White Supremacism (Right-Wing Extremism)

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NorthReport

 

“Canada Not Racist,” Declares 73-year-old White Man

"Where does racism manifest?” asks Rex Murphy, who once wrote that rap music leads to “a degraded and vulgar culture"

https://www.canadalandshow.com/canada-not-racist-says-rex-murphy/

NDPP

"R*dsk*ns, a Washington football team that came from the taking of scalp bounties from Native people, is officially retired! Don't pat racist ass team owners or franchise defenders on the back. This victory belongs to Native people and is about more than a name."

https://twitter.com/nick_w_estes/status/1282673944101703681

So how about it Edmonton E*kim*s?

[email protected]

NorthReport

Military involvement in racist, extremist activity ‘growing at an alarming rate’: report

Brett Forester

Apr 25, 2022

 

 

https://www.aptnnews.ca/national-news/military-involvement-in-racist-ext...

NorthReport

Nazi collaborator monuments in Ukraine

Left: parade honoring Third Reich Governor-General of Poland Hans Frank, Stanislaviv (now Ivano-Frankivsk), 1941 (Wikimedia Commons). Right: march commemorating the establishment of the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Galician), L’viv, April 28, 2014 (Yuri Dyachyshyn/AFP via Getty Images). Image by Forward collage

nazi-collaborator-monuments-in-ukraine
By Lev Golinkin
January 27, 2021
There are hundreds of statues and monuments in the United States and around the world to people who abetted or took part in the murder of Jews and other minorities during the Holocaust. As part of an ongoing investigation, the Forward has, for the first time, documented them in this collection of articles. For an initial guide to each country’s memorials click here. For a 2022 update to the investigation, click here.

Note: beginning in 2014, when the Maidan uprising brought a new government to Ukraine, the country has been erecting monuments to Nazi collaborators and Holocaust perpetrators at an astounding pace — there’s been a new plaque or street renaming nearly every week. Because of this, the Ukraine section represents an extremely partial listing of the several hundred monuments, statues, and streets named after Nazi collaborators in Ukraine.

Left: Stepan Bandera monument, opening ceremony, L’viv, October 13, 2007 (Wikimedia Commons). Right: Bandera monument, Ivano-Frankivsk (Wikimedia Commons). Image by Forward collage
L’viv and Ivano-Frankivsk — 1.5 million Jews, a quarter of all Jews murdered in the Holocaust, came from Ukraine. Over the past six years, the country has been institutionalizing worship of the paramilitary Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, which collaborated with the Nazis and aided in the slaughter of Jews, and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which massacred thousands of Jews and 70,000-100,000 Poles. A major figure venerated in today’s Ukraine is Stepan Bandera (1909–1959), the Nazi collaborator who led a faction of OUN (called OUN-B); above are his statues in L’viv (left) and Ivano-Frankivsk (right). Many thanks to Per Anders Rudling, Tarik Cyril Amar and Jared McBride for their guidance on Ukrainian collaborators.

Left: gate festooned with banners welcoming the Nazi invasion of Ukraine, Zhovkva, 1941. Top banner: “Heil Hitler! Glory to Petliura! Glory to Bandera!” (WWI-era nationalist Symon Petliura’s troops massacred tens of thousands of Jews). Middle banner: “Long live independent sovereign Ukrainian nation! Long live the leader Stepan Bandera!” Bottom banner: “Heil Hitler! Glory to the unconquered German and Ukrainian armed forces! Long live Bandera!” (Wikimedia Commons). Right: Bandera monument, Ternopil (Wikimedia Commons). Image by Forward collage
Ternopil and numerous other cities — Another statue of Bandera in Ternopil. Above left is a photo from Zhovkva 1941, when OUN members welcomed the Nazis, assisting with their murder of Jews. The banners include “Heil Hitler!” and “Glory to Bandera!”

Ukraine has several dozen monuments and scores of street names glorifying this Nazi collaborator, enough to require two separate Wikipedia pages (there are so many Bandera streets that only a few are listed in this project). Prominent honors include a joint monument to him and Roman Shukhevych in Cherkasy, Horishniy, Pochaiv, Rudky and Zaviy; a monument to him, Shukhevych and other OUN leaders in Morshyn; a monument to him and his father in Pidpechery; a plaque and monument in Lutsk; a bas-relief, monument and museum in Dubliany; a plaque, monument and museum (with bust) in Stryi; a plaque, street and monument in Zdolbuniv; monuments in Berezhany, Boryslav, Buchach, Chervonohrad, Chortkiv, Drohobych, Dubno, Hordynya, Horodenka, Hrabivka (Ivano-Frankivsk Raion), Kalush, Kamianka-Buzka, Kolomiya, Kozivka, Kremenets, Krushel’nytsya, Kyiv, L’viv, (and a plaque), Mlyniv,Mostyska, Mykolaiv (L’viv Oblast), Mykytyntsi, Nyzhnye (Sambir Raion), Pidvolochysk, Romanivka, Sambir, Skole, Sniatyn, Staryi Sambir, Seredniy Bereziv, Sokal, Sosnivka, Strusiv, Terebovlia, Truskavets, Turka, Uzyn, Velyki Mosty, Verbiv (Narayiv Hromada), Zahirochka and Zalishchyky; a plaque and street in Sniatyn and Zhytomyr; plaques in Ivano-Frankivsk, Khmelnytskyi and Rivne; museums in Staryi Uhryniv (with a statue and memorial plaque) and Volya-Zaderevatska (with a bust and bas-relief); a park in Kamianka-Buzka; and a school in Dobromyl.

Left: Stepan Bandera (Wikimedia Commons). Right: Far-right march in honor of Bandera’s 112th birthday, Kyiv, January 1, 2021 (Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images). Image by Forward collage
Kyiv — In 2016, a major Kyiv boulevard was renamed after Bandera. The renaming is particularly obscene since the street leads to Babi Yar, the ravine where Nazis, aided by Ukrainian collaborators, exterminated 33,771 Jews in two days, in one of the largest single massacres of the Holocaust. Both the Simon Wiesenthal Center and the World Jewish Congress condemned the move.

Above right, the annual torchlight march on Bandera’s birthday in 2021; during the 2017 commemorations marchers chanted “Jews Out!”

Left: Roman Shukhevych monument, Krakovets (Wikimedia Commons). Right: bas-relief on Shukhevych’s birth house, L’viv (Wikimedia Commons). Image by Forward collage
Krakovets, L’viv and numerous other towns — Monuments to Roman Shukhevych (1907–1950), another OUN figure and Nazi collaborator who was a leader in Nazi Germany’s Nachtigall auxiliary battalion, which later became the 201st Schutzmannschaft auxiliary police unit. Shukhevych later commanded the brutal Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), responsible for butchering thousands of Jews and 70,000-100,000 Poles.

The monument in Krakovets (above left) and plaque in L’viv (above right) are two of many Shukhevych statues in Ukraine. This includes joint monuments to him and other nationalists in several cities (see Bandera entry above) a monument to him and other nationalists in Sprynya; a monument, two plaques and a bas-relief in L’viv Polytechnic National University in L’viv; and monuments in Borschiv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Kalush, Khmelnytskyi, Khust, Kniahynychi, (and a plaque), Kolochava, Oglyadiv, Shman’kivtski, Staryi Uhryniv (at the Stepan Bandera museum), Tyshkivtsyah, Tyudiv, and Zabolotivka; plaques in Buchach, Kamianka-Buzka, Kolomyia, Pukiv, Radomyshl’, Rivne and Volya-Zaderevatska; a museum in Hrimne; a stadium in Ternopil; a metro station in Kyiv; and a school in Ivano-Frankivsk. See The Algemeiner on Israel slamming naming the Ternopil stadium for Shukhevych.

Even more shocking are the Shukhevych monuments in Canada and the U.S.

https://forward.com/news/462916/nazi-collaborator-monuments-in-ukraine/

JKR

NR, why are you demonizing Ukraine now that Russia has invaded Ukraine?

NorthReport

JKR wrote:

NR, why are you demonizing Ukraine now that Russia has invaded Ukraine?

JKR, According to you, you are quite the authority on Russia and Ukraine.

Personally I have come here to learn and to try and understand. For that reason a thread has been started to help assist with this endeavour. On the opening post there is a link to a lenghty discussion about the hows, whens, and whys of the current Russian-Ukrainian War. Cheers JKR.

JKR

NorthReport wrote:

JKR, According to you, you are quite the authority on Russia and Ukraine.

I don’t consider myself an authority on Russia and Ukraine I haven’t said that I am.

NorthReport

Ukraine Azov will be charged as Nazi Criminals by Russian Court

https://abrahamstein.substack.com/p/ukraine-azov-will-be-charged-as-nazi...

NorthReport

..

lagatta4

Quoting NDPP:

Say no to White Supremacy! Say no to Settler State genocide! Say no to Canada!

Say yes to what, NDPP?

By the way, I doubt there are many fans of genocide or white supremacy at rabble/babble.

Paladin1

Say no to Canada? What?

kropotkin1951

lagatta4 wrote:

Quoting NDPP:

Say no to White Supremacy! Say no to Settler State genocide! Say no to Canada!

Say yes to what, NDPP?

By the way, I doubt there are many fans of genocide or white supremacy at rabble/babble.


That is undoubtedly the case.

NDPP's over the top rhetoric however was in support of rejecting Canada's bid to be on the Security Council, a policy that I certainly supported and still support.

Pondering

kropotkin1951 wrote:
lagatta4 wrote:

Quoting NDPP:

Say no to White Supremacy! Say no to Settler State genocide! Say no to Canada!

Say yes to what, NDPP?

By the way, I doubt there are many fans of genocide or white supremacy at rabble/babble.


That is undoubtedly the case.

NDPP's over the top rhetoric however was in support of rejecting Canada's bid to be on the Security Council, a policy that I certainly supported and still support.

I'm not against it I just don't know why I should be for it. What would be the benefit?

kropotkin1951

I was merely pointing out that while this thread has evolved into another Ukraine thread, NDPP's post is from the 2020 debate on the Security Council.

Pondering

I was confused. I misread you. 

lagatta4

Thanks, Kropotkin.

kropotkin1951

Here is Canada's systemic white supremacy in action.

epaulo13

..in this poster, promoting a new book, at the bottom there is a box that claims that white supremacy is not just the far right but dominant norms. i agree with that statement. 

NorthReport

Heil Hipster: The Young Neo-Nazis Trying to Put a Stylish Face on Hate

Inside the tote-bag friendly, “Harlem Shake”-happy world of Germany’s “nipsters”

 

https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/heil-hipster-the-young...

NorthReport

Empire Solves Ukraine's Nazi Problem With A Logo Change

 

 

https://caitlinjohnstone.substack.com/p/empire-solves-ukraines-nazi-prob...

NorthReport

The past President of the USA - So Sick!

RACE

Survivors of KKK’s Ax Handle Attack Appalled at Trump Speech

CONSCIENCE OF AMERICA

Courtesy Rodney Hurst

The president plans to speak at the RNC on the anniversary of a racist rampage in Jacksonville, Florida.

Updated Jun. 13, 2020 10:44AM ET / Published Jun. 13, 2020 4:35AM ET 

On the same day President Trump is scheduled to give his acceptance speech for the Republican nomination at the big arena in Jacksonville, Florida, another group will meet in a nearby park where Klansmen in Confederate uniforms handed out ax handles for a racist rampage exactly 60 years before.

The permit for the Aug. 27 gathering at Hemming Park was secured by one of that murderous white mob’s targets on what became known as Ax Handle Saturday. Rodney Hurst was the 16-year-old president of the youth council of the NAACP back in 1960. He will be joined this year as in previous years by Alton Yates, who was then the group’s 23-year-old vice president. 

“I got hit in the back of the head with an ax handle,” Yates told The Daily Beast of that day six decades ago. “If you’ve ever seen stars before, it’s unbelievable. It’s something a young person never expects to have happen to them.”

Yates survived, but three people are believed to have died as a result of the attack and as many as 100 were injured. Hurst says that an admitted FBI informant named Clarence Sears would tell him years later that the Ku Klux Klan had hoped to spark a race war in the city.

Two weeks before the mob’s attack, Hurst and Yates and several dozen other young people had begun daily sit-ins at segregated lunch counters in downtown Jacksonville. Hurst had been a member of the NAACP Youth Council for five years, having joined when he was just 11 at the suggestion of his eighth-grade American History teacher, Rutledge Pearson. Hurst had skipped ahead in school and he further proved to be a prodigy as a civil rights activist, becoming the group’s president at 15. He had been in that position for a year at the time of the first lunch counter sit-in. 

“They called me the kid,” Hurst later told The Daily Beast.

Ax Handle Saturday in Jacksonville on Aug. 27, 1960

Bettmann/Getty

Yates had recently returned to Jacksonville from serving in the Air Force, riding high-speed rocket sleds as a volunteer in the manned space flight program. He had been featured in an Ebony magazine article as “The GI Who Risked His Life 65 Times For Science.” He was still wearing his uniform when he stopped in to get a bite to eat at the start of a 1,400-mile drive home from his base in New Mexico. That made no difference when he stopped early on at a roadside place to get a bite to eat. The proprietor welcomed him with the N-word and told him to leave or he would be hanging from a tree. He went to a grocery store. 

“I ate peanut butter and bread all the way to Jackson,”  he recalled. “I could not use a rest room the whole way.”

Yates arrived ready to join the struggle for civil rights.

Upon entering the downtown Woolworth’s on Aug. 13, 1960, Hurst and Yates and the others in the group each made a purchase in another part of the store. They hereby established that Woolworth’s would take their money in one department before testing what would happen at the lunch counter. They made sure to have some added cash. They jokingly imagined a newspaper headline that might otherwise appear in the highly unlikely event they were served:

“Youth Council Members Arrested, Not For Sitting In, But For Not Having Money to Pay For Food They Ordered.”

They understood that would not be a worry the moment they sat down.  

“The waitress said, ‘You can’t sit there, the colored counter is at the back of the store. This is for white people,” Hurst recalled. “We said, “We’re just here to be served. We’re shoppers. We’re here to be served.”

The waitress sought out the manager, James Word. He came over.

“He said, ‘You  know, this is the white person counter,’” Hurst remembered. “We said, ‘That’s fine but we’re still here.’”

The manager closed the counter. Hurst and Yates and the others stayed put. They had decided beforehand to remain through the lunch period lest the counter just reopened after they left. 

A group of whites formed behind them, growing in number and fury, spewing virulent racial epithets. 

Hurst had a Brownie camera, and somebody used it to take a picture. He can be seen sitting erect, looking impossibly young and brave. 

When the group finally rose and moved to leave, they were kicked and stuck with pins. A white man with a walking stick had sharpened it at the end and poked them with it. A woman blocked Hurst’s way and ground her heel into his toe.

“A heel to your toe with deliberation really hurts,” Hurst later said.

The group continued to stage the daily sit-ins at various locales over the next two weeks. They would meet beforehand at a youth center made available by a local church and sing such songs as “We Shall Overcome.” They would hold hands and end with a prayer and some words to send themselves back into the struggle. 

“Together we go up, together we stay up!”

On the morning of Aug. 27, Pearson got word of alarming developments in Hemming Park, across from Woolworths. The park was named after Charles Hemming, who had erected a memorial there to Florida’s Confederate soldiers in 1898. The memorial featured a representative figure standing atop a 62-foot granite column at the park’s center.

Pearson saw white men wearing similar Confederate uniforms as he drove past. They were carrying ax handles on which they had affixed Confederate battle flags. A sign was posted next to a station wagon.

“Free ax handles.”

Pearson reported back to the group. They held hands and sang and prayed as always. The difference was that this time Hurst took a vote on whether they should go ahead with a sit-in. The vote was unanimous in the affirmative. And 34 of them set off. 

“Our determination and courage overcame our healthy fear,” Hurst would later write in a book titled It Was Never About a Hot Dog and a Coke.

The group was marching downtown when the white mob spotted them and gave chase. Their pursuers were armed with baseball bats as well as ax handles.

Swinging at anyone black downtown and swinging at any of the whites who tried to defend anyone black.

— Rodney Hurst

Yates and five of the others headed into Woolworth’s directly across from the park. They began to stage a sit-in that was cut short when some of the mob burst in. Yates and the others escaped out a side door, but he was struck in the head before they reached the sanctuary of the church’s youth center.

Hurst and the rest had continued three blocks to start a sit-in at the W.T. Grant store. They had no sooner entered than the management closed the place and shut off the lights. They emerged to see a white mob charging at them.

“Swinging at anyone black downtown and swinging at any of the whites who tried to defend anyone black,” Hurst recalled. 

Hurst fled.

“Running away from getting hit,” he later said. “You did not know if there was someone else around the corner. You were running away from the danger you saw in front of you.” 

The stores up and down the street locked their doors. 

“If you were in, you couldn't get out, and if you were outside, you couldn’t get in for safety,” Hurst said.  

The nearly complete absence of cops led Hurst to suspect both the police department and the county sheriff’s office knew what was coming. Yates saw a single cop.

“There was one police officer who tried to get help. He called for help, but nothing happened until all hell broke loose,” Yates recalled.

The police only responded after a number of black people less resolutely non-violent than the youth council stepped in. Two tall and beefy cops arrived at the church youth center where Hurst and the others in the group had also sought sanctuary. The cops were confronted by the pastor, who stood maybe 5-foot-5.

“I remember him looking up to the county patrolmen, saying, ‘You will not set foot on church property,’” Hurst said. “They said, “All we want is to go in and talk to them.’ He said, ‘No, you will not talk to anybody today…’ And they left.”

After the first sit-in, Hurst had been fired from his job as a dishwasher at Cohen's department store.

“We don’t need you anymore,’ is what they actually said,” Hurst recalled. 

Hurst went on to serve in the Air Force and to write a book about Ax Handle Saturday. He remained a civil rights activist and there was much to do in Jacksonville. In response to the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision that school segregation was unconstitutional, the city had named a high school after Nathan Bedford Forrest, founder of the Ku Klux Klan. The school was not renamed until 2013.

That rocked the conscience of America unlike anything else that’s happened.

— Rodney Hurst, Ax Handle Saturday survivor

Hurst also became a black historian. He saw last month’s murder of George Floyd as part of a horrific continuum stretching back to slavery days. What made this killing different was the video showing Floyd die while the cop pressing a knee to his neck remained so impassive and deaf to the cries of “Mama! Mama!” along with the too familiar, ‘I can’t breathe.”

“That rocked the conscience of America unlike anything else that’s happened,” Hurst said. 

On Thursday came word that President Trump had chosen Jacksonville as the site of the Republican national convention and would deliver his acceptance speech on what happened to be the anniversary of Ax Handle Saturday.

The announcement explained to Hurst why Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry had the Confederate memorial in Hemming Park dismantled the day before. Hurst thinks Curry must have been seeking to preempt some of the fuss about the date and dampen in advance any criticism over this ebullience that Trump had chosen Jacksonville.

All that will remain of the monument will be a bare column stripped of statue and plaques when Hurst and Yates plan to gather for the 60th anniversary of Ax Handle Saturday. Hurst emphasizes that they will be observing social distancing and figure on providing masks to any who arrive without one. He and Yates are horrified that Trump will be packing his supporters into the arena on that same day in the midst of a pandemic when COVID-19 infections in Florida will likely still be rising.

 

 

“Which means he really doesn’t care about his base as he has those people kneeling at his throne,” Hurst said. “No empathy. No compassion. No sensitivity.”

The feeling of being hit in the back of a head with an ax handle just across from the park remains a vivid memory for Yates.

“It’s an experience in order for change to take place,” he said on Friday. “And that change was very slow in coming. I certainly thought we would be much further along.”

Yates, who went on to serve in federal and city government and to become a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve, added, “I thought as a result of the demonstrations of the 1960s that America would learn its lesson, that people would learn how to live together in peace and harmony, that we wouldn’t have to contend with the kind of rampant discrimination and prejudice that we are faced with today.”

He said that although the death of George Floyd was a shocking reminder of how far we have to come, he took hope in the diversity of the protesters across America.

“When we were protesting in the 1960s, we had one white student who demonstrated with us, and that was a rarity,” he said. “But today the demonstrators are people from all walks of life, all races, all religions and the ages go from the very young to the elderly people. The demonstrators look like America and that’s important. As a result of that, I think you will begin to see change happen as never before.”

NorthReport

REMEMBERING AX HANDLE SATURDAY

Pres. Trump’s Republican Convention speech will be on the 60th anniversary of Jacksonville’s biggest anti-Black race riot. A local lawyer who grew up in the Florida town wants to ensure we remember the past

 

https://thephiladelphiacitizen.org/ax-handle-saturday-trump-rnc/

JKR

Putin’s fascists: the Russian state's long history of cultivating homegrown neo-Nazis; Robert Horvath, La Trobe University; Published: March 22, 2022

Many commentators have already debunked Russian President Vladimir Putin’s absurd claim to be waging war to “de-nazify” Ukraine. 

Some have pointed out the far right received only 2% of the vote in Ukraine’s 2019 parliamentary elections, far less than in most of Europe. Others have drawn attention to Ukraine’s Jewish president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and the efforts of the Ukrainian state to protect minorities like Crimean Tatars and LGBTQ+ people, who are subject to brutal persecution in Russia.

What has received less coverage is the Putin regime’s own record of collaboration with far-right extremists. Even as Russian diplomats condemned “fascists” in the Baltic states and Kremlin propagandists railed against imaginary “Ukronazis” in power in Kyiv, the Russian state was cultivating its own homegrown Nazis.

JKR

Members of the pro-Kremlin Nashi movement celebrate the victory of Putin’s party in parliamentary election in 2007. MISHA JAPARIDZE/AP

NorthReport

Some is blatant like Trump and some is more subtle like......

Why Aren’t There More Black Managers In English Soccer?

The English Premier League is filled with elite Black talent. Manchester City pair Raheem Sterling and Kyle Walker, Manchester United duo Jadon Sancho and Marcus Rashford, Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-Arnold, Chelsea’s Reece James, Arsenal’s Bukayo Saka — all are excelling on the pitch. Ten players on the England squad that reached the final of the UEFA European Football Championships last summer were Black.

But the success of English soccer’s Black players has not translated into other opportunities at clubs. Though the issue of Black representation in soccer management has been discussed for decades, progress has been glacial — if it is even visible at all. Forty-three percent of players in the Premier League in 2021 were Black, as were 34 percent of players across the next three divisions that make up the top 92 clubs in the English football pyramid. But only 4.4 percent of managerial positions typically associated with professional playing experience are held by Black people, as documented in new research by the University of Michigan sports economist Stefan Szymanski. The lack of diversity among head coaches, then, is even starker than in the NFL, where six out of 32 current head coaches are members of a racial or ethnic minority, with four of them Black.1
In English soccer, an overwhelming number of managers are ex-professional players. Yet Black former players have routinely been overlooked for prominent jobs. Of the 94 men who played in the Premier League or Football League since 2004 and hold a UEFA Pro License, the highest professional qualification available to managers, three-quarters held management positions in either league in 2021. Just 23 percent of them were Black. There have been only 28 Black managers in the history of the English professional game, according to the Black Footballers Partnership, a body advocating for better representation of Black people in leadership positions in the sport. (The organization also commissioned Szymanski’s new research.)

Black footballers also historically faced discrimination when it comes to their earnings. A paper from Szymanski details how, from 1986 to 1993, an all-white team’s wage expenditure was about 5 percent higher than that of an equally successful team fielding an average proportion of Black players. The Black players were consistently underpaid.

Subsequent research has shown that, from the mid-1990s, Black players have been paid wages in line with their performances and no longer suffer from economic discrimination in the game. Yet barriers to management, and other coaching positions, evidently remain. Last year, only 10 percent of Black players to retire since 2004 had any managerial or coaching position at a professional English club; for white players, the figure was 50 percent, according to Szymanski.

https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/why-arent-there-more-black-managers...

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