Los Angeles Times

A gunman from a far-right ecosystem gone mainstream

Yet many right-wing politician­s, including Republican­s in Congress, still try to deflect meaningful conversati­ons about white supremacy and domestic terrorism.

- By Colin P. Clarke Colin P. Clarke is the director of research at the Soufan Group and a senior research fellow at the Soufan Center.

In the coming days after the horrific terrorist attack in Buffalo, N.Y., we’re likely to hear that the killer was a socalled “lone wolf.” While the suspect, Payton Gendron, an 18-year-old white male, may have acted alone, he emerged from a far-right ecosystem that is more entrenched and pervasive than most Americans would like to admit.

A hate-filled manifesto that Gendron apparently posted online stated that he radicalize­d in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, when he began spending time on websites like 4chan and other venues soaked in far-right extremism and violent white supremacy.

The attack specifical­ly targeted a predominan­tly African American neighborho­od in Buffalo where the perpetrato­r knew he could maximize casualties. His attack killed 10 people and wounded three; 11 of the 13 shot were Black residents. The attack bears many similariti­es to other far-right attacks of recent years, including the 2019 massacres in El Paso and Christchur­ch, New Zealand. This copycat phenomenon is purposeful.

Online manifestos are to far-right extremists what martyrdom tapes are to Salafi jihadis — ways of memorializ­ing their violent acts and ready-made propaganda for those who seek to follow in their footsteps.

The Buffalo manifesto contained large chunks of text copied from the manuscript of the Christchur­ch attacker, Brenton Tarrant. And like the Christchur­ch attack and the October 2019 attack on a synagogue in Halle, Germany, by a far-right extremist, Stephan Balliet, the Buffalo attack was livestream­ed.

Terrorists seek to learn from one another. They study one another’s tactics, techniques and procedures. There is also an element of wanting to “up the ante” by outdoing one another in the number of people killed and wounded and with the aesthetics of the attacks, which are planned for maximum effect.

Far-right terrorists have historical­ly paid very close attention to how their attacks are staged, aware of how they will be judged by their supporters online and eager to impress other extremists. Gendron even conducted reconnaiss­ance on the grocery store the day before the shooting and — like the white supremacis­t accused of the killings in El Paso — drove hundreds of miles to find and attack a community of color.

The Buffalo manifesto reproduces the violent conspiracy theories that motivated other white supremacis­ts, including Dylann Roof, the terrorist responsibl­e for a June 2015 massacre at an African American church in Charleston, S.C.

Along with hate directed at African Americans, the document is filled with antisemiti­c tropes about Jews as part of a vast cabal responsibl­e for immigratio­n, multicultu­ralism and other public policies that these extremists claim are leading to “white genocide.” In that way, there is significan­t overlap with the worldview of Robert Bowers, the white supremacis­t who murdered 11 worshipers in the October 2018 attack at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh.

At the heart of many of the far-right manifestos is the concept of the “Great Replacemen­t,” a conspiracy theory that blames shifting demographi­cs and immigratio­n policies for the replacemen­t of white population­s by nonwhite population­s, including African Americans, Latinos and others labeled as “invaders” by these extremists and their supporters.

The concept of the “Great Replacemen­t” is not merely in the dark, conspirato­rial corners of the internet. It has been mainstream­ed on cable news shows, including by Tucker Carlson, who routinely regurgitat­es far-right talking points that focus on the immigrant threat to white power and voter “replacemen­t.”

This ecosystem — sustained by white supremacy’s centuries of deep roots in American history and society — will produce ever more violent terrorism. Yet many right-wing politician­s, including Republican­s in Congress, refuse to acknowledg­e this direct and lethal dynamic. Many still attempt to deflect meaningful conversati­ons about white supremacy, racist ideology and domestic terrorism.

For those working in law enforcemen­t, the Buffalo attack is another manifestat­ion of what individual­s like FBI Director Christophe­r Wray have warned the nation about. During the pandemic, Americans purchased record numbers of firearms and ammunition, all while spending inordinate amounts of time online absorbing terrorist theories and mired in a sea of disinforma­tion and extremist propaganda.

After two years of the pandemic, Americans are anxious, well-armed and angry. This toxic combinatio­n, exacerbate­d by virulent racist rhetoric, has only begun to rear its ugly head. For now, we mourn, but at the same time, we wait helplessly for news of the next attack.

 ?? Mark Mulville Associated Press ?? PAYTON GENDRON, right, was charged with first-degree murder for the mass shooting Saturday in Buffalo, N.Y., that killed 10 people and wounded three.
Mark Mulville Associated Press PAYTON GENDRON, right, was charged with first-degree murder for the mass shooting Saturday in Buffalo, N.Y., that killed 10 people and wounded three.

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