Creator Forum - Racial Loyalty News Online

Racial Loyalty News => Creativity in the (((MSM / News))) => Topic started by: Rev.Cambeul on Wed 26 Feb 2020

Title: 2020-02-25 ADL: Creativity Alliance Activity Has Doubled Nation Wide
Post by: Rev.Cambeul on Wed 26 Feb 2020
White supremacist activity doubles nationwide

Rhonda Wheeler, News Editor | The Shield (https://usishield.com/) (USA) | 25 February 2020

https://usishield.com/32888/news/white-supremacist-activity-doubles-nationwide

White supremacist activity on college campuses have reached an all-time high, according to a new study from the Anti Deflamation League (ADL).

In 2018, over 1,200 cases of white supremacist activity were reported nationwide in 2018, including the distribution of racist, anti-Semitic and anti-LGBTQ flyers, stickers, banners and posters on campus.

Nearly 3,000 cases were reported nationwide in 2019. This averages to more than seven incidents per day.
(https://usishield.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/White-S.-Graphicai-360x475.jpg)
The ADL claims this is the highest number of propaganda incidents they have ever reported.

"Propaganda allows white supremacists to maximize media and online attention, while limiting the risk of individual exposure, negative media coverage, arrests and public backlash that often accompanies more public events," the study said.

The ADL said, nationwide, white supremacists have always leafleted campuses, but their campaign targeting college students ramped up 2016 and has continued since.

Steve Bequette, director of Public Safety, said USI's campus had three reports both in 2018 and 2019.

There has been no reports of white supremacist flyer this semester.

"Universities are a convenient target because of who you have in mass in that community," Bequette said. "It's a wide variety or cornucopia of people from all walks of life and at that age who's most impressionable."

Some of the most common tactic white supremacist groups use is distributing flyers or posters.

The person leaving flyers on vehicles was caught on campus earlier this year, but the university chose not to identify them (@Mr.Deth) so they wouldn't get the notoriety they're looking for.
See: https://creativityalliance.com/forum/index.php/topic,11728.msg33109.html#msg33109

Is it Really ALRIGHT TO BE WHITE? "Most American people don't subscribe to their views or want to take the time to look at them," Bequette said. "It's disgusting. It's terrible."

Quote from: MSMWhite Lives Don't Matter
https://creativityalliance.com/forum/index.php/topic,11801.0.html

https://twitter.com/LeighStewy/status/1231679391777902594

The Creativity Alliance Group, a white supremacist group, has received a trespass letter from the university. The group could be arrested if they show up on campus again.
See: https://creativityalliance.com/forum/index.php/topic,11728.0.html

The group left flyers on cars at the University of Evansville which led to an individual fleeing from them, giving both universities a meager description of them.


"Obviously these people that are involved in this we believe are cowards because they won't stand up and talk face to face about these issues," Bequette said. "They'll put it on flyers and run."
Admin Note (https://creativityalliance.com/forum/index.php?action-staff): Attempting to goad us, hey? He/She/It isn't very good at it. Obviously English is a second language for that dumb *e Bequette.

Bequette said Public Safety monitors the groups' social media formats as the groups post where they've been that day and try to be incognito about it.

Public Safety also monitors other universities around the region to see if they've had similar issues.

"That's been extremely important to identifying other individuals that have been involved in different things," Bequette said. "Because we're not the only university that has been targeted by these individuals. If you see something, say something."

Students are asked to assess the situation, call public safety immediately and take action. In a situation involving white supremacist flyers on campus, students are asked to observe and get a license plate or description of the person.

Bequette also recommended students know the university solicitation policy. The university doesn't allow the distribution of posters without permission of the President's Office.

The ADL mapped out each reported case from 2018-2019. In Evansville, there were 12 incidents involving white supremacist propaganda.



Director of Public Safety Stephen Bequette

slbequette@usi.edu
(812) 464-1845
USI Public Safety
8600 University Boulevard
Evansville, Indiana 47712
(https://www.usi.edu/media/5609558/steve-bequette.jpg)
Title: Re: 2020-02-25 ADL: Creativity Alliance Activity Has Doubled Nation Wide
Post by: Rev.Cambeul on Tue 28 Jul 2020
Quote from: Mr.Deth on Thu 27 Feb 2020Steve Bequette never called back. Who's the coward now ?

I sent him an email challenge as well. He refused to respond. In Ms Bequette's words, that's the behaviour of a "coward."




White supremacist propaganda produced by U.S. hate groups is spreading — and working  :ok

The purveyors largely favor veiled hate over explicitly racist language because it helps lure young people who could be turned off by clear neo-Nazi rhetoric.

NBC News? | 24 February 2020

By Carla Hill, senior investigative researcher at the Anti-Defamation League's Center on Extremism

https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/white-supremacist-propaganda-produced-u-s-hate-groups-spreading-working-ncna1140726

Excerpt: White supremacists and their ilk have long used propaganda as a tool to spread their message. Long before the internet, men stood on corners with paper bags of hateful flyers or drove from town to town, leaving their racist or anti-Semitic photocopies on front steps and in driveways.

This tried-and-true tactic is now back with a vengeance. In 2019, U.S. white supremacists employed paper canvassing of neighborhoods and college campuses more than at any time in recent memory, with an unprecedented number of flyers, banners, stickers and posters appearing across the country.

But the age-old scourge is being accompanied by some innovations, including a technological upgrade. The propaganda is used to lure potential haters online, where these new recruits are gradually indoctrinated more and more. And given the negative publicity surrounding violent rallies like Unite the Right in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, white supremacists have chosen to temper their rhetoric. That means their posters and stickers may initially appear to be innocuous, making their propaganda tactics even more insidious.

According to our research at the Anti-Defamation League, white supremacists were responsible for 2,713 propaganda distributions across the United States in 2019, an increase of 123 percent from 2018. Dozens of white supremacist groups participated in this barrage of offensive propaganda, which was documented in every state except Hawaii.

White-supremacist groups largely favor veiled hate over explicitly racist language, and some, such as the Patriot Front, lean heavily on "patriotic" imagery, incorporating American flags or red, white and blue color schemes. They all tend to use toned-down language about how "diversity destroys nations" and the need to take pride in "Western" culture.

This is purposeful; it gives white supremacists an opening to a population of curious young people who would most likely be turned off by explicit neo-Nazi rhetoric or overtly racist language.

And it provides a greater chance of their signs passing under the radar instead of being immediately challenged. A poster encouraging passers-by to "Defend America" or urging "Nationalism Not Globalism" probably wouldn't raise many eyebrows, while it might attract a few curious young people to visit the website printed in tiny letters at the bottom edge of the placard.

White supremacists have learned to take advantage of social media, starting with paper but quickly following up online. As soon as a poster is taped up, for instance, a photo appears on a white supremacist group's social media feed proudly noting the propaganda and its location.

Members of white supremacist groups can post these "patriotic" flyers anonymously or hold and quickly disband flash demonstrations before counterprotesters can assemble. They then share their images and videos, knowing they're finding their audience. They create fear and anxiety in communities with little or no risk to their reputations.

While the language may be intentionally vague, it does the job. It's a hat-tip to those who recognize and embrace "globalism" as an anti-Semitic trope and other such hate-filled dog whistles, but it also serves as a more subtle invitation to people with no established ties to extremism whose curiosity may have been piqued by an offhand comment or an intriguing phrase.

But it's not just the words or images on the poster or sticker that matters — it's also the placement. White supremacists target locations where they know they'll have an impact: campus multicultural centers, Hillel buildings and African American studies departments.

That's part of the hateful message: We're here, and we're watching you.

Blah blah blah ... not worth the effort to copy and paste the rest of this Jewish Supremacist garbage.