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Disgraced media figure Jamie Allman who threatened Parkland survivor has history of far-right extremism

On March 26, far-right media personality Jamie Allman threatened toParkland massacre survivor and gun safety activist David Hogg with a “hot poker.”

The backlash to Allman’s threatening tweet was not immediate; it was not until this past weekend that public outcry seemed to hit a critical mass.

This week on, Allman’s rising career as a Saint Louis radio talk show host and television commentator quickly came crashing down. As news spread of his tweet, companies quickly withdrew their advertising dollars. Localand television stations booted him from the airwaves and shortly thereafter hehis resignation from the television conglomerate Sinclair Broadcast Group.

Allman’s termination can be interpreted as a positive step toward more factually-informed and civil discourse. However much of the coverage surrounding the controversy has largely overlooked Allman’s history of propagating far-right extremism and failed to raise questions like, “Why did it take so long to remove an individual with a history of espousing fringe ideas and welcoming extremists to his show?” and “How did a person with his views get such a platform to begin with?”

Allman’s incendiary language comes at a time of right-wing populist backlash to the March for Our Lives, a movement calling for greater gun safety and gun control since the February 14 mass shooting in Parkland, Florida, that left 17 dead and 17 more wounded.

The Parkland student activists have been the subject of a constant barrage of conspiracy theories, smears, online harassment, and violent threats reminiscent of the abuse that unfolded after theelementary school shooting in 2013.

The difference between then and now is that individuals who pushed those extreme narratives and conspiracies theories were usually confined to the political fringes of the far-right. However, for many years such rhetoric and conspiracy-fueled politicsfrom the margins into. Donald Trump’s then-candidacy and now presidencythat trend.

Allman has contributed toward the larger mainstreaming of previously fringe far-right ideas.

Perhaps the most recent example occurred on April 4, over a week after his tweet, when he invited notorious anti-Muslim extremistPamela Gelleron his radio show. Sheabout an “enemedia” friendly to Obama and hostile to Trump and effectively blamed Muslims for the rise in London’s reported crime.

Geller has been on Allman’s radio show at leastsince 2010.

Allman has also had Jim Hoft, editor of the conspiracy-laden far-right blogGateway Pundit, speak on his radio showof times since at least 2013. Hoft has madeԻfactual errors furthering his far-right views. (In 2017, Allman boasted that he was set to attend the “alt-Lite”-organized “” with Hoft celebrating Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration.)

Allman himself has also propagated conspiracy theories often heard from so-called“Patriot” movementextremists likeAlex Jones. He has previously made outlandish and unsubstantiated claims such as alleging thatexists in Missouri and around the U.S., that Planned Parenthood engages in “” and that after the Las Vegas mass shooting gun safety activists were “.”

Since his fall, Allman has kept a low profile and his tweets are now private. However, as observers have pointed out, he is far from the only individual who has engaged in an ideologically-driven and conspiracy-fueled effort to attack the Parkland student activists. Whether or not his downfall is an isolated case or the beginning of a counter-movement toward greater civil and fact-driven public discourse, remains to be seen.

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