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Redefining “What is an American?” and challenging racism and white supremacy at its heart through research, education, and disruption.

Big Tech (Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, X Snapchat, YouTube, LinkedIn, Microsoft) Signs Up For Hate Speech Code Of Conduct in EU, but does opposite in US 01/21/2025

Big Tech (Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, X Snapchat, YouTube, LinkedIn, Microsoft) Signs Up For Hate Speech Code Of Conduct in EU, but not in the US

Forbes - Major tech firms have agreed to do more to fight hate speech, signing a code of conduct that's been integrated into the EU's Digital Services Act.

Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, X Snapchat and YouTube have all agreed to abide by the code of conduct's terms, along with LinkedIn, Microsoft hosted consumer services, Rakuten Viber, Dailymotion and Jeuxvideo.com.

The aim is to strengthen the way online platforms deal with content that EU and national laws define as illegal hate speech.

"Hatred and polarization are threats to EU values and fundamental rights and undermine the stability of our democracies. The internet is amplifying the negative effects of hate speech," said Michael McGrath, commissioner for democracy, justice, the rule of law and consumer protection.

https://www.goldbridgeinstitute.org/big_tech_signs_up_for_hate_speech

Big Tech (Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, X Snapchat, YouTube, LinkedIn, Microsoft) Signs Up For Hate Speech Code Of Conduct in EU, but does opposite in US Forbes - Major tech firms have agreed to do more to fight hate speech, signing a code of conduct that's been integrated into the EU's Digital Services Act.

White Christian Nationalism Enters the Political Mainstream: Implications for the Roberts Court and Religious Freedom 10/07/2024

White Christian Nationalism Enters the Political Mainstream: Implications for the Roberts Court and Religious Freedom

Published from Seton Hall University

(Excerpt from Seton Hall Law Review)

An increasing number of legal scholars and political scientists
acknowledge that, in most cases, Supreme Court decision-making is based on neither pure law nor pure politics. Rather, the Justices’ votes and the Court’s decisions arise from an uncertain amalgam of law and politics—a law-politics dynamic, we might say. Politics, though, is not static. The conservative politics of 1990 is not the same as the conservative politics of 2021, including in relation to judicial decision- making. Hence, while a conservative majority has controlled the Court since 1991, when Clarence Thomas replaced Thurgood Marshall. The ramifications of political conservatism for the Court’s decision-making have significantly transformed over the years.

This Article traces the evolution of conservatism during the late
twentieth and early twenty-first centuries and explores the implications of that history for the Court’s recent religious freedom cases, with a focus on Fulton v. City of Philadelphia. To be sure, changes in the Court’s personnel affect the politics of the Court’s decisions. Moving from a liberal icon, like Marshall, to an ultra-conservative, like Thomas, will inevitably change the politics of Supreme Court adjudication. The same can be said about the more recent transition from Ruth Bader Ginsburg to Amy Coney Barrett. Yet, one should not overlook the importance of less extreme transitions, such as the replacement of
the moderately conservative Sandra Day O’Connor with the arch-conservative Samuel Alito. Regardless, given that a conservative bloc has controlled the Court for thirty years, this Article is less concerned with the politics of individual Justices and more concerned with broader trends in conservative politics.

For instance, before 1991, conservatives often advocated for
judicial restraint: the Justices, according to this viewpoint, should have been deferring to the democratic process. If the Court was reviewing the constitutionality of a congressional action, to take one example, the Justices should refrain from substituting their own values for those of Congress. After 1991 and the establishment of conservative control of the Court, conservatives quickly lost interest in judicial restraint and
instead began advocating for “judicial engagement.” Conservatives, in other words, encouraged the Court to articulate and implement conservative values rather than deferring to the democratic process.

Still, though, what values were the Justices to articulate and
implement? In short, what did (and does) conservatism mean for the Court?

White Christian Nationalism Enters the Political Mainstream: Implications for the Roberts Court and Religious Freedom An increasing number of legal scholars and political scientistsacknowledge that, in most cases, Supreme Court decision-making isbased on neither pure law nor pure politics. 1 Rather, the Justices’ votes

White Christian Nationalism ‘Is a Fundamental Threat to Democracy’ 06/19/2024

White Christian Nationalism ‘Is a Fundamental Threat to Democracy’

New York Magazine - An ideology is on the march. Traces of it are detectable in a racist massacre in Buffalo; in Tucker Carlson’s monologues; in Marjorie Taylor Greene’s public comments. Find it again in the right’s anti-abortion rhetoric, which poorly disguises demographic anxiety, or in the right’s response to the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, which shows it embracing God and guns with ever greater conviction. This ideology has a name, argue sociologists Samuel L. Perry of the University of Oklahoma and Philip S. Gorski of Yale University. Perry and Gorski call it white Christian nationalism, and in their view, it represents a pressing threat to democracy.

In The Flag and the Cross, their new book from Oxford University Press, white Christian nationalists undergo careful scrutiny. Combining research with data analysis, Gorski and Perry argue that white Christian nationalists share a set of common anti-democratic beliefs and principles. “These are beliefs that, we argue, reflect a desire to restore and privilege the myths, values, identity, and authority of a particular ethnocultural tribe,” they write. “These beliefs add up to a political vision that privileges the tribe. And they seek to put other tribes in their proper place.”

White Christian Nationalism ‘Is a Fundamental Threat to Democracy’ New York Magazine - An ideology is on the march. Traces of it are detectable in a racist massacre in Buffalo; in Tucker Carlson’s monologues; in Marjorie Taylor Greene’s public comments. Find it again in the right’s anti-abortion rhetoric, which poorly disguises demographic anxiety, or in the ...

New wave of bills targeting libraries is ‘a threat to our democracy,’ American Library Association warns 03/13/2024

New wave of bills targeting libraries is ‘a threat to our democracy,’ American Library Association warns

NBC News - The association, founded in 1876, condemned legislation that would threaten librarians and other educators with criminal prosecution for possessing “obscene” material

Less than two months into 2024, lawmakers in at least 13 states have introduced legislation that could disrupt libraries’ services and censor their materials. The new wave of bills follows a historic year of book challenges, mainly affecting titles centered on the topics of race, gender identity or sexual orientation.

“The American Library Association condemns in the strongest terms possible legislation in more than a dozen states that would threaten librarians and other educators with criminal prosecution for doing their jobs,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, the director of the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom, in a statement. “This is not a culture war; it’s a threat to our democracy.”

New wave of bills targeting libraries is ‘a threat to our democracy,’ American Library Association warns NBC News - The association, founded in 1876, condemned legislation that would threaten librarians and other educators with criminal prosecution for possessing “obscene” material

Antisemitic incidents in U.S. surged 360% after Hamas attack: ADL 01/10/2024

Antisemitic incidents in U.S. surged 360% after Hamas attack: ADL

AXIOS - Antisemitic incidents in the U.S. have more than tripled in the three months following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack in Israel, according to new Anti-Defamation League (ADL) preliminary data.

Driving the news: Antisemitic cases involving incidents like physical assault, harassment and vandalism, were higher than the total number of antisemitic episodes tracked in almost every year since ADL started monitoring this data in the late 1970s, the group said Wednesday.

By the numbers: The ADL documented 3,283 antisemitic incidents between Oct. 7, 2023, and Jan. 7, the group's report said. That's a 360% jump from the same period a year earlier.

At least 628 incidents were reported against Jewish institutions such as synagogues and community centers.
The report said 505 incidents occurred on college campuses, and another 246 were reported in K-12 schools.
About two-thirds of the reported incidents could be directly related to the Israel-Hamas war, the ADL report said.
Zoom out: Since Oct. 7, there was an average of nearly 34 antisemitic incidents per day, putting 2023 on track to be the highest year for antisemitic acts against Jews, according to ADL records.

The preliminary three-month tally is higher than the total number of antisemitic incidents tracked in any year in the last decade, except for 2022, when the number of such incidents reached a historic high of 3,697.

Antisemitic incidents in U.S. surged 360% after Hamas attack: ADL AXIOS - Antisemitic incidents in the U.S. have more than tripled in the three months following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack in Israel, according to new Anti-Defamation League (ADL) preliminary data.

Two states are filing lawsuits to curtail the activities of a neo-Nazi organization 12/20/2023

Two states are filing lawsuits to curtail the activities of a neo-Nazi organization

KWBU (NPR)

A. MARTÍNEZ: Attorneys general in Massachusetts and New Hampshire are filing lawsuits to curtail the increasingly public activities of a neo-Nazi group called NSC-131. NPR's domestic extremism correspondent Odette Yousef joins us now. All right. NSC-131 - who are they, and what are they doing, Odette?

ODETTE YOUSEF: Well, A, NSC-131 stands for Nationalist Social Club Anti-Communist Action. It was started in 2019 by a Massachusetts man named Christopher Hood and now has an estimated 20 to 30 active members. They are explicitly neo-Nazi, pursuing a white nationalist agenda. And these suits relate to activities that the group undertook mostly in 2022, 2023, when it was deliberately trying to increase its public profile throughout New England. Its members disrupted several drag queen story hours at libraries and other establishments. They patrolled neighborhoods, and they visited several hotels that were putting up asylum-seekers, targeting and harassing migrants and other patrons. In several instances, A, the group has been involved in physical violence. But actually, these are not criminal charges. These are civil lawsuits.

MARTÍNEZ: Why not? I mean, they sound like crimes, especially violence. So why is this being pursued in civil court?

Two states are filing lawsuits to curtail the activities of a neo-Nazi organization A MARTÍNEZ, HOST: Attorneys general in Massachusetts and New Hampshire are filing lawsuits to curtail the increasingly public activities of a neo-Nazi group called NSC-131. NPR's domestic extremism correspondent Odette Yousef joins us now. All right. NSC-131 - who are they, and what are they doing,...

One Month Following Hamas Massacre, ADL Documents Dramatic Surge in Antisemitic Incidents in the U.S. 11/18/2023

One Month Following Hamas Massacre, ADL Documents Dramatic Surge in Antisemitic Incidents in the U.S.

ADL - In the month following Hamas’s terror attack on Israel, antisemitic incidents in the U.S. increased by 316 percent compared to the same time period last year, according to preliminary data released today by ADL (the Anti-Defamation League). At the same time, Americans are growing increasingly concerned about antisemitism, with more than 70 percent agreeing in a new survey that Jew-hatred is a serious problem.

In the one-month period between Oct. 7 and Nov. 7, 2023, the ADL Center on Extremism documented 832 antisemitic incidents of assault, vandalism and harassment across the U.S., an average of nearly 28 incidents a day. This represents a 316 percent increase from the 200 incidents reported during the same period in 2022.

An interactive map plotting where incidents occurred since Oct. 7 can be found here.

Of the 832 incidents, ADL recorded 632 acts of harassment, 170 instances of vandalism, and 30 assaults.

ADL’s data shows that at least 200 of the 653 anti-Israel rallies held across the U.S. since Oct. 7 featured explicit or strong implicit support for Hamas and/or violence against Jews in Israel. These rallies are included in ADL’s tally of antisemitic incidents under the harassment category.

124 of the incidents took place on college campuses since Oct. 7, compared to only 12 incidents over the same time period last year.

One Month Following Hamas Massacre, ADL Documents Dramatic Surge in Antisemitic Incidents in the U.S. ADL - In the month following Hamas’s terror attack on Israel, antisemitic incidents in the U.S. increased by 316 percent compared to the same time period last year, according to preliminary data released today by ADL (the Anti-Defamation League). At the same time, Americans are growing increasingl...

How the Israel-Hamas war is fueling hate against Muslims and Jews 11/02/2023

How the Israel-Hamas war is fueling hate against Muslims and Jews

Vox - Deadly violence in the Middle East is spurring attacks and heightening fear in Muslim, Jewish, and Arab (especially Palestinian) communities across the United States.

Israel’s airstrikes in the past three weeks have killed more than 8,000 Palestinians, most of them women and minors, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Hamas’s attack killed more than 1,400 Israelis, and the group is still holding about 200 people hostage, according to the Israeli government. As the war continues, law enforcement officials expect hate crimes reports to only increase: The FBI warned last week that “the volume and frequency of threats to Americans, especially those in the Jewish, Arab American, and Muslim communities in the United States, have increased, raising our concern that violent extremists and lone offenders motivated by or reacting to ongoing events could target these communities.”

The FBI’s national hate crimes data is reported on a yearly basis, and the agency has not released specific numbers about the increases they’ve seen in threats and hate crimes against Palestinians, Jews, or Muslims have risen in the past few weeks. Even so, the FBI’s latest hate crimes report, released on October 16, showed that hate crimes were already on the rise in the past year.

Hate crimes increased by 7 percent in 2022 compared to 2021. Anti-Jewish attacks, the second highest hate crimes category after anti-Black, rose to 1,124 incidents. There were 158 reported anti-Muslim incidents and 92 reported anti-Arab incidents.

The numbers are an undercount. Many police departments opt out of submitting hate crime data to the FBI, and it remains difficult for officers to prove that a reported crime was motivated by bias. Fear and distrust of law enforcement among victims of certain populations, such as Muslim communities, leads to underreporting. Nevertheless, the number of incidents represents the highest number recorded since the FBI began collecting this information in 1991.

How the Israel-Hamas war is fueling hate against Muslims and Jews Vox - Deadly violence in the Middle East is spurring attacks and heightening fear in Muslim, Jewish, and Arab (especially Palestinian) communities across the United States.

Online hate surges after Hamas attacks Israel. Why everyone is blaming social media 10/11/2023

Online hate surges after Hamas attacks Israel. Why everyone is blaming social media

USAToday - Allison Josephs got a bone-chilling threat in 2012 from someone who identified herself as Becky. “Hitler should have finished his good work,” the message read. The writer said she had her Louisville Slugger ready for the “next chance we get.”

The frequency of hate-filled social media posts targeting Jews has only increased since then, said Josephs, a mother of four who runs the nonprofit Jew in the City.

So she said she was not surprised by the wave of online hate immediately following the deadly attacks in Israel as people celebrated Hamas’ acts of terror, striking fear of more violence to come.

“From a social media perspective, it’s already been so bad, it’s kind of hard for it to get worse,” Josephs said.

But it is getting worse. Groups who study online hate speech say it has spiked in recent days – not just for Jewish communities but also for Palestinians, who have faced increasing online hatred. And representatives of both communities agree on one thing: U.S.-based social media companies are still not doing anywhere near enough to rid their platforms of hate against targeted groups.

Online hate surges after Hamas attacks Israel. Why everyone is blaming social media USAToday - Allison Josephs got a bone-chilling threat in 2012 from someone who identified herself as Becky. “Hitler should have finished his good work,” the message read. The writer said she had her Louisville Slugger ready for the “next chance we get.”

09/08/2023

Cowards. At least Illinois N***s don't hide their faces. - Jake Blues

Racist Jacksonville shooter wore Rhodesian army patch, a symbol of white supremacy 08/30/2023

Racist Jacksonville shooter wore Rhodesian army patch, a symbol of white supremacy

NBCNews - The white gunman who killed three Black people at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida, over the weekend wore a Rhodesian army patch on his tactical vest, law enforcement sources say, a reference that has been used before during white supremacist attacks.

The patch — representing Rhodesia, a former white minority-ruled territory in southern Africa in the 1960s and ’70s that would become Zimbabwe — is yet another symbol of how the shooter, Ryan Palmeter, was racist and was influenced by racist ideology, investigators say.

Further details also emerged Monday about his struggles with his mental health and a domestic disturbance that required law enforcement intervention.

“This shooting was racially motivated, and he hated Black people,” Sheriff T.K. Waters told reporters Saturday.

Racist Jacksonville shooter wore Rhodesian army patch, a symbol of white supremacy NBCNews - The white gunman who killed three Black people at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida, over the weekend wore a Rhodesian army patch on his tactical vest, law enforcement sources say, a reference that has been used before during white supremacist attacks.

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