View Full Version : exposing the HATE propaganda, lies, and hidden agendas
cheka.
8th May 2018, 08:46 PM
thread to chronicle the hate-as-a-weapon attacks on americans. it is one of the key weapons 'they' are trying to use to subvert our people and society
leading off with this one from atlanta
http://www.cbs46.com/story/38142517/residents-shocked-after-hate-speech-propaganda-litters-their-metro-atlanta-neighborhood
Residents shocked after hate speech propaganda litters their Metro Atlanta neighborhood
A plastic baggie was found on Tuesday from a group called Patriot Front. The bag had flyers in it saying, “Keep America American” and “Report Illegal Aliens, They Are Criminals.”
"It's very surprising,” Clark said. “It's sad."
The group's website has images of signs that say, “Send them back,” “Reclaim America” and others of men holding torches. The Anti-Defamation League lists the group as a white supremacist group.
"You just don't really see that kind of conversation in this neighborhood from people," Clark said. "I'd feel sad if somebody lived here and they were doing that. You'd think they'd just move. They're not going to change it."
Copyright 2018 WGCL-TV (Meredith Corporation) and Associated Press. All rights reserved.
midnight rambler
8th May 2018, 09:47 PM
They can't attack undocumented Democrats like that!
Just like in the future they can't be witch-hunting undocumented evil black rifles.
cheka.
9th May 2018, 11:30 AM
there seems to be hate for certain people from the anti-hate criminals
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/canadian-anti-hate-network-forms-toronto-profiles-far-right-groups-1.4653148
New anti-hate group aims to monitor 'growing threat' of far-right extremists in Canada
Canadian Anti-Hate Network to launch website with profiles of groups spreading hate
A new group says it is planning to research, monitor and expose more than 100 far-right groups spreading hate across Canada.
The Canadian Anti-Hate Network, formed by more than 15 academics, journalists, legal experts and community leaders, says it will launch a website in the next few weeks that will provide profiles of hate groups operating in Canada.
Bernie Farber, chair of the network, said the organization is a way for people already keeping an eye on the Canadian far right to pool resources online, while the profiles will draw attention to the names, locations and ideologies of the groups.
The network takes its inspiration from the Southern Poverty Law Center in the U.S., which tracks hate groups south of the border in a "hate map" and through a blog called "hate watch."
Farber, an expert on white supremacism and former CEO of the Canadian Jewish Congress, explained that hate in Canada can look different than in the U.S. and can vary significantly from province to province.
He said though there aren't "hundreds and hundreds" of people involved in home-grown hate groups, they are "undeniably" on the rise.
"The sad part is it doesn't take a lot of people to create havoc," he added.
Crowdfunding campaign for resources
Farber said the network is hoping to raise $50,000 through its crowdfunding campaign to pay for its website, office space and researchers in Toronto, where the group was recently incorporated.
"Domestic hate groups are a growing threat in Canada," the network says on its crowdfunding page.
"Yet there is no organization to counter groups like the alt-right, neo-Nazis, Soldiers of Odin, Northern Guard, Blood and Honour, and the Worldwide Coalition Against Islam."
cheka.
9th May 2018, 11:51 AM
head scratcher.....apparently calling some one a 'jew' is an insult of epic hate crime-ology. who knew ???
http://start.att.net/news/read/category/entertainment/article/page_six-charges_downgraded_for_alleged_jewbashing_socialit-rnypost
Socialite accused of Jew-bashing dodges hate crime charges
Cooke previously said she never called anyone a “Jew,” and simply told the woman “Excuse me, I have to get through.”
“She clearly didn’t hear what I said, and immediately screamed at the top of her lungs, ‘She called me a Jew!’” Kent Cooke told Page Six.
cheka.
9th May 2018, 11:57 AM
brits leading the way
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5707039/Sharing-hate-posts-online-lead-six-months-jail.html
Sharing hate posts online could lead to six months' jail as judges recommend harsh punishments for internet trolls who torment racial, religious or sexual minority groups
Social media users who share or comment on racist or anti-gay postings will face jail under rules proposed yesterday.
Advice for judges and magistrates recommends harsh punishments for those found guilty of stirring up hatred against racial, religious or sexual minority groups.
Among those jailed should be people who post comments or share online hate speech because they have been reckless as to whether they stir up hatred, say the proposals from the Sentencing Council.
cheka.
9th May 2018, 12:08 PM
racial slurs = go back to africa? go back to wakanda? how so?
http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/news/20180508/natick-police-say-mall-assault-motivated-by-hate
“He was yelling several racial slurs, things like, ‘Go back to Africa,’ and ‘Go back to Wakanda (fictional country from the movie ‘Black Panther’),” Rossi said.
cheka.
9th May 2018, 12:12 PM
more ridiculous hate claims
https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2018/05/07/anti-lgbt-hate-group-leader-scott-lively-garners-enough-votes-massachusetts-gubernatorial
Anti-LGBT hate group leader Scott Lively garners enough votes for Massachusetts gubernatorial primary
Lively’s campaign website is littered with conspiracy theories and anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim and anti-LGBT rhetoric. If elected, he says he will work to pass a ban on “the promotion of non-traditional lifestyles to minors” and that the “LGBT agenda” should be restricted from public life.
He claims that “political elites” have “orchestrated this sudden wave of ‘refugees’,” refers to undocumented immigrants as “illegals” and says that they need to “take all that they have learned about living in an orderly democratic society back to their homelands so they can recreate there what they have enjoyed here.”
With regard to abortion, if he’s elected , he will make his first public policy act an executive order that will recognize the “legal personp-hood [sic] of the unborn,” and he will task every authority – including the state police – to implement and enforce the order. If necessary, he says, he will “create a constitutional crisis” that will force the issue to the Supreme Court and overturn Roe v. Wade . He also supports the death penalty for “serial abortionists.”
Lively also says on his campaign website that he stands with anti-Muslim Dutch politician Geert Wilders (who was banned for months from Britain over concerns his views would trigger violence) and posts the transcript from one of Wilder’s 2014 speeches.
Lively is perhaps best known for his virulent anti-LGBT conspiracy theories about the so-called “gay agenda” and for his 1996 book, The Pink Swastika, that claimed the Nazi Party was made up of gay men who orchestrated the Holocaust. Historians have roundly refuted the book .
Lively has also repeatedly vilified LGBT people as “perverts,” “deviants” and “dangerous,” and equated homosexuality with pedophilia. His other books, like the 1997 Poisoned Stream, claims that homosexuality is a “dark force” throughout human history.
In 2012, he was sued in federal court for human rights violations under the alien tort statute by the U.S.-based Center for Constitutional Rights on behalf of a Ugandan LGBT advocacy group.
The lawsuit alleged that Lively’s anti-LGBT rhetoric and actions in Uganda led to the persecution of LGBT people in that country. The lawsuit – the first known Alien Tort Statute case seeking accountability for persecution on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity – was dismissed in 2017 on a technicality, but the ruling by a judge affirmed that Lively aided and abetted anti-LGBT persecution and that he had violated international law.
The 25-page ruling excoriated Lively and his anti-LGBT activities, stating that the “Defendant’s position on LGBTI people range from the ludicrous to the abhorrent,” and that “he has tried to make gay people the scapegoats for practically all of humanity’s ills.” The “crackpot bigotry could be brushed aside as pathetic,” the judge continued, “except for the terrible harm it can cause.” (The ruling has been appealed by Lively’s attorneys with anti-LGBT hate group Liberty Counsel in an attempt to strike the judge’s language.)
cheka.
9th May 2018, 12:21 PM
prosecutor asks for 3 year sentences, skype overrule him
https://www.haaretz.com/world-news/americas/in-first-neo-nazi-gang-members-sentenced-to-jail-time-in-argentina-1.6060651
Nazi Gang Members Sentenced to Jail Time for Hate Crimes in Argentina
The sentences ranged from nine years and six months in prison to four years and six months in prison.
The prosecutor in the case had asked for a maximum of 3 years in prison, but attorneys for DAIA, the Argentinean Jewish political umbrella organization, asked for 15 years.
Human rights and Jewish organizations praised the judgement.
“Argentina, the country that at the end of World War II received the most Nazi war criminals, cannot afford leniency to neo-Nazis. This is landmark case,” Shimon Samuels, director for International Relations at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said in a statement.
Some neo-Nazi supporters present at the court became violent after the reading of the sentence.
cheka.
10th May 2018, 01:26 PM
4-chan has Skype freaking out. long article, just posted a clip
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/measuring-hate-4chan-w520145
The Measure of Hate on 4Chan
The number of racist and other white supremacist terms has exploded on the message board since the start of the Trump campaign
It's difficult to find a single location – physical or otherwise – so inclusive to the disparate factions of the far-right as 4chan. Its "politically incorrect" message board – /pol/ – has served as a general assembly for all manners of right-wing contrarianism – and extremism
Janet Reitman's story, "All-American Nazis," which traces the path of four disaffected young men from ironic anti-Semitism to neo-Nazi terrorism, notes how 4chan's veil of obscurity was used to incubate white nationalism. By early 2012, she writes, the site's "tone had shifted drastically to the right." Discussion threads on white supremacist sites "considered how /pol/ might be used to help young people become 'racially aware.'" But while the idea of xenophobic half-jokes mutating into something more virulent seems intuitive, it can be difficult to capture the full picture of an online hate campaign.
A sister site called 4plebs archives the board's typically ephemeral content, but when a programmer and I attempted to scrape 4plebs, the site repeatedly rebuffed us, forcing us to make 11 requests to the domain for each page of posts we wanted – out of a total of about 30,000 pages. After two days of halting progress, 4plebs dumped its data on archive.org, the internet's effective Library of Congress. I later learned the site's monsoon response to our rain dance of scraping requests was merely a favor that the 4plebs team regularly performs.
Data of this size requires an iterative process: instead of opening every post at once into a single dataframe (which is like a spreadsheet), the file is opened piecemeal in "chunks"; in this case, 100,000 to one million lines at a time. At the same time, we created an algorithm to search for specific terms. For instance, to find how often the phrase "Read Siege" – a neo-Nazi rallying cry to read the white supremacist manifesto Siege – the program has to first search the million lines of the dataset, pull out any instances that include the phrase, count them, save just the relevant lines to a new dataframe, and then repeat, until all 159 million lines have been searched. How long this takes depends largely on the number of times different terms appear in the data. Culling the data for all instances of "atomwaffen," the online neo-Nazi group at the center of Reitman's story, ran a little under two hours. For the epithet "kike," the search lasted for roughly three-and-a-half.
Boring shapes often make for scary statistics – the occurrence of terms follows a simple up-and-to-the-right trajectory, often staggeringly so. "Read Siege," for instance, went from a negligible rarity to occurring about 200 times in a month. The use of "kike" quadrupled to over 40,000 uses in a month. In January of this year, the site recorded about 115,000 instances of the N-word, a nearly five-fold increase since the start of Trump's bid for president. The complete findings of our analysis is below.
cheka.
11th May 2018, 10:50 AM
how does a town get on the splc HATE map that is spewing from the megaphone? one person on some gov run kkk website claimed he/she/it was from there
http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/lake-county-news-sun/news/ct-lns-gurnee-hate-map-designation-ends-st-0512-story.html
Gurnee removed from Southern Poverty Law Center hate map
Police and village officials said they had been told by the SPLC that the village was included after the center found that someone who listed a Gurnee address had registered on a KKK web site.
Smith said no evidence was found that anyone by the name listed in the accusation against the village had lived in the municipality, and that investigators also found no evidence of hate group activity in the village.
“It's most likely a false name,” Smith said last year, and he added this week that “there was no evidence of any such group or movement within the community.”
cheka.
14th May 2018, 09:42 PM
nice
https://www.chron.com/national/article/Southern-Poverty-Law-Center-to-list-White-Lives-9186288.php
Southern Poverty Law Center to list White Lives Matter movement as a hate group
...phrase "14 Words" seen on posters at these events is a reference to the popular white supremacist slogan "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children."
The same question has been asked about the Black Lives Matter movement, the movement which inadvertently birthed its antithesis.
The Southern Poverty Law Center took notice after many requests to label the Black Lives Matter movement a hate group came across its figurative desks in the wake of the murder of eight Dallas and Baton Rouge police officers.
Short answer: The center says the Black Lives Matter movement is not a hate group because it seeks to promote a race that has been marginalized throughout history
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