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Warning Issued Over 'Explosion' of Neo Nazi Clubs in US
Warning Issued Over 'Explosion' of Neo Nazi Clubs in US

Newsweek

time12 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Newsweek

Warning Issued Over 'Explosion' of Neo Nazi Clubs in US

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A warning has been issued over the increasing number of neo-Nazi clubs in the United States. According to the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism (GPAHE), there has been an "explosion" in the number of active chapters of neo-Nazi Active Clubs (ACs) in the U.S. and other countries. The group is raising alarm about this trend, calling it a "growing transnational threat." Why It Matters Active Clubs are a transnational network of sports clubs that were founded by the white supremacist Robert Rundo and the Russian neo-Nazi Denis Kapustin in 2020. Rundo is one of the founders of a U.S. far-right organization called the Rise Above Movement (RAM) and was sentenced to jail in 2024 for conspiracy to riot at Californian political rallies in 2017. Kapustin is a far-right figure who runs the Russian Volunteer Corps and has reportedly espoused Adolf Hitler's views. The decentralised groups engage in physical training with the purpose of being able to attack political opponents and also spread propaganda about white nationalism. Carrying shields, covering their faces, and holding upside down U.S. flags, marchers with the Alt-Right Neo-Nazi group "Reclaim America," march in Washington, D.C., on May 13, 2023. Carrying shields, covering their faces, and holding upside down U.S. flags, marchers with the Alt-Right Neo-Nazi group "Reclaim America," march in Washington, D.C., on May 13, 2023. AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin The growth of ACs comes amid growing concerns about the rise of white supremacist incidents more broadly. According to the Anti-Defamation League, more than 750 white supremacist incidents took place from 2020 to 2024. They found that there were 282 events organized or attended by white supremacists in 2023, a 63 percent increase from 173 in 2022. What To Know The number of ACs in the U.S. has increased from 49 in October 2023, to 78 in June 2025. This is a percentage increase of 59.2 percent. Of these, GPAHE found that at least 19 clubs representing 42 states target teen boys aged 15 to 18. Some of these groups posted neo-Nazi propaganda on social media, as seen by GPAHE, including a quote by Adolf Hitler. GPAHE also found that globally, the number of Active Clubs has increased by 25 percent since 2023. This means that 187 chapters of the movement are now operating across 27 countries. GPAHE tracked ACs on social media to come to these findings. They found that the groups recruit on Telegram and TikTok. What People Are Saying GPAHE said the movement "represents a growing transnational threat, especially as it adapts to evade platform moderation and targets young recruits." What Happens Next Social media platforms can adopt policies to remove the groups presence from the internet while the government can also enact policies to clamp down on the neo-Nazi movement. However, there must be political will for this to happen. In the mean time, the extent to which these groups continue to flourish remains to be seen.

Violent Threats Against US Judges Are Skyrocketing Online
Violent Threats Against US Judges Are Skyrocketing Online

WIRED

time14-05-2025

  • Politics
  • WIRED

Violent Threats Against US Judges Are Skyrocketing Online

May 14, 2025 1:04 PM Threatening social media posts targeting US judges have increased by more than 300 percent since last year, a new report shows. Photo-Illustration: Wired Staff; Harold M. Lambert/Getty Images Violent threats and calls for impeachment on social media platforms against US judges have skyrocketed by 327 percent since last year, according to new research from the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism (GPAHE). Many of the posts are violent and politically charged. 'THIS JUDGE NEEDS TO BE REMOVED AND CHARGED W TREASON,' one user posted on TikTok in March, referring to Judge James Boasberg, who found probable cause for contempt against the Trump administration after it refused to turn around deportation flights on March 15. 'That bitch is guilty of treason, sedition and insurrection; lock up that bitch and send her to gitmo,' a user called Old School Cowboy wrote on Gab about California Judge Jennifer Thurston, who ruled last month that Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents could no longer stop undocumented immigrants without reasonable suspicion that they were in violation of the law. While threats of this nature were previously limited to fringe corners of the internet, GPAHE researchers found that they are now openly shared on mainstream platforms like TikTok. Along with TikTok, the researchers also compiled instances of violent threats and calls for impeachment against judges on President Donald Trump's Truth Social platform, the anonymous message board 4chan, in the comments of video posts on the video sharing site Rumble, and on Gab, a far-right social network. This uptick in posts comes as Trump, Elon Musk, and other major figures on the right have shared inflammatory rhetoric about the judiciary, especially in cases where judges have ruled against the current administration. In a Truth Social post in March, Trump called Boasberg a 'radical left lunatic' who 'should be IMPEACHED!!!' Musk called the court decisions impeding his so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) a 'judicial coup,' adding in a post on X: 'impeach the judges.' White House Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and Attorney General Pam Bondi have all expressed similar views in recent months. Andy Ogles, a Republican congressman from Tennessee, introduced articles to impeach Judge John Bates, after Bates ruled against the Trump administration's removal of the government's public health websites. Ogles posted on X, without evidence, that the judge was a 'predator' and a 'RADICAL LGBTQ activist.' 'These anti-Trump browbeaters have zero credibility and were conveniently silent when the former president weaponized his administration against his political opponents, Catholics, parents, and doctors who opposed his radical agenda. President Trump will always stand for law and order and the U.S. Constitution,' White House spokesperson Harrison Fields tells WIRED. There are real world impacts of these posts. Judge John Coughenour was subjected to a bomb threat and a swatting attack in January after ruling against the Trump administration. Boasberg's brother, a former school superintendent, was given a security detail in March after far-right activist Laura Loomer made baseless allegations against him. 'There's no question that we're seeing a normalization of bigoted, violent, and other harmful speech on mainstream platforms,' Wendy Via, the CEO and President of GPAHE tells WIRED. 'Trump and other extreme influencers threatening and mean-spirited posts and public comments has moved the once unthinkable to commonplace, online, in our communities, and in our political discourse, without thought to the very real dangers of regularly demonizing those that oppose you.' The researchers found that the social platforms they examined all saw a significant spike in threatening posts in March. "This report relies on anecdotal observations and exaggerated data to distort the reality of our platform,' TikTok spokesperson Ben Rathe tells WIRED. 'Nevertheless, we continue to enforce our policies which strictly prohibit violent threats.' In May last year, the researchers found just 35 threatening posts about US judges on TikTok. In March this year, they say that number had risen to 223 instances, marking a 537 percent increase. 'Given the large user base of TikTok, it's likely that it was only a matter of time before some content creators started to carve out a niche for users that sought the sort of threats we see today,' Luke Baumgartner, a research fellow at George Washington University's Program on Extremism, tells WIRED. 'I think it's broadly a reflection of how some of those that occupy the highest political positions in the country are comfortable with openly threatening judges, giving ordinary social media users a chance to pass on the message.' On Truth Social, where threats against judges were already commonplace, the number of posts, according to GPAHE, rose from 2,232 in May 2024 to 9,462 in March 2023, with an increase of 324 percent. Many of these posts were written directly in response to Trump's own threats against judges. The largest increase in threatening posts was recorded on Gab, a platform favored by white supremacists and antisemites, with threatening posts rising from 273 in May 2024 to 3,210 in March 2025, a 1,076 percent increase. 4chan and Rumble also saw significant increases in posts. 'All of a sudden you people are against calling for the impeachment of government officials or calling for them to be tried and convicted for treason? That's funny,' Andrew Torba, the Christian nationalist who runs Gab, tells WIRED. Torba did not respond when asked specifically about the violent threats posted on his platform. Truth Social, 4chan and Rumble did not respond to WIRED's request for comment.

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