has different sympathies thats part of it? Sure. Its predominantly rightwing. Is the boogaloo fundamentally a white supremacist movement? Theres no question that some boogaloo supporters are explicit white nationalists and neo-Nazis who use the term boogaloo as a synonym for a coming race war. But theres real disagreement, even among experts who monitor extremist groups, about whether the boogaloo movement as a whole should be described as white supremacist. Analysts from the Anti-Defamation League and Middleburys Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism have argued that a significant number of boogaloo supporters are genuinely not white supremacist, and that the movement in fact has two wings, one advocating for race war and one obsessed with societal breakdown and rebellion against the government. Arguments over white supremacy have played out on public boogaloo Facebook groups for months, the analysts said, with some boogaloo supporters, particularly group administrators, denouncing white supremacists and saying they want to stand in solidarity with Black Lives Matter, even as other members of the groups made racist and antisemitic comments and mocked moderators for trying to be politically correct. Tensions within the movement over supporting Black Lives Matter and pushing out overt white supremacists have been playing out for months, according to the first in-depth profile of the movement from journalists at Bellingcat. Some boogaloo memes and versions of the movements flag name black victims of police violence, including Oscar Grant and Breonna Taylor, among the movements martyrs. At the same time, some of the recent pro-Black Lives Matter statements on Boogaloo pages may have been motivated by group administrators desire to avoid a crackdown from Facebook moderators, Newhouse said. An armed man holds a sign during a rally against the death of George Floyd, in Detroit, Michigan. Photograph: Rebecca Cook/Reuters An armed man holds a sign during a rally against the death of George Floyd, in Detroit, Michigan. Photograph: Rebecca Cook/Reuters Other experts say that lip service from some boogaloo supporters about wanting to be a multi-racial movement should not be taken seriously. Were equivocating for the sake of an imagined audience, said Joan Donovan, the director of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. The idea that you would dismantle the US government at this stage is to undo the protections that have been granted to black, people, queer people, disabled people, to stop foreign policy related to immigration, Donovan said. There are always racialized and eugenic sub-themes in these groups. Thats what war is, at its base. Its about who should live. I dont think you can get away from the ways in which the rhetoric supports a white supremacist ideology, once you start talking about the kinds of policies or strategies they think need to be implemented. One way to capture the complex dynamics of boogaloo ideology is to label it as a broad anti-government movement that is full of white power activists, said Kathleen Belew, a historian of the American white power movement of the 70s, 80s and 90s. There are always racialized and eugenic sub-themes in these groups. Thats what war is, at its base. Its about who should live Joan Donovan Because there are many Americans who believe in white supremacist ideas, but have never make an explicit effort to advocate for the cause, its more accurate to label people involved in racist movements as white power activists rather than as white supremacists, Belew argues. Like the militia movement of the 1990s, not everyone who participates in boogaloo events or groups is necessarily a white power activist, Belew said. But its important to understand that many explicit supporters of race war are operating under the cover of a slightly more mainstream anti-government movement, she said, and that this is a deliberate strategy. Not all the people in the militia movement would be categorized as white power activists, but most of the white power movement was located inside the militia movement, she said. Money, guns and people routinely moved between more mainstream and more underground, explicitly violent groups, she said, and that same pattern is likely repeating today. For the Americans who are encountering armed men with Hawaiian shirts at protests in their hometowns, nuanced distinctions may not be that helpful. On the ground, experts said, theres really no way to figure out in real time if an unknown man in a Hawaiian shirt is a neo-Nazi looking to start a race war, or an anti-police libertarian who sincerely believes that he is not a racist. Asking boogaloo boys about their beliefs directly is unlikely to clarify much, since neo-Nazis and white nationalists routinely lie and claim not to be racist. No matter what your beliefs are, if you show up at a Black Lives Matter protest as a white man armed with a bunch of guns, thats a white supremacist act, even if you dont mean it to be, said Emily Gorcenski, the creator of First Vigil, a project that tracks far-right individuals and groups. Fundamentally, it will instill fear. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ada, All (#0)
You've found something wild here. I can't recall seeing a single mention of it in the definitive right-sites I or we read? Perhaps it's some confused young people grappling for a rightist stance they don't dare fully embrace because of their lifelong brainwashing. OR a big long-term plot to bring massive FAKE public disgrace on real and mostly imagined white survivalists. But all these commie entities are saying in unison that it's not even consistently right-wing. Here's an actual libertarian opinion -- the L-word keeps popping up: https://beinglibertarian.com/meme-boogaloo/ ////////////////////.....Though this meme has been present in the underground for years, it has been getting exponentially more popular as of late and spilling into the mainstream. Due to this, quite a few new people have been adopting and misusing the term in recent months, especially in the wake of the Trump impeachment. This is an incorrect use of the meme. The boog was never originally a Republican vs Democrat thing, it exists more on an authoritarian vs libertarian scale. Both mainstream parties are awful and have been equally complicit in the degradation of our liberty...... The boogaloo has literally never been a race thing, it started as a gun rights thing, and has morphed into a general freedom/liberty thing, but it was never about race. All colors and creeds are welcome to join the cause of standing up to tyranny. Of course, this is a story weve already seen 1000 times. Whenever the modern American left doesnt like something, they just outright make things up in order to paint their opponents in an ugly light. Were all used to it by now. Painting this as a right-wing thing or a race war is both not only incorrect, but both also imply a war between the people, which indicates a core misunderstanding of the entire term. The boog is not the people vs the people, the boog is the people vs the government. Its a revolution, not a civil war.....//////////////////// A MacGuffin the authorities seem to think they have is Jo Jorgensen -- didn't she pass thru our 5um consciousness recently?: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jul/06/libertarian-2020- candidate-jo-jorgensen-podcast-boogaloo-movement Mebbe it's genuine rightists that are being framed as dangerous and lawless by the usual round of suspects, partly with the use of knockoff factions. It's difficult to gauge when the article is entirely establishment-generated and its documentation a bit sketchy. Wikid is calling it outright "a loosely organized American far-right extremist movement whose participants say they are preparing for a second civil war" and ascribing "two ambush-style attacks occurred against security personnel and law enforcement officers in California" to it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_boogaloo_killings The Hawaiian shirt motif is unexpected. What do you think is really going on here? Anybody else heard of a 'boogaloo' mvt other than this page? Good find, Ada!
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