The Herald

White supremacy is a white disease and it is spreading

- NEIL MACKAY

IREMEMBER driving down Detroit’s famous Eight Mile Road with a white supremacis­t called Shawn Sugg a decade ago. Sugg was fantasisin­g about genocide and talking about the so-called Fourteen Words, which lie at the heart of the white supremacis­t credo, and read: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.”

If we’re to defeat the far right terror now on the rise around the world, we must understand it. Atrocities, such as the New Zealand mosque attacks, don’t happen in isolation. Like Islamist killings, there’s a global ideology behind such attacks, and sprawling networks of interlinke­d groups and people.

I’ve spent 25 years interviewi­ng neo-nazis across the west to try and understand what makes them tick. They genuinely believe that the white race is being destroyed by Western government­s – and these government­s are, of course, in their minds, controlled by Jews.

This may sound crazy to the average Scottish voter – and intellectu­ally it is crazy – but there are many people across the West who hold these views, and they’re becoming more visible, more powerful, and even shifting from the extremist fringes. They’ve been abetted by Twitter and Facebook; the normalisat­ion of hate in the mainstream media – with the use of people such as Katie Hopkins, who once suggested using gunboats against migrants, as commentato­rs; and the normalisat­ion of extremism by the likes of Ukip and Donald Trump. The President has even hinted his supporters could turn violent.

White terror poses as great a threat as Islamist terror. Young white people from all background­s – though mostly working class and poorly educated – are being radicalise­d across the West.

White supremacis­ts glorify killing, loath democracy, and would use violence to achieve their ends. There’s little that separates them from Islamist extremists. They’re often life’s losers, they hate and they want to destroy. Many long for race war. If yesterday’s shootings in Utrecht were indeed the work of an Islamist gunman we need to begin to fear the rise of tit-for-tat murders.

In the wake of the New Zealand attack, a rash of hate crimes broke out across Britain. A stabbing in Surrey is being treated as a terrorist incident. A man and a woman have been charged over an incident in Rochdale after a taxi driver was abused with threats referencin­g New Zealand. A woman and man were arrested over online comments about the attack. Police in London are hunting three men who made anti-muslim remarks and then attacked another man with a blunt object. Swastikas were daubed on walls in Oxford along with references to the Youtuber Pewdiepie, who was namechecke­d by the Christchur­ch gunman.

The Muslim Council of Britain says there is a “palpable sense of fear” among the community, and has called for better security at mosques. Security funding has already been increased for synagogues and Jewish schools due to the rise in anti-semitic attacks.

Dame Louise Casey, the UK government’s former integratio­n tsar, and Sir Mark Rowley, former police national lead on counter-terrorism, jointly spoke out describing “divisive rhetoric” and “a climate of hate” that is feeding extremism. The atmosphere in the UK is “febrile”. People feel “left behind” and not part of liberal Britain. They are “highly susceptibl­e to extremist narratives”.

“We have alienated, angry, white working-class communitie­s who feel that they have little stake in society. And we have highly segregated British Muslims stuck in low-paid jobs and feeling under attack,” they said.

The UK security minister, Ben Wallace, says that mass shootings of Muslims by a far right terrorist “absolutely could happen here”. Crimes inspired by white supremacis­m have already happened here, however, as we saw with the murder of Jo Cox MP.

British security services place the threat of the far right on a par with Islamist and Irish terror. In Scotland, more far right extremists have been flagged to the Prevent programme – which is meant to spot people becoming radicalise­d – than Islamists.

Britain has already outlawed one neo-nazi organisati­on, National Action. A member was jailed for the attempted murder of a Sikh dentist with a hammer and machete, and the organisati­on has called for “white jihad”.

In the years which I have studied the far right, I’ve come to one firm conclusion: fascism flourishes in a vacuum. In the 1990s and 2000s, the West failed collective­ly to address concerns within primarily white working class areas over immigratio­n and multicultu­ralism. In Britain, any attempt to hold a conversati­on was immediatel­y silenced with claims of racism. Many people felt voiceless and the far right moved in offering a voice.

We need to address concerns, even if we find them ugly. That doesn’t mean giving white supremacis­ts a neutral stage to propagandi­se hate, but it does mean listening to people who might be vulnerable to their message, and it also means scrutinisi­ng, dismantlin­g, and defeating the far right message.

Our silence means former England Defence League leader Tommy Robinson can stage 4000-strong rallies.

Nazi organisati­ons in the UK, like the new Sonnenkrei­g Division, are getting louder each day. It wants execution for “race mixing”, and published images of Prince Harry with a gun to his head and the words “see ya later, race traitor”. Sonnenkrei­g also calls for the rape of police officers, and glorifies Anders Brevik, the Norwegian mass murderer.

Anti-radicalisa­tion programmes need to be expanded in schools, communitie­s and colleges – and the message needs put out repeatedly that extremism is colour-blind. If every Muslim has been told to watch for extremists, then every white person should be told the same. White supremacy is a white disease, and white people need to be vigilant against it growing among their friends, family and colleagues. Hand the job of tackling the far right to the security services. Extremist organisati­ons need to be infiltrate­d – just like Islamist groups believed to be preparing acts of terror. Arrest members and proscribe far right organisati­ons, like Sonnenkrei­g Division, once they advocate any form of criminal behaviour.

Honest debate, defending decency, a society built for everyone, and intoleranc­e of the intolerabl­e – these are the values that will protect the liberal West. Without those values, hatred, division and violence beckon.

In Scotland, more far right extremists have been flagged as radicalise­d than Islamists

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