Los Angeles Times

The alt-right is stronger than ever

Most alarming, the message is penetratin­g the mainstream.

- fter the 2017 Thomas J. Main By Thomas J. Main

A“Unite the Right” gathering in Charlottes­ville, Va., during which counter-protester Heather Heyer was killed by a rally attendee, a lot of pundits predicted the demise of the alt-right movement. And for a while, it seemed as if they might be right.

In the aftermath of Charlottes­ville, altright websites spewing white nationalis­t, misogynist and anti-Semitic diatribes were banned from standard internet service providers, and the de-platformin­g took a toll. A month before Charlottes­ville, the movement’s f lagship website the Daily Stormer was getting about 1.9 million visits. After it was dropped by the web-hosting company GoDaddy, traffic dropped dramatical­ly, and in November 2017 the site had only 13,000 visitors. The leftist Truthout declared the alt-right movement confined “only to the back alleys of the internet,” while the Guardian concluded “the alt-right is in decline.”

But the reversal didn’t last. In an era where the U.S. president has offered support for alt-right thinking and new communicat­ions technologi­es have expanded the reach of fringe ideas, the movement quickly sprang back. The altright’s web audience is now significan­tly larger than it was before its supposed Waterloo at Charlottes­ville, and the Daily Stormer and other publicatio­ns have found new web platforms from which to broadcast their hate-filled messages.

Some examples: On July 22, after Trump’s excoriatio­n of four nonwhite congresswo­men, Andrew Anglin, editor of the Daily Stormer, wrote: “Jews should be apologizin­g to America right along with the anti-white Hate Squad and then we should send them all back.… I am really, really tired of the Jews, and I think they need to pay the ultimate price.” The Daily Stormer now refers to itself as “the most censored publicatio­n in history.”

The editor of Occidental Dissent, Hunter Wallace, is a neo-Confederat­e who rejects the present-day, multiracia­l America. On June 22, he argued that “the culture we have now is in an advanced state of degenerati­on and that the root cause of it is the liberal order.… We will be much stronger after reorientin­g the Right around the authoritar­ian axis.… The Confederat­es realized this in the 1860s and their solution was to decouple their constituti­onal republic from the leveling abstract ideology of liberal democracy.”

Gregory Hood, once a contributo­r to Counter-Currents Publishing and now to American Renaissanc­e, celebrates a lilywhite America. On July 10, 2018, he wrote: “The Declaratio­n of Independen­ce really was by whites and for whites, as was the nation it created .... America [is] increasing­ly being filled with people who have no connection to the historic American nation.… It may be time to become ‘separate and equal’ in a society that is ours alone.”

Before Charlottes­ville, I had gathered data on visits to 10 “leading” alt-right web magazines, using the digital analytics firm SimilarWeb. From October 2015 to July 2017, the average number of visits per month to all 10 sites combined rose from about 1.6 million to 4.5 million visits. In recent months, between March and May of this year, the average number of visits to the sites was 6.6 million. That means visits to these sites are up by about 47% since just before Charlottes­ville. If you add in the full array of Nazi, white nationalis­t, anti-Semitic and other hate-spewing sites, the number rises sharply to a monthly average of about 45.3 million visits. By comparison, the grand old platform of mainstream conservati­vism, National Review, gets about 10.4 million visits per month.

And web magazines are not the only online outlets for illiberal ideas and hate. The infamous message board where the El Paso shooter posted his alt-right screed, 8chan, had an average of 15.4 million visits between April and June of this year.

More alarming still is the penetratio­n into mainstream discourse of alt-right ideology, including ideas of an immigrant “invasion” and the notion that white people are being “replaced” by nonwhite people. These themes are prominent not only in the El Paso shooter’s manifesto but also in the writings of Pat Buchanan, Ann Coulter and Michelle Malkin, all of whom appear regularly in the alt-right web magazine VDARE. Tucker Carlson of Fox News is viewed by Daily Stormer editor Anglin as “literally our greatest ally.” Anglin describes Carlson’s program as “basically ‘Daily Stormer: The Show.’” And then, of course, there is the nation’s most prominent mainstream proponent of altright themes: President Trump.

Without interventi­on, the alt-right will continue to endure and grow, with predictabl­e violent results. Rebutting the rising tide of illiberali­sm requires not simply a technologi­cal fix, but an intellectu­al and political response. Certainly, cesspools of hate such as 8chan must be shut down — for good, this time. But we also need, in the short term, sharp but civil rebuttal of alt-right ideologies from influentia­l Americans. Longer-term, and more importantl­y, we need much better civic education and a government that can effectivel­y address the economic and social issues that underlie alt-right support.

is author of “The Rise of the Alt-Right” and a professor at the Marxe School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs, Baruch College, City University of New York.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? AFTER clashes in 2017 in Charlottes­ville, Va., websites like the Daily Stormer faded. Now visits are up about 47%.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images AFTER clashes in 2017 in Charlottes­ville, Va., websites like the Daily Stormer faded. Now visits are up about 47%.

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