Stalin
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2008
- Messages
- 4,017
Predictably the US nazi cabal has smeared this group as "terrorist"
This modern iteration of antifa grew in response to an alarming new cadre of white supremacist groups that emerged during Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. Although antifa is most commonly associated in the public imagination with punching Nazis, such militancy represents a tiny fraction of its activism. The story of antifa – a subculture of anarchists, socialists and communists dedicated to destroying the far right “by any means necessary” – is remarkable not so much for its violence, which is rare, but for its espionage and research. Over the last decade it has exposed the identities of thousands of pseudonymous Americans belonging to this new generation of fascists, sometimes deploying spies to go undercover into white supremacist groups and gather intelligence – including secretly recorded audio, covert photos and thousands of private chat messages – that would be used to unmask professors, politicians, police officers and pastors.
There are now more than 70,000 human beings languishing in America’s immigration detention centers, an all-time high. Report after report has detailed the inhumane conditions at these jail complexes, where detainees have accused DHS and ICE agents of sexual abuse, medical neglect and assault. Thirty-two people died after being detained in these places in 2025, making it the deadliest year in more than two decades. Only one month into 2026, six people have died in ICE custody. One of those deaths was recently ruled a homicide.
“These traveling terrorists need a place to sleep,” Riley said of agents who send immigrants – some of them young children – to these centers, which experts have argued can reasonably be called concentration camps. “They need to get coffee, eat, go to the bathroom, go to the gym, get gas, rent a car like anyone else. Predators should not be able to enjoy anonymity.”
There is a long, proud American tradition of unmasking fascists. Black activists and investigative journalists such as Ida B Wells and Walter White labored for decades, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, to strip the white lynch mobs terrorizing the south of their anonymity, identifying individual executioners and demanding they face justice. In 1924, the mayor of Buffalo, New York, enlisted a spy to go undercover into the city’s large Ku Klux Klan chapter, eventually obtaining a list of members and putting it on display downtown so Buffalonians could learn which of their neighbors hid behind white hoods at night to burn crosses. In Los Angeles in the 1930s, a Jewish lawyer named Leon Lewis operated a spy network to infiltrate the German American Bund, foiling Nazi plots to massacre the city’s Jews. In the 1940s, activist Stetson Kennedy went undercover into the Klan in Georgia, stealing away thousands of invaluable documents. In the 1980s and 90s, young punks belonging to groups such as Anti-Racist Action would go dumpster-diving outside the homes of neo-Nazi skinheads, retrieving discarded mail with the Nazis’ real names and eventually posting “MEET YOUR LOCAL NAZI” posters in their neighborhoods.
www.theguardian.com
comrade stalin
masscow
This modern iteration of antifa grew in response to an alarming new cadre of white supremacist groups that emerged during Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. Although antifa is most commonly associated in the public imagination with punching Nazis, such militancy represents a tiny fraction of its activism. The story of antifa – a subculture of anarchists, socialists and communists dedicated to destroying the far right “by any means necessary” – is remarkable not so much for its violence, which is rare, but for its espionage and research. Over the last decade it has exposed the identities of thousands of pseudonymous Americans belonging to this new generation of fascists, sometimes deploying spies to go undercover into white supremacist groups and gather intelligence – including secretly recorded audio, covert photos and thousands of private chat messages – that would be used to unmask professors, politicians, police officers and pastors.
There are now more than 70,000 human beings languishing in America’s immigration detention centers, an all-time high. Report after report has detailed the inhumane conditions at these jail complexes, where detainees have accused DHS and ICE agents of sexual abuse, medical neglect and assault. Thirty-two people died after being detained in these places in 2025, making it the deadliest year in more than two decades. Only one month into 2026, six people have died in ICE custody. One of those deaths was recently ruled a homicide.
“These traveling terrorists need a place to sleep,” Riley said of agents who send immigrants – some of them young children – to these centers, which experts have argued can reasonably be called concentration camps. “They need to get coffee, eat, go to the bathroom, go to the gym, get gas, rent a car like anyone else. Predators should not be able to enjoy anonymity.”
There is a long, proud American tradition of unmasking fascists. Black activists and investigative journalists such as Ida B Wells and Walter White labored for decades, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, to strip the white lynch mobs terrorizing the south of their anonymity, identifying individual executioners and demanding they face justice. In 1924, the mayor of Buffalo, New York, enlisted a spy to go undercover into the city’s large Ku Klux Klan chapter, eventually obtaining a list of members and putting it on display downtown so Buffalonians could learn which of their neighbors hid behind white hoods at night to burn crosses. In Los Angeles in the 1930s, a Jewish lawyer named Leon Lewis operated a spy network to infiltrate the German American Bund, foiling Nazi plots to massacre the city’s Jews. In the 1940s, activist Stetson Kennedy went undercover into the Klan in Georgia, stealing away thousands of invaluable documents. In the 1980s and 90s, young punks belonging to groups such as Anti-Racist Action would go dumpster-diving outside the homes of neo-Nazi skinheads, retrieving discarded mail with the Nazis’ real names and eventually posting “MEET YOUR LOCAL NAZI” posters in their neighborhoods.
Antifa used to unmask neo-Nazis, now it’s exposing ICE: ‘Predators don’t get anonymity’
Following in a long American tradition of identifying fascists, a network of leftists has set out to name and shame Trump’s immigration agents
comrade stalin
masscow