Spreading Hate Hate Comming 2022

Spreading Hate Hate Comming 2022




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Spreading Hate: The Global Rise of White Supremacist Terrorism
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Spreading Hate examines the evolution of the white power movement around the world, explaining its appeal and the threat it poses as well as many failures. The modern white power movement is now a global, transnational phenomenon. In this sweeping, authoritative account, Daniel Byman traces the key moments in the white power movement's evolution in the United States and around the world and then details its many facets today. Using a wide range of sources, Byman explodes several myths about white power terrorism and exposes dangerous gaps in current policies. For almost two decades since 9/11, white supremacist terrorism has been relegated to a secondary concern in the US and Europe despite the fact that it was clearly metastasizing. This neglect has led to shocking episodes of violence from New Zealand to Norway to South Carolina and has eroded faith in Western democratic institutions. Because white power terrorists' grievances echo mainstream debates and their violence often exacerbates polarization, their political impact can be inordinately high even if the body count is low. As Byman stresses, they are not a hide-bound movement seeking to turn back the clock, but are dynamic, drawing on ideas from around the world and exploiting the most cutting-edge technologies, especially social media. White power terrorists, however, have many weaknesses. They are divided, with poor leadership, and often attract the incompetent and the criminal as well as the dangerous and deluded. If governments act decisively and treat white power terrorism with the same urgency they use to manage jihadist violence, then the threat can be reduced. This will require aggressive law enforcement, international intelligence cooperation, crackdowns by technology companies, and other forceful steps. Considering policy solutions as well as synthesizing a vast body of scholarly research, Spreading Hate will be essential reading for anyone worried about this an increasingly networked movement that threatens to grow more dangerous in the years to come.
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Daniel Byman is a professor at Georgetown University and a senior fellow at Brookings. He is a widely published and nationally recognized expert on terrorism. Byman was a US government analyst and a staff member on the 9/11 Commission, among other positions. His most recent books include A High Price: The Triumphs and Failures of Israeli Counterterrorism ; Al Qaeda, the Islamic State, and the Global Jihadist Movement and Road Warriors: Foreign Fighters in the Armies of Jihad.

Publisher

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Oxford University Press (March 22, 2022) Language

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English Hardcover

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288 pages ISBN-10

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0197537618 ISBN-13

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978-0197537619 Item Weight

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5.3 ounces Dimensions

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9.53 x 1.15 x 6.41 inches


4.7 out of 5 stars

7 ratings



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White nationalists across the world are waging a race war in the social media age, a trend that is analyzed in Spreading Hate: The Global Rise of White Terrorism by Daniel Byman. Byman begins his book by showing that racists in America have influenced racists throughout the world and that these white supremacists have joined forces to commit acts of terrorism in what is in their mind a race war fueled by The Great Replacement Theory, originating from France, which stokes the fear of “white genocide,” a theme repeated on certain “cable news” shows on American television. The book begins with white supremacist Brenton Tarrant shooting 51 Muslims at Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre in New Zealand in 2019. He posted his shootings on Facebook Live. Though Australian, Tarrant was a disciple of American racism. He had the number 14 stamped on his rifle, referring to the 14-word credo of white supremacist ideologue David Lane, member of the 1980s terrorist group The Order. The current race war is global. In the words of Daniel Byman: “The transnational white supremacist movement . . . is innovative, widespread, and deeply enmeshed in the politics of the United States, Europe, and other parts of the world where migration, racial equity, and social and economic change are challenging traditional power structures.” One of the catalysts for the spike in racial terrorism was the election of Barack Obama, which created a counterreaction in which racists relied on Jim Crow 1.0 memes to caricature Obama and use his image as a danger sign that white America was losing the race war. This has led to a “heightened sensitivity on racial issues and a mainstreaming of once- marginalized viewpoints.” As an example, high-ranking and very popular Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Paul Gosar of Arizona attend white supremacist conventions with impunity. Not only are Greene and Gosar not marginalized, many fear they may be the future of their party. Their behavior would have made them rank pariahs just 10 years ago. Now they enjoy popularity in their states. Why does this matter? Because “incendiary rhetoric” of mainstream politicians emboldens racists and increases white supremacy fund-raising to commit more acts of violence. When no political leaders draw a red line between a state representative and a white supremacy conference, white terrorism gets mainstreamed. No such red line is being drawn today. Such misconduct is being normalized. Byman observes that in 1914, United States Congressman James Thomas Heflin served on a platform of racism, anti-Semitism, anti-Catholicism, KKK, and other racist terrorist organizations, and he “was a dominant force in Alabama politics,” an example of the mainstreaming of politics and racism. We see this today in the likes of Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar, the glue between Jim Crow 1.0 and 2.0. The seeds of the race war were in Reconstruction, a time when poor whites saw black Americans enjoying “special preferences” and a war needed to be waged against them. Now in Jim Crow 2.0 a similar war against those “others enjoying special preferences” is being fomented by politicians and popular cable news broadcasters. In 1963, the KKK committed an act of terrorism in Birmingham Alabama, killing four innocent black children at the 16th Street Baptist Church. Between 1954 and 1968, white supremacists murdered 41 people, mostly Civil Rights activists. In today’s race war, Europe has joined the United States, but as Byman observes, Europe doesn’t have America’s history of slavery, Jim Crow, and KKK. Europe’s main fuel for racism comes from immigration and The Great Replacement Theory. In Europe, such racists join the neo-Nazi Party. Much of their racism targets Muslims, Africans, and Asians. In the 1980s, American “White Power Music” spread to Europe and inspired the neo-Nazis, creating a cultural bond between American and European racists. This includes Russia, which has “one of the most active white supremacists movements in the world” (69). We see that modern racists are social media-savvy and use social media platforms to recruit their members. Two important areas that are missing in this book are a deeper analysis of the psychological profile of the white supremacists that get recruited today. What makes them such outcasts that they are desperate to join a hate group? A second area that is lacking is the January 6 2020 Capitol Insurrection. This mainstreaming of white nationalism and resisting free elections is clearly a connective glue between fringe hate groups and mainstream “patriots” who are attempting to take over the United States. Their danger needs to be addressed, but overall a strong book on the rise of global hate groups.


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Daniel Byman is Professor in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and Senior Fellow at the Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution. He has served on the 9/11 Commission staff and as an analyst with the U.S. government.

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Home India Hate spreading in name of caste, religion; if unchecked, may lead to unrest: Gehlot


Hate spreading in name of caste, religion; if unchecked, may lead to unrest: Gehlot

Gehlot also said the party's rank and file is in favour of Rahul Gandhi becoming Congress president again.


By: PTI
Kanyakumari (tamil Nadu) | September 7, 2022 2:56:03 pm
First published on: 07-09-2022 at 02:56:03 pm
* The moderation of comments is automated and not cleared manually by indianexpress.com.




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Copyright © 2022 The Indian Express [P] Ltd. All Rights Reserved
Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Wednesday attacked the ruling BJP , claiming hate has spread in the country in the name of caste and religion and it can lead to a civil war if not checked.
Addressing a press conference here ahead of the launch of the party’s 3,570-km ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra ’ from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, Gehlot also said the party’s rank and file is in favour of Rahul Gandhi becoming Congress president again.
“We will all work together under Rahul Gandhi’s leadership. There are big challenges before the country and if Rahul Gandhi becomes the party chief, it will be easier to deal with them,” he said.
He said there was a need to give the slogan of ‘Bharat Jodo’ as an atmosphere has been created in the country, for the first time since Independence, that there is hate, tension and violence.
The whole country is concerned about this, he said.
“We have been requesting Prime Minister Narendra Modi that you should appeal that there should be love, brotherhood and harmony among people and violence will not be tolerated. He has not done so till now,” Gehlot said.
“There is so much polarisation, hate has been created in the name of caste and religion. If this is not controlled, it can go towards civil war,” he said.
May better sense prevail, he said, targeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah.
Rahul Gandhi believes in non-violence, he said, adding he has no hate in his heart.

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