How do we know they were really antifa members if they had masks? How do we know this isn't some false flag operation organized by the alt-reich? Has anyone in the upper echelons of antifa officially endorsed these supposed members?
This seems like just the thing the alt-reich would organize in order to create more support for their cause, try to get people wearing black classified as 'gang members', and to make the left, the majority of which are currently peaceful, look more violent.
It is common sense for a group that has eschewed all moral and ethical high ground, like the alt-reich and their various associated hate groups, to embrace such measures.
Homemade hate the good ol' fashioned way.
Nah, antifa has active members who are more (or less) involved in organising actions and counter-demos - but besides that, there is no hierarchy.
This is a ridiculously long response - so besr with me, anyone that has the patience or inclination to read it all... .)
there are respected activists amongst the groups and meetings who may have the kind of natural leadership qualities that mean people are more inclined to listen to their opinions and plans - but antifascist groups are generally without hierarchy or leaders in the more traditional sense.
I don't think this is a stunt by the far right, for several reasons.
- i don't think enough of the fascists are smart, cunning or informed enough to fool other antifascists that they are leftists.
Obviously some are - but in these numbers? I doubt it.
My experience with these alt-right types is that most of them don't seem to have a very good grasp of leftist politics.
Most of the more militant activism i've been involved in (not necessarily antifa stuff) - there has been an understanding between other people in the group that infiltration and sabotage is entirely within the realms of possibility - but we're usually more wary of police than political opponents, though it
does happen.
Still, at least from what i saw, this looked like a tight-knit bunch of anti-fascist activists.
- unless i missed something, the anti-fascist demonstrators didn't seem to do anything particularly obvious that would indicate they'd been lead astray or inflitrated by opponents or law enforcement (though the latter is likely, in one way or another).
There have been accusations of "black bloc" actions being carried out by undercover detectives in the past (some big protest in canada maybe 5 or 10 years ago, there were photos distributed online of people in the "black bloc" smashing windows or starbucks etc - whilst wearing police issue boots. This apparently helped justify a heavy-handed police response, at that rally - to stop the "anarchists" from committing acts of vandalism.
So - the motive for that seemed pretty obvious.
But what motive would anyone on the far-right have for inflating the numbers of leftist counter-demonstrators, making them look even more numerous and intimidating?
If it was an alt-right propaganda stunt, it would be an epic own-goal IMO.
We've seen a few of these lately - like the dickhead a day or two ago who claimed he was stabbed by a black guy for having a "fascist haircut". Police investigating that allegation concluded that he stabbed himself. Not too bright.
- as for PR, i think antifa have been made into a tabloid folk devil ever since trump's inauguration, when "antifa" became a household name, and seeped into american mainstream political consciousness.
There was a lot of liberal condemnation, for example, of the guy that biffed Richard Spencer in the face on trump's inaugeration day.
Since then, antifascists have received really bad press almost across the board - from Fox/Faux News' crew of fearmongering
shouting heads - and many liberal media institutions - to the president (after the violent rally and murder at Charlottesville) - all making out that anti-fascist activists are unreasonably violent, that we are a gang/terrorist outfit/paid protesters (LOL) - and that (most ridiculous of all IMO) we are "just as bad as the nazis".
In this case (as opposed to the black bloc anti-globalisation protests that police apparently infiltrated in canada that i mentioned earlier) I don't see what purpose it would serve the nazis to make antifa look bigger, more dedicated and more fearsome to come up against.
One of the main points of having a black bloc - all decked out in black, faces covered - one big unified force - is to look fearsome to the people you're opposing.
Bolstering those ranks would only serve to scare some of the less deeply-committed members of the far-right/alt-right from turning up.
That is the real intention of
all of this stuff - scaring and confronting nazis means that you "increase the cost of membership" for nazi groups. If people know that they risk being physically confronted when they take part in nazi rallies, some of those people will opt not to turn up.
Clan rallies didn't have this problem in the 19th century, or the 1920s - but fascists in other parts of the world have had their groups (and their ability to meet, organise, demonstrate or harass people) completely destroyed by anti-fascists making life tough for them.
Oswald Mosely is a great example - he and his BUF (British Union of Fascists) got such a pasting from anti-fascists (many of them British jews who had fought in the war, liberated some of the nazi death camps, and had seen first-hand what the reality of fascism/nazism was).
They got beaten when they had their meetings, they got beaten when they tried to sell their anti-semitic newspapers on the street and (even before the Second World War) they got the shit kicked out of them when they tried to march (with police protection) through a jewish neighbourhood in london (known as the 'Battle of Cable Street').
It made it impossible for the BUF to do any of their shady shit, so eventually they just ceased to exist.
What purpose would it serve to artificially inflate the numbers of your sworn enemies in political street battles?
I can't think of any, besides escalating the whole conflict - but after some of the previous brawls between left and far-right in Berkeley - and then Charlottesville - i don't see the right's street presence escalating. Only the anti-fascist numbers and determination.
The right has
already escalated operations - the fact that they are so heavily armed seems to demonstrate this, as well as efforts to "unite the right" - bringing disparate elements of the far right together (nazis, kkk, militia groups, preppy racists etc).
I think - and this is just my opinion - that the nazis have made a really big effort to turn their online troll antics into a powerful, intimidating street presence.
Charlottesville was the culmination of all this, but it may also have been the high water mark for this agglomeration of pond scum.
A lot of the tough-talkers got arrested, and others were hospitalised.
When shit got real, the fascists were taken by surprise at how willing - and able - some "snowflakes" are in a street fight.
That's why there were pictures going around on social media of guys bleeding from the face despite their full body armour, brandishing poles with swastika flags on them, armed with guns, shields, clubs, knives.
I think these guys seriously believed that a bunch of pro-diversity, pro-LGBTI, anti-trump, anti-fascist activists would be a
pushover for such big, scary, heavily armed nazis.
That proved to be a major micalculation - which is presumably what lead to the terrorist attack with the motor vehicle that killed the poor woman that was murdered in c'ville.
Though they'd never admit it, anti-fascist resistance is causing the far right to cancel their rallies, and making people reconsider how open and gung-ho they are going to be about preaching "ethnic cleansing" and all the other shit they go on about.
They're frightened of the opposition - of anti-fascists - because we're organised, we have a really strong sense of comradery and solidarity - and we are determined to shut their shit down.
So, i don't see any reason to suspect the people in the black bloc were anything other than the 'real deal' (give or take a few undercover law enforcement types).
The nazis are already on the back foot in this "war" - and anarchists are pretty indifferent to how they are percieved in the general public's opinion (not to mention the corporate press - and trump).
If anything, this level of attention and notoriety works in antifascists' favour - as it increases the perception that we are a serious force not to be fucked with - as opposed to a bunch of college kids decked out in black with masks/bandannas/balaclavas and hoods over their heads.
The right went from a "successful" KKK-esque gathering of hundreds of torch-burning idiots, to strings of cancelled demos in the space of about 2 weeks.
It would be a bit dishonest for antifa to take full responsibility for this - obviously there were many factors at play - but anti-fascist political activism is a significant part of what has spooked the nazis. I don't think they'd have any reason to dress up as "antifa" - unless the plan was to go on a destructive rampage and blame it on "the left".