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A Day in My Life in the Time of Covid - CounterPunch.org

Louis Proyect
 

By Jeffrey St. Clair. (Don't forget to donate to the CounterPunch fund-drive.)

https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/10/23/a-day-in-my-life-in-the-time-of-covid/


A Portrait of the Fascist as a Young Man

Louis Proyect
 

NY Review of Books, November 5, 2020
A Portrait of the Fascist as a Young Man
by Ali Winston

As the threat of political violence looms over the 2020 presidential election, federal prosecutors in Los Angeles are preparing for an appeals hearing for the founder of a neofascist street gang at the heart of the earliest street violence of the Trump era. Four years ago, Robert Rundo, a thirty-year-old Queens native, construction worker, and ex-convict, cofounded a group named the Rise Above Movement (RAM). Ostensibly a mixed-martial-arts club for young white men in Southern California, the organization has also promoted identitarian, nativist politics, with a particular antipathy for antifascist activists who, at the time of RAM’s founding, were physically confronting far-right activists throughout California.

In 2019, a US District Court judge threw out Anti-Riot Act charges against Rundo and three other RAM members on grounds that the statute itself was over-broad and criminalized expressions of political opinion, even if they resulted in violence. It is these charges, originally brought because of their involvement in violence at protests in Orange County, San Bernardino, and Berkeley in 2017, that federal prosecutors are now seeking to reinstate at the hearing on November 17.

The Anti-Riot Act has been used to prosecute activists from both sides of the political spectrum, most notably in 1969 with the trial of the “Chicago Seven,” who were accused of conspiring to foment violence at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Last year, four other members of the Rise Above Movement pled guilty on anti-riot charges in Virginia for their part in the Charlottesville Unite the Right rally.

There have been other prosecutions of far-right groups on a variety of violent offenses, including the Proud Boys, Atomwaffen, and The Base, but no such case has risen as high in the federal court system as Rundo’s. The Rise Above Movement spearheaded political violence in California in 2017, well before such clashes went national. Until the group was broken up in 2019 by concerted law enforcement action, RAM was a figurehead of the alt-right, its street-fighting exploits the subject of numerous memes. It also built ties to violent right-wing extremist groups throughout Central and Eastern Europe, as well as forging connections in the US with old-line skinhead gangs like the Hammerskins and the Aryan Brotherhood.

Federal prosecutors’ renewed effort to convict RAM’s founder comes at a time when the FBI has issued an intelligence assessment that warns of the “violent extremist threat” around the election and its aftermath, and when a plot by anti-government militia members to kidnap the governor of Michigan was foiled by federal law enforcement agents. Whereas Rundo’s group once fought Antifa with taped fists, armed groups in battle fatigues and carrying military-type weapons are becoming a customary sight at right-wing counterdemonstrations against social justice protests. RAM itself had begun training with firearms and practicing drive-by style shootings before law enforcement descended on the group. This dangerous evolution is what makes Rundo’s career such an instructive case study of growing militancy among far-right violent extremists in the US.

Rundo returned to the United States for his hearing earlier in September after months of travel through Serbia, Ukraine, and Hungary. In some respects, this was an homage for Rundo: when he first formed RAM, he was consciously taking up the street-fighting tradition of European far-right groups like Italy’s CasaPound and Russia’s White Rex; and he has been back a number of times to rekindle the connections.

“The biggest influence was from White Rex,” Rundo said in a recent interview with a far-right podcast. He cited, in particular, the group’s founder, Denis Nikitin, a former member of soccer hooligan gangs for FC Köln and CSKA Moscow who hosts far-right MMA tournaments across Europe, sells neo-Nazi-themed clothing, and participated in the riots during a Euro 2016 soccer match between Russia and England.

Of RAM’s 2016 founding (the group was first called “DIY Division”), Rundo said, “The American scene at the time didn’t have this street activism that I saw that was very successful in Europe. It was something that I saw to me that was very appealing.” RAM’s appeal to alienated white American youth came through the potent mix of combat sports, graffiti, and street culture that mimicked European football hooligans as well as Southern California’s street gangs.

“I can’t remember what chapter it is in Mein Kampf,” he went on, turning to the subject of Adolf Hitler, “[where] he says we need more people that take up boxing than [we need] intellectuals.”

While staying in Rome in 2018, at a hostel and youth center that belongs to CasaPound (the name refers to the American poet and fascist sympathizer Ezra Pound), Rundo was surprised to see crowds of young Italians turning up for a rap concert. When he asked why CasaPound would be hosting a concert of non-white music, a member told Rundo that it was what was popular—better to adapt right-wing ideas to popular culture than risk falling into irrelevance.

Rundo also drew on the writings of fascist philosopher Julius Evola to conceive of the Rise Above Movement as a “meta-political” organization that would foster its own culture, making it independent of Western commercial culture, which Rundo believes is sapping the vitality of white Americans with mainstream TV, substance addition, junk food, and multicultural values. Following Evola’s teaching, he believed, the right can provide wayward white youth with direction and purpose in life through political and physical education. This would equip its tough young cadres to “revolt against the modern world,” in words of Evola that RAM made its credo, and prepare them to confront ideological opponents.

“They did nothing with electoral politics, but they did everything with street politics and building a counterculture,” Rundo said of CasaPound. “Everything we can do that’s outside of the mainstream, outside of their poison, we need to do.”

What Rundo himself brought to this project was a degree of charisma that made him able to recruit others. As a young man, he was involved in the Original Flushing Crew, a multiracial neighborhood gang in Flushing, Queens. After a spell in state prison for the 2009 stabbing of an MS-13 gang member, Rundo formed a small whites-only gang inside called the 88ers (a name instantly recognizable to neo-Nazis as using the eighth letter of the alphabet to refer to “Heil Hitler”).

When he was initially outed after the Rise Above Movement was investigated by ProPublica in 2017 and a PBS Frontline documentary series the following year (I contributed reporting to both), Rundo’s civilian life as a unionized laborer in Southern California came apart. He lost his job, and his fiancée gave him an ultimatum—me or the movement—and then left him. His response was to dive deeper into right-wing militancy, and in the years since, his standing in the international far right has only grown. In an internal memo about far-right domestic terrorism that was circulated in March 2018, the FBI classified him as a “tier one operator.”

Since the group’s founding, RAM forged extensive ties to the older, criminal white skinhead gangs, notably the Western Hammerskins, the West Coast chapter of the largest skinhead umbrella group in the US. Reilly Devore, a prominent San Diego Hammerskin organizer, has appeared in several of RAM’s slickly produced propaganda videos that had been a feature of the group’s early renown. Matthew Branstetter, another Hammerskin from Orange County who did state prison time for a 2011 hate crime assault on a Jewish man, has also trained with RAM.

Rundo himself has also mixed with members of the Aryan Brotherhood at social gatherings. In the same recent podcast interview, he recounted how, while awaiting his 2019 court hearing, he’d been accepted by the skinheads who ruled the roost over white inmates at the Los Angeles County jail.

In fall 2018, after the indictments in Virginia of four of his comrades, Rundo went on the run from federal authorities, aiming to hide in Ukraine, which has become something of an asylum for right-wing militants who are or consider themselves to be fugitives from US justice. Because of travel restrictions placed on him by American authorities, Rundo was turned back to the US while attempting to transfer flights in London. Weeks later, he made a second attempt: he walked across the border into Mexico and made his way to El Salvador—only to be apprehended there and turned over to the FBI. He was flown back to Los Angeles, accompanied by FBI agents, to face prosecution on the now-overturned indictment. In early 2020, having regained his passport and travel privileges, Rundo did pay a visit to Ukraine, reconnecting with another former RAM member there and visiting RAM’s patrons in the Azov Battalion, an ultra-nationalist, far-right regiment in Ukraine’s National Guard.

Whereas RAM once hoisted banners at rallies declaring “Defend America,” Rundo now believes, as he told the podcast interviewer, that the country “is collapsing.” He has urged fellow right-wing “dissidents” to flee the United States and, if possible, obtain foreign passports in order to avoid travel restrictions like the No Fly list.

At the same time, his image has changed, from a SoCal-friendly, MMA gym-rat look to harder-edged, traditional skinhead iconography: he sports new tattoos—a Nazi-style Sonnenrad (“black sun”) tattoo on his right elbow, and on his abdomen, a dagger emblazoned with “Me Ne Frego” (“I don’t care”), motto of the Italian Blackshirts.

Following his release from federal custody, Rundo again immersed himself in far-right activism, connecting with an East Coast neofascist group named Revolt Through Tradition (another Evola reference) that also trains in mixed martial arts and posts propaganda videos that draw on RAM’s early work. Besides such efforts to establish himself as an inspirational YouTube personality of the far right, Rundo has proven adept at turning movement politics into a business model, lately hawking a line of extremist-themed clothing.

Court documents from Rundo’s federal appeals case, as well as hearings in the criminal case against RAM’s now-convicted cofounder, Ben Daley, make clear that federal law enforcement views RAM as an organization capable of political violence. According to a filing from prosecutors, Daley and Rundo organized training sessions whose purpose was to “prepare to engage in violence at political rallies, and then attended political rallies where they assaulted journalists, police officers, and others.”

The United States Attorney’s office in Los Angeles continued to keep tabs on Rundo after the 2019 dismissal of his indictment. A motion filed in the appeal, in March 2020, expressed prosecutor’s concern about his activities—and with reason: in February, he posted a video of himself attending a neofascist rally in Budapest to commemorate wartime Hungarian volunteers in Germany’s SS divisions.

It was in early 2017, when RAM was brawling its way through political rallies up and down California, that the FBI opened a domestic terrorism case focused on the group. Over the two years that followed, it is clear from prosecutorial records that RAM’s leaders were escalating their militancy from street fighting to potential armed operations.

During Daley’s sentencing hearing in July of last year, United States Attorney Thomas Cullen recounted remarks Daley had made following the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville: that James Fields’s lethal car attack on counterprotesters was premature, and the movement needed to do more to prepare extreme tactics.

“The fact he was becoming more militant and potentially more dangerous is evidenced by the fact that these defendants are in the desert of California shooting assault rifles and driving a white van shooting out of it and practicing, essentially, a drive-by shooting,” Cullen said. “That’s disturbing evidence in and of itself, but in the context of the larger case, it gives you an idea of the road this group was heading on.”

When Daley was arrested by federal authorities in 2018, the FBI recovered a twelve-gauge shotgun, a loaded .357 pistol, and a knife with a Swastika insignia. Ammunition for assault weapons, smoke bombs, and flares were found in the home of another RAM member, Mike Miselis, a former Northrop Grumman systems engineer, who has since served just over a year in prison and is now out on supervised release.

The outcome of Rundo’s appeal hearing next month will prove decisive for his attempt to reestablish himself as a far-right figurehead through his Media 2 Rise project on Telegram and YouTube. There, he posts instructional videos on physical training, political organizing, and travel, all while promoting his personal narrative about the persecution of RAM by the federal government as “thought criminals.”

“It remains to be seen what Rundo does with all this Eastern European education…on how to be structured,” said a longtime investigator of white-power groups who was not authorized to speak on the record. In recent interviews, the investigator noted, it appears that Rundo’s approach to organizing has grown more sophisticated. “He’s maturing,” the investigator said, comparing Rundo now to Thomas Metzger, the former Klansman and founder of the group White Aryan Resistance, who is an ideologue revered by the Hammerskins and other skinhead groups.

The tardy but escalating federal law enforcement response to the growing militancy of the far right might seem welcome, but the renewed possibility that another central figure in the Rise Above Movement might serve prison time again is not necessarily reassuring. Just as occurred earlier in Rundo’s career, prison often leads to greater radicalization and the forging of tighter criminal–organizational bonds.

Rundo’s career also shows that a traditional law enforcement approach to dismantling right-wing extremist groups is a game of Whac-A-Mole. Actors like Rundo have ambitions far beyond those of the foot soldiers of traditional far-right street fighting; they have a long game of forging a lasting social movement, and are deft at using the tools of influencing and culture-warring.

Deradicalization is a much more complex task, one that will take years. The far right has firmly entrenched itself in Western youth subcultures, both online and off. Xenophobic, nativist ideas that were previously confined to fringe of American politics have been mainstreamed, from the Oval Office downward. And the “very fine people” whom President Trump first hailed after the mayhem of Charlottesville in 2017 are once again gearing up for confrontation.

Although concerted antifascist organizing has served to blunt the resurgence of far-right militants, often far outnumbering them at counter-demonstrations, groups like the Rise Above Movement and Proud Boys have seen their hate-violence validated by America’s commander-in-chief. Without a sweeping effort to address the root causes of radicalization, this evil genie will be very hard to get back in the bottle. The organized thuggery that plagues countries like Ukraine, Serbia, and Hungary, which Rundo and his movement seek to emulate, threatens to become a lasting feature of American society, too.


The latest low

John Obrien
 




The Ugly Memory of the US war on Southeast Asia

Ron Jacobs
 


The Real Reason the GOP Suppresses the Vote | Boston Review

Louis Proyect
 


Hollywood's Second Fiddles: Screenwriters in the 30s - CounterPunch.org

Louis Proyect
 

Given the scary nature of pretty much everything these days (a raging pandemic amidst widespread disbelief in science; a ruling oligarchy dead set on destroying anything worth living for; Attorney General Barr’s “anarchist jurisdictions,” which are at once ominous-sounding and nonexistent), it’s a relief to escape into a past that was if not always kinder or gentler at least a hell of a lot more entertaining than late 2020. Such blissful escape is provided in spades by Philippe Garnier’s Scoundrels and Spitballers: Writers and Hollywood in the 1930s, a new release from the independent publisher Black Pool Productions, an imprint run by film noir historian, exhibitor, and preservationist Eddie Muller. It’s a wildly passionate guide to largely forgotten history that most books on the period have barely touched upon.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/10/23/hollywoods-second-fiddles-screenwriters-in-the-30s/


What's Missing From "Vote Biden, Fight Him Later" - CounterPunch.org

Louis Proyect
 


The Science of Race and the Racism of Science - CounterPunch.org

Louis Proyect
 


Trotsky on Fascism - CounterPunch.org

Louis Proyect
 


Jeremy Corbyn: ‘We Didn’t Go Far Enough’

Louis Proyect
 


Meaning a Life | The Point Magazine

Louis Proyect
 

The Oppens were chastened and wanted to do something to help alleviate such misery. While they did not believe that the economic crisis made art irrelevant, they thought that poetry and painting were not a cure for the economic and political problems people faced on the streets every day. Mary “did not find honesty or sincerity in the so-called arts of the left,” whereas George found the rhetoric of many political poems to be “merely excruciating.” The reason was that such poems, filled with exhortations about the responsibilities of art or politics, depended on a language that does not test itself. “We must cease to believe in secret names and unexpected phrases which will burst the world,” George wrote in a daybook. He was wary of the idea that every aspect of a life should conform to a coherent political-aesthetic vision or ideology, a form of didacticism that has long been a strong undercurrent in American culture.

https://thepointmag.com/criticism/meaning-a-life/


Justice of the Inca by Tristan Marof - COSMONAUT

Louis Proyect
 

Tristan Marof was the pseudonym of Bolivian revolutionary Gustavo Adolfo Navarro. Navarro was born in Sucre in 1898. He took an early interest in politics: in 1920 he joined the socialist wing of the broad-tent “Partido Republicano” (PR) that was composed of republicans and socialists who were opposed to the ruling liberals. The PR would come to power following a coup d’etat in the same year of 1920, and as a reward for his services during the coup, Navarro obtained a job as French consul and moved across the ocean. During his stay in France, he would become more radicalized, and produced the two influential oeuvres he is best known for: El Ingenuo Continente and his shorter La Justicia del Inca, to which the fragments translated below pertain. In both of these works, he makes the case for an explicitly American communism, which was based on the traditional indigenous practices of that continent, especially that of the Inca.

https://cosmonaut.blog/2020/10/22/justice-of-the-inca-by-tristan-marof/


Russia’s Clandestine Chemical Weapons Programme and the GRU’s Unit 21955 - bellingcat

Louis Proyect
 


David Graeber...his Thought and his Struggle

Dayne Goodwin
 

David Graeber (1961-2020): The Relevance of his Thought and his Struggle
by Eric Toussaint
Committee for the Abolition of Illegitimate Debt, Oct. 16

 . . .
Public debt can also serve as a mechanism for subjugation

In parallel with David Graeber’s research and writing covering the period from the earliest antiquity through the end of the 18th century, I focused my attention particularly on the period between the North American and French revolutions of the late 18th century up to the present time. That work resulted in several books, including The Debt System, first published in 2017, and The World Bank, a Never Ending Coup d’Etat, first published in 2006, which provide a partial systematization of the conflicts surrounding the question of sovereign public debt. That work led me to develop ideas that are not touched on in David Graeber’s work.

Greece in the years from 2010 is a demonstration of how a country and a people can be deprived of their freedom by being forced to repay a debt that is clearly illegitimate. Since the 19th century, from Latin America to China and including Haiti, Greece, Tunisia, Egypt and the Ottoman Empire, public debt has been used a weapon of domination and spoliation [9] Creditors – whether powerful States, the multilateral entities that serve them, or banks – have perfected the manœuvres by which they impose their will on debtors. Before the end of the first half of the 19th century, Haiti served as a laboratory. Haiti was the first independent Black republic; the island freed itself of France’s yoke in 1804. But that did not mean that Paris was prepared to give up its hold on Haiti. French slave owners were given royal compensation for their “losses.” The accords signed in 1825 with Haiti’s new leaders created a monumental debt weighing on the independent State, which Haiti had difficulty in repaying as early as 1828 and which in fact took a century to repay, making any real development impossible in the meantime.

Debt was also used to subjugate Tunisia to France in 1881, and Egypt to the UK in 1882; the creditor powers used unpaid debt to subjugate what until then had been two sovereign nations. Similarly, Greece came into being in the 1830s already shackled to a debt held by the UK, France and Russia. In 1934, the island of Newfoundland, which until then had been a Dominion of the Crown, with its own Parliament, was facing bankruptcy – more than 63% of the budget was devoted to debt service. The United Kingdom handed over management to a commission of civil servants and ceded the province to Canada in 1949. [10]

Over the last two centuries, several countries have successfully repudiated or unilaterally restructured debts by arguing that they were either illegitimate or odious. Portugal (1837), Mexico (1861, 1867, 1883, 1914, 1943), the USA (1837, 1865, 1898), Russia (1917–1918), Costa Rica (1919), Brazil (1931, 1946), Cuba (1909, 1934, 1959), China (1949), Indonesia (1956), Iran (1979), Paraguay (2005), Ecuador (2007-2009), Iceland (2008-2009) have all done [11]. . .




Jean-Luc Mélenchon Blames the “Chechen Community” for Murder of Teacher in France

RKOB
 

Concerning "left-wing" social-chauvinism, Mélenchon - the most important leader of the French "left" - is a case in point.

https://www.leftvoice.org/jean-luc-melenchon-blames-the-chechen-community-for-murder-of-teacher-in-france

-- 
Revolutionär-Kommunistische Organisation BEFREIUNG
(Österreichische Sektion der RCIT, www.thecommunists.net)
www.rkob.net
aktiv@...
Tel./SMS/WhatsApp/Telegram: +43-650-4068314

Virenfrei. www.avast.com


Re: Down with the Islamophobia in France: “We Are Not Samuel!”

RKOB
 

Concerning the issue of free speech: there is a certain misunderstanding. We do not advocate legal steps. Of course, in various countries such legal constrictions exist. For example, in Germany and Austria (may be in other countries too) it is not allowed to dispute the fact of the Holocaust/Shoa against the Jews and the killing of 6 million by the Nazis. Then there are more algebraic laws against “hate-mongering”. It is also not allowed to “degrade” religious beliefs. And so on. We do not advocate the implementation of such laws because they can be used by the ruling class.

However, this does not mean that we defend the right of fascists to deny the Holocaust/Shoa! Or that we defend the rights of Islamophobic provocateurs. No, Trotsky advocated direct action against fascists and racists.

In fact, in contrast to the Macron propaganda, this racist provocateur Samuel Paty was highly despised by many people – parents as well as school pupils. Even the school authorities wanted to discipline him. He was well-known because he did his provocations against Muslim school pupils for years. Of course, killing him is wrong. But driving him out of the school is certainly the right thing to do.

The reaction of some supporters of Paty on this list reflects the point of view of sectors of the “left”. They defend Islamophobic racism under the cover of “free speech”. It is the same line of Geert Wilders – the Durch right-winger –, Charlie  Hebdo, the extreme right-winger who burn the Quran, and Macron. Actually, the arch-reactionaries in the U.S. who defend raising the Confederate flag are of the same kind.

This has nothing to do with the issue of LTGBI or sexuality. Of course, we defend the right of all oppressed, including in countries with a Muslim-majority (e.g. Stop Persecution of Homosexuals in Chechnya! https://www.thecommunists.net/worldwide/europe/persecution-of-homosexuals-in-chechnya/) But this has nothing to do with the Islamophobic provocations. Does anyone seriously believe that the Geert Wilders, Charlie  Hebdo, or Macron oppress the Muslim minorities because they want to defend LTGBI people?!

To start a discussion about sexual oppression in the context of Islamophobic racism is the same reactionary nonsense like when the White supremacists raise the issue of criminality and gangs among Black people in order to legitimize the struggle of the oppressed.

It is not surprising to meet such racist points of views in a society based on exploitation and oppression. However, being forced to have such a discussion on a list with the banner of “Marxism” is something extraordinary. But then, social democrats also praised the superiority of the German race in 1914. And the French social democrats praised their country of being superior because of the republican tradition. So it is not something new that chauvinism is deeply rooted among significant sectors of the “left”.

Am 22.10.2020 um 16:50 schrieb Michael Meeropol:

Yes, Communists should oppose free speech (????) ---- THUS, the CPUSA celebrated the prosecution of the Socialist Workers Party in 1940 under the Smith Act ---and surprise surprise, the Smith Act was then used against them ---

The problem with any "leftist" supporting the suppression of free speech for "horrible people" is that they rely on the Bourgeois "democratic" state to enforce that suppression --- Giving them the tools to suppress us whenever we become a "danger" ---

Racist words should be combatted by anti-racist words --- racist DEEDS must be punished --- I think there's an obvious difference and I reject the idea that the way communists fight racism is to appeal to the capitalist ruling class to suppress the people who espouse those ideas ---



On Wed, Oct 21, 2020 at 12:17 PM workerpoet <red-ink@...> wrote:
"  . . . can express themselves without fear of retribution. Yes, that includes racists."

That is how every single genocide has begun. Racist libel is not free speech and while liberals support it, Communists should not. Free speech has limits which are not hard to define re, libel, bigotry, blatant, purposeful misinformation designed to incite or cause harm are examples.
_._,_.
-- 
Revolutionär-Kommunistische Organisation BEFREIUNG
(Österreichische Sektion der RCIT, www.thecommunists.net)
www.rkob.net
aktiv@...
Tel./SMS/WhatsApp/Telegram: +43-650-4068314

Virenfrei. www.avast.com


NPA statement - anger, solidarity and rejecting Islamophobia in France

Chris Slee
 


Advertising as a window into the popular consciousness

Ken Hiebert
 

Some of you will be recall the United Colors of Benetton ads. I just saw an ad for Vaseline on the theme of Black Lives Matter.
I think it is a fair guess that Vaseline would not run such an ad if they thought it would hurt business.
ken h

You may find it here.
https://www.vaseline.com/us/en

Or here, on this right wing website.
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2020/10/vaseline_gets_woke_and_creates_a_black_lives_matter_ad.html


Is capital finally losing faith in Trump? | US elections 2020 | The Guardian

Louis Proyect
 


Guns Under the Bed: Jody Forrester Shares Her Story

Alan Ginsberg
 

A former member of the Revolutionary Union (predecessor of the Revolutionary Communist Party) is interviewed by Max Elbaum about her recently published memoir.

https://www.portside.org/2020-10-12/guns-under-bed-jody-forrester-shares-her-story