To be honest I'm not liking what I've seen of either side.
The more I learn the more it looks like it's just two groups of fascists fighting eachoher. One might be less bad than the other but neither strikes me as good. Spacejunk, this kind of thinking is very dangerous. When you get to this kind of extreme it's usually not long before the tactics get more and more aggressive, and what it deemed to be a nazi grows broader and broader till it's just anyone you don't like. And then, you are your enemy.
Tread carefully.
That's the mainstream media and rightwing commentariat's take, but as i've explained countless times in this and other threads - it's a mischaracterisation.
That's not a dig at you, jess - i just feel like i must be boring some of the regular posters here that continually read my antifascist perspectives on these matters
The argument pushed a lot in the mainstream in the last few weeks is that "both sides are as bad as each other". By "the mainstream", i refer to a huge range of media sources, as well as donald trump.
This
might be true if you don't draw an ethical distinction between "punching a nazi" and "killing commies" or "creating a white ethnostate".
Punching someone isn't a very nice thing to do, but if the person you are punching is
openly talking about killing you and your comrades (
see this and countless pieces of "alt-right" online literature) - it doesn't seem quite so unreasonnable - at least to me.
Because only one "side" here is killing people, I consider the
both sides are as bad as each other argument to be one of false equivalence.
It might be convincing in soundbyte form, with some visuals of black-clad, masked-up people chanting "fuck nazis!" - but it doesnt stand up to more rigorous scrutiny.
I'm absolutely happy to revise my position when antifascist and anti-racists start killing people for their beliefs.
As that hasn't been, and isn't happening - i'm going to stick with my belief that militant anti-fascism is a response to violence, threats and intimidation from the extreme right.
I hate seeing two groups of people turning up to fight as well, but this idea that nazis are only violent because of the people opposing them is demonstrably false.
It's actually the exact opposite - anti-fascists wouldn't have any reason to mobilise if it weren't for this re-emergence of nazi ideology.
The left isn't about to start congregating to beat up old people for voting for the republicans or the tories any time soon. That's the kind of scaremongering the tabloids are pushing, but it's a bad misinterpretation of the whole point of antifascist activism - deliberately so.
Fascists are violent. They've killed people in the past, and they've killed people for political reasons in the USA
this week.
Dismissing that is, frankly, a privileged position to take. I don't mean that personally, jess (or anyone else), but i sincerely believe it to be true.
People have dismissed and downplayed fascist violence in the past - most of the outside world had no idea what was happening inside nazi germany to jews, disabled people, romani people, "degenerates" (drug addicts, homosexuals etc) and others, until the nazi reguime was defeated and the camps were 'liberated'.
Sadly the lessons from those days have been forgotten by many - even though many in the contemporary far right probably had grandparents that fought (and killed) in the Second World War.
Do we condemn our forebears for committing acts of violence against fascists? No - we commemorate their bravery; as we should.
I don't know how other countries commemorate WWII, but the emphasis in australia has long been on
not forgetting the lessons of history. That - to me - refers not just to war, but also to the conditions that led up to it.
Fascism is a dead-end street. It glorifies a past that never existed, and has no vision for the future outside of repression and division.
We've had this battle - many times over - and we don't need to have it again. Spoiler: the racists and the segregationists lose in the end. The only question this time around is how long it will take then to lose, and how many innocent people will they kill in the meantime?
Jews, muslims, people of colour (to name just a small few) don't have the luxury of abstract moral relativism on this subject.
When a bunch of nazified fratboys start preaching about mass, racially motivated deportations - and claim (fairly convincingly, in context) to have the president of the united states on their side, it's no time to be complacent.
Maybe i'm just super-vigialent because i actually keep an eye on what the far right are up to, but it's fucking alarming (to say the least) how emboldened nazis have become recently in the west, especially in the US.
It's not a hypthetical - these people aren't fucking around; they're mobilising, they're propagating hate, and they're fucking killing people.
The idea that nazi groups kill people is not far-fetched or exaggerated. It's happening now in the US, it happened to Labour MP Jo Cox right before the brexit referendum, and Golden Dawn in Greece have been murdering people regularly for years. Those are just some contemporary examples - history is littered with them.
I shudder to think how bad it would be if the so-called alt-right weren't scared of antifa.
I posted a video earlier of Richard Spencer
pleading with police not to disperse their seig-heiling mob, into the surrounding counter-demonstrators.
This is because he advocates "ethnic cleansing" and other genocidal violence.
You can't make a career advocating racist violence without expecting opposition - and if you take that violent rhetoric to the streets, then it is surely not some big surprise to be confronted by a lot of people from a lot of different walks of life.
I agree totally that opposing political groups fighting in public is horrible - it's an absolute disgrace.
It should never have come to that, but i'm afraid it has.
When white supremacists and other fascists are murdering people (with guns in black churches, or firing randomly at people in anti-trump demonstrations, or just shooting of black people for simply being black; stabbing people to death on public transport for defending muslim people they threaten - etc etc, those are just a couple of examples) - it begs the question;
What do critics of militant antifascism expect communities to do?
Should we just stand back and watch innocent people get murdered and beaten?
I'm not spouting hyperbole here - i'm absolutely serious. This shit is happening right now, and it's not just a threat to ethnic/religious/cultural/political minorities - it is (especially in the USA, where white supremacists are in charge of the federal government) a threat to democracy, and a threat to peace.
It's all well and good to be disgusted by violence. That's the healthy response to violence.
However, some of us are motivated to want to stop it from happening further, and prevent the normalisation of racist homicide, political assassinations and neo-nazist ideology becoming mainstream.
It's easy to think this doesn't affect every one of us, but once this sort of extremism hits a certain critical mass, it affects
everyone.
"First they came for the communists..."
It's not "fascist" to engage in physical resistance against fascism; it's pragmatism.
Fascist movements have been crushed this way in the past - in their infancy, on the streets.
Oswald Mosely's British Union of Fascists is a notable example.
These are the proud antifascists that stopped them. Antifascism is not a new phenomenon.
[video=youtube_share;aSNkTnIsWho]http://youtu.be/aSNkTnIsWho[/video]