Sunday, June 6, 2010

Article, Right-Wing Extremists Organize and Promote Violence onFacebook -- Should the Feds Bust Them Or Leave Them Alone?

 
Hi to all.

Here, from one of the accessible Youtube sites, is one of the Sons of Liberty messages to which the article refers. Perhaps someone with some sight can explain what happens at the message's end.

Ted

http://tube.majestyc.net/?v=GRhbCvGH-B4
---- Claude Everett <ceverett@dslextreme.com> wrote:
>
>
> Right-Wing Extremists Organize and Promote Violence on Facebook -- Should
> the Feds Bust Them Or Leave Them Alone?
> By Justine Sharrock, AlterNet
> Posted on June 3, 2010, Printed on June 6, 2010
> http://www.alternet.org/story/147054/
>
>  With all the concern about the lack of privacy on Facebook, one would think
> that the online social networking site would be the last place that
> paranoid, right-wing extremist groups would organize. But a wide range of
> groups, from patriot organizations to militias and even white supremacists,
> are using social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and
> YouTube to organize and even espouse illegal activities.
>
> Take the American Resistance Movement, a network of militia groups that vows
> to take up arms against what it claims is an increasingly tyrannical
> government. Its Facebook pages and those of its members are filled with
> conspiratorial news about the New World Order and impending martial law,
> information about AK-47s, announcements for meetings, links to YouTube
> recruitment videos, and information about boycotts and elections.
>
> Clicking through ARM's profiles and walls offers an insider's view of what
> these groups are all about. ARM member and Three Percenter Bradley Clifford,
> who ran the ARM online forum, suggested that I check out Facebook, MySpace
> and YouTube rather than ARM's own Web site to "get a better picture" of the
> group. In fact, he eventually ended up taking down its Web site all
> together.
>
> The photo pages are filled with shots of masked men holding machine guns,
> some with the U.S. flag tied around their lower faces. There are photos of
> AR-15s and AK-47s, Palin signs, eagles and hot chicks with guns. There are
> American flags, Don't Tread on Me flags and Confederate flags. Images of the
> Founding Fathers sit next to those of Obama depicted as a socialist in front
> of the Russian flag. Favored Thomas Jefferson quotes like "The Tree of
> liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and
> tyrants" and "When the government fears the people, there is liberty. When
> the people fear the government, there is tyranny" litter posts and
> individual About Me sections.
>
> Looking through pages for ARM as well as linked groups like Sons of Liberty,
> (a "peaceful" group whose mission states, "As John Locke said, it is not
> only the right, but the duty of the people to overthrow an oppressive
> government. In the future, if need be, the new 'sons of liberty' shall and
> will take back control of this nation.") Three Per Centers, Right to Revolt
> and "White Fang Revolution," linked YouTube videos range from footage of
> militia trainings, infomercials about the New World Order and hip hop videos
> promoting an armed revolution. There are tips on how to stockpile ammo and
> survival gear, and calls to impeach Obama and resist the New World Order.
>
> It seems odd to see all this on Facebook, but in some ways it makes perfect
> sense. Any grassroots political movement from the Tea Parties to MoveOn to
> Obama's election volunteers has to maximize social-networking sites to be
> successful. Likewise, right-wing extremist groups realize that the reach and
> efficiency these sites offer can't be duplicated. They can reach members who
> are isolated in rural areas (or liberal pockets like San Francisco), link to
> like-minded organizations and quickly disseminate information far and wide.
>
> It's particularly essential for groups like ARM, which use the leaderless
> resistance model, in which organizations operate as a network of small
> dispersed independent yet interlinked groups and individuals, without one
> easily identifiable leader who can be easily targeted. It eliminates the
> weak link represented by a central leadership that has historically been
> targeted by the government and has proved vulnerable to internal disputes
> and struggles within movements. It allows individuals to take initiatives on
> a local level while still working together and sharing strategies and ideas.
> Popularized in 1962 by former Klansman turned Aryan Nationalist Louis Beam,
> it's a structure that is used by a variety of groups, from the Earth
> Liberation Front to the Tea Party movement.
>
> Social networking sites mimic the structure of these groups, making them the
> ideal way to communicate. The page itself becomes a sort of central command:
> it's a meeting place, operating manual, source of information and
> inspiration, outreach tool and in essence becomes a sort of cyber leader in
> itself. The Xerox machine made pamphleting easier and telephones aided
> outreach, but social networking has influenced the very essence of
> organizations.
>
> Social networking sites also encourage a greater level of cross-pollination
> and cooperation between different factions. "If you physically put these
> different factions in a room together, they would fight. Online they can
> sound off and vent instead of exchanging blows, and agree to put aside their
> difference. At public rallies you will find the whole spectrum invited to
> join together and show a strong presence in the real world. There is more
> willingness to work together," explains Brian Marcus from the
> Anti-Defamation League.
>
> Social networking sites work best for leaderless resistance models as
> opposed to hierarchies. The Oath Keepers, for example, which is rigidly led
> by its founder Stewart Rhodes, has disabled most of its Facebook page, since
> Rhodes couldn't stop people from posting things like calls for armed
> resistance that contradicted his message and mission. Online, the group took
> on a life of its own and became greater than the founder and the official
> organization itself.
>
> Many of the posts are benign---sharing news articles or announcements for
> meetings---but some cross the line into potentially illegal or dangerous
> territory. One member and frequent Facebook poster, active duty soldier
> Robert Hase, wrote on ARM's wall that ARM "will resist and destroy
> Socialism, Fascism, Communism and terrorism. Foreign or domestic. I will
> never stop fighting the traitors. Wan't [sic] to help me?"
>
> Another member, Johnny Pernisco, posted, "...I will start war against to
> [sic] new world order till it over and our country will take america back to
> us as we the people." The person behind Right to Revolt posted "The Founders
> knew we would one day lose our Republic. They also knew we would shed our
> blood & spill the blood of tyrants to restore it!" and earlier, "I'm
> beginning to feel an urge, more descriptively....a violent impulse! Totally
> unrelated I'm sure, but my trigger finger has been having muscle spasms as
> well! MUCH MUCH self control is being exhausted to keep myself within the
> confines of the law. What a pity that those we sent to DC to uphold the law,
> have so blatantly and frequently defecated on it!!!!!!!!!!!!"
>
> Jered Bonneau, who used Facebook to draw people to his militia in Washington
> State, posted a detailed plan for a "mass stand-off" blockading state
> Capitols meant to incite police and federal officers to "fire the first
> shot...Letting other militias Amp up their guards. Sending an Alarm and
> muster throughout the nation."
>
> Bonneau has a network of allies in groups like the Three Percenters, Oath
> Keepers, Sons of Liberty across the country that he communicates with almost
> exclusively through Facebook. During the health care reform debates there
> were numerous tweets calling for Obama's assasination. Solomon "Solly"
> Forell wrote, ""We'll surely get over a bullet 2 Barack Obama's head!" Jay
> Martin, aka Thheee_Jay posted a series of tweets including, "You should be
> assassinated @BarackObama" and "If I lived in DC I'd shoot him myself. Point
> Blank. Dead Fucking Serious." Most infamously, Daniel Knight Hayden tweeted
> threats "start the killing now" signaling his intent to wreak havoc at a Tax
> Day protest (some of which is still up on Twitter. Under the name
> CitizenQuasar, he tweeted:
>
> 7:59 p.m. "The WAR wWIL start on the stepes of the Oklahoma State Capitol. I
> will cast the first stone. In the meantime, I await the police."
>
> 8:01 p.m. "START THE KILLING NOW! I am wiling to be the FIRST DEATH! I Await
> the police. They will kill me in my home."
>
> 8:06 p.m. "After I am killed on the Capitol Steps like REAL man, the rest of
> you will REMEMBER ME!!!"
>
> 8:17 p.m. "I really don' give a shit anymore. Send the cops around. I will
> cut their heads off the heads and throw the on the State Capitol steps."
>
> Facebook has a policy against any posts that are "hateful, threatening, or
> pornographic; incite violence; or contains nudity or graphic or gratuitous
> violence...violates someone else's rights or the law...or is used to "bully,
> intimidate, or harass any user." If you violate those rules, your post can
> be deleted or you can get kicked off Facebook. "The goal of these policies
> is to strike a very delicate balance between giving people the freedom to
> express themselves," explains spokesperson Andrew Noyes, and maintaining a
> safe and trusted environment.
>
> But a simple search through various groups' and individual's sites makes it
> clear that Facebook can't keep up. For example, it was only after CNET
> alerted them that Facebook disabled a month-old publicly open "Kill Obama"
> page with 122 members. One of its goals read, ""We are going to kill Obama.
> Ten of us will surround the capital, armed with sniper rifles. Mr. Hope And
> Change just made his last speech." There are enough pro-terrorism posts that
> Facebook has to "regularly" remove them, according to Noyes. In fact,
> they've set up a separate page to report that kind of thing. When asked
> whether they hand that information over to the FBI or DHS, Noyes refused to
> comment.
>
> It's unclear how much the federal government is using the information about
> these groups that is right there on the computer screen-which is a good or
> bad thing, depending on how you look at it. It's a delicate balance between
> freedom of speech and privacy, versus the common sense to keep an eye on
> activity that is technically public and only one quick click away.
>
> Right now, Facebook is a goldmine of information (that private businesses,
> at least, are gladly taking full advantage of). The Web site records and
> stores all user information through screenshots, documenting what people
> have viewed and entered on the site, even if it has been untagged or
> deleted. It seems an obvious source for the feds. But there are serious
> jurisdictional and constitutional limits to what they can do. For example,
> it is still unclear whether social networking sites legally constitute
> public or private information and whether it is fair game to go undercover
> on the sites.
>
> A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security told me they don't
> monitor Facebook generally. "There are specific instances when you can and
> can't monitor what someone is posting on Facebook or sending in emails," he
> explained, "There has to be some type of criminal predicate." Likewise, Paul
> Bresson at the FBI, which admits to looking at such sites in certain
> examples, explains, "There are First Amendment issues that we are aware of
> and must respect."
>
> Most social networking sites permit emergency access to information.
> MySpace, which stores current users' information indefinitely, only requires
> a search warrant for any private messages, bulletins, or friends lists that
> are less than 181 days old. Twitter will only hand over information in
> response to legal process and has no guide for law enforcement procedures.
> According to a Department of Justice slide presentation on social networking
> sites obtained by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Facebook is "often
> cooperative with emergency requests."
>
> The IRS searches the sites to see if you have side businesses you're not
> reporting, but it has issued clear and strict guidelines that it can only
> use sites that don't require logging on. The DOJ on the other hand trawls
> the sites, but has't come up with an answer to whether it's allowed to go
> "undercover" on the sites, taking on fake personas and friending people.
>
> It's not that the extremist groups are so naive as to think there isn't a
> possibility of being monitored. ARM's Facebook administrator posted that he
> "wants everyone to stay vigilant and careful about what you discuss to
> strangers, we are all living under the patriot act now and must act
> accordingly. remember it does the movement no good if you are sitting in a
> federal prison."
>
> "Facebook probably is monitored just as much as everything else -- probably
> more so," says Clifford. "That however, should not stop anyone from
> exercising their rights. If we just hide and not exercise those rights... we
> may wake up with none."
>
> Part of the point of posting calls for revolution on Facebook is because it
> is a public forum and anyone---including the federal government -- can see
> it.
>
> While much of the content posted on these sites could be unsubstantiated
> threats and rhetoric---calling for a revolution is very different from
> actually taking up arms---there is power in words. As Bill Bychowski, who
> posts about everything from getting Tea Partiers into Congress to the
> eugenics he thinks drives health care reform to stockpiling weapons, points
> out that Facebook messages also reach those running for office. "Mostly
> politicians are copying the [Facebookers'] phrases, using the terms
> "revolution", "don't retreat, reload", "born again Americans", Global
> WAR-ming," says Bychoski. "They are paying attention."
>
> When our politicians' response to these calls for an uprising is to co-opt
> them to win elections, instead of investigate potentially violent crimes,
> it's time we all pay attention.
>
>
>
> C 2010 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
> View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/147054/
>
> Regards,
> Claude Everett
> Everyone has a disability, some are more aware of it than others.
> "...the moral test of government is how that government treats those who are
> in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life,
> the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life; the sick, the needy and
> the handicapped."
>  Last Speech of Hubert H. Humphrey
> 1911-1978, American Democratic Politician,
>  U.S. VicePresident
>
>
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