This is a good question with no single right answer. Contributing factors are: - failure to unify - realization they're the bad guys - a bunch of lawsuits - a bunch of people are in jail facing charges - national exposure revealing their true nature - resources drying up - fear https://twitter.com/bruminger/status/945771224478748672 …
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The Charlottesville rally used the statues as an excuse to be openly fascist. But the reality is many of the attendees gave zero fucks about the statue.
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One of their goals was to create a united far-right movement. Ultimately this failed, but to understand the landscape of this movement we have to understand those nuances and differences.
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A Nazi is a Nazi, but the divisions between groups expose weaknesses that can be used to ensure their movement doesn't grow.
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This neo-fascist/nationalist/separatist/supremacist movement is only worth fighting if it poses some future danger. And it does, which is to say that regardless of how fascist the current system is, the normalization and acceptance of these movements can make it worse.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
But is it the actors, who seem rather naive, or those who whip up the hatred from a distance, who need to be fought?
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