At any rate, a lot of people want to go back to edgy memes, to regrow the movement from its internet roots, "redpilling" people in their parlance. Others want to appeal to mainstream politics. It's a mess. This is where TWP comes in.
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TWP has been for a little while the street fighters of the movement. They engaged with antifa in Michigan to support Spencer's rally. There were a bunch of arrests, including a firearms charge on the right.
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In all of this, TWP has been the only group to maintain a consistent and strong showing at right wing events. And Spencer still canceled his tours anyways. Without TWP, there's no group left to fill that role.
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It's also dangerous because many of these groups are social support groups for dudes who may be violent. There is a growing concern of further radicalization, backlashes, and lone-wolf or retaliatory violence.
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I received a late-night message last night to be wary of terrorism. Some of these folks, the ones leaning full Nazi, are going to fall to the further radicalized segments. These segments promote a book, Siege, that advocates for things like mass casualty incidents.
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My sense is that the big rallies and clashes with antifa are going to dwindle. But random violence is going to increase. The groups haven't gone away, yet, but right now they're at a loss. New leaders will gather fragments, try new things.
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You'll see new groups and new symbols pop up. But they are dwindling faster than they can recruit. Arrests and doxxing and lawsuits are taking a huge, huge toll.
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I have extensively read their private chats, seen what they are afraid of. Y'all they spend a lot of time talking about what clothes to wear. A lot. This is no small deal.
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But few of them want anything like Charlottesville ever again. It is safe to say now that the alt-right is over.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
That is a dangerous statement. Perhaps a better phrasing, the idea of alt right as a cohesive group is over but it may well turn into a number of independent cells of terrorists who lack what little restraint was placed on them from above.
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The alt-right has always been a number of independent cells only vaguely assembled to a common goal. The alt-right as it has existed today is done, however. A new alt-right will emerge and it remains to be seen what factions will dominate.
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Replying to @EmilyGorcenski
Let us hope it is not the religion side of kek nor the siegers. Let us hope it is more idiots like heimbach who flame up and burn out in a year. Let us hope their leadership potential has been squandered.
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Replying to @h_ups @EmilyGorcenski
And let us prepare for the worse cases of terror the u.s. has seen. I suspect, Austin TX blind bombings will only be the start.
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