Hate in Europe: July 2018
The following is a list of activities and events linked to American white supremacist, neo-Nazi, anti-LGBT, anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim groups and personalities in Europe. Organizations designated by the 人兽性交 as hate groups are marked with an asterisk.
United Kingdom
Bannon launches a foundation: After multiple trips to Europe to meet with far-right figures, former executive chairman of Breitbart Stephen Bannon announced the creation of a called 鈥淭he Movement鈥 to help far-right European politicians get into office in the European Parliamentary elections next May. His objective is to rival George Soros鈥檚 funding of liberal efforts in Europe and to form an anti-European Union bloc at the European Parliament.
According to , The Movement will help European populists get elected through methods that helped Trump win the election, such as using data and polls to target voters, as well as by facilitating campaign financing. It will also make European policy proposals and connect European politicians to sympathetic American ones. To create The Movement, Bannon appropriated the existing legal structure of a Brussels lawyer a small far-right party, Mischa毛l Modrikamen.
Many far-right politicians have expressed聽聽about the project. A member of parliament (MP) from Poland鈥檚 ruling party, the far-right Prawo i Sprawiedliwo艣膰 (PiS, Law and Justice Party)聽聽they were approached by Bannon but refused to collaborate with him. In scathing language, the MP said they had nothing in common with the anti-EU far-right parties Bannon works with.
And a cryptocurrency project: Bannon also that he is working on his own cryptocurrency for聽 鈥渢he populist movement on a worldwide basis,鈥 in an effort to solve the financing problems of some far-right parties.
Bannon鈥檚 blunders: But Bannon鈥檚 European forays 鈥 which included with conservative politician Boris Johnson 鈥 were not without blunders. 聽Bannon was caught on tape insulting a radio host and clashing with former UKIP leader Nigel Farage over his defense of jailed anti-Muslim provocateur Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known under his pen name Tommy Robinson. A of the encounter was released by the radio station:
鈥淵ou guys hate Tommy Robinson. You hate him because he鈥檚 a working class guy. You鈥檙e one of these f------ elites that hate him. Tommy Robinson is the f------ backbone of this country. You lose guys like Tommy Robinson you're not going to have a country.鈥
Former Breitbart editor Raheem Kassam was then out of the building after entering the studio without authorization to vent his anger over Bannon鈥檚 interview 鈥 an account he denied. Later, Kassam rallied people to harass Farage鈥檚 producer and 鈥渢ell him what [they] think.鈥 The radio show is now facing an from Britain鈥檚 broadcast regulator after they received 36 complaints over the episode.
Tommy Robinson released: As for Yaxley-Lennon, whose arrest became a cause c茅l猫bre in the international far-right, he was released on bail on August 1, after appealing his 13-month jail sentence. The appellate judge found issues with the first judge鈥檚 condemnation, and decided to send the case back to another judge. The founder of聽the far-right English Defence League, Yaxley-Lennon was condemned for filming and harassing people outside a courthouse in Leeds, during a case for which coverage was banned. He used the case to fuel his anti-Muslim rhetoric and was eventually charged with contempt of court.
Men鈥檚 rights conference takes place: Meanwhile in London, the men鈥檚 rights activist International Conference on Men鈥檚 Issues, co-organized by male supremacist hate group A Voice For Men* (AVFM), took place the weekend of the July 21. The misogynist who heads AVFM, Paul Elam, couldn鈥檛 travel there because of health issues but spoke via video. In his speech, he was for describing women as 鈥渙pportunistic parasites in the lives of men.鈥 Cassie Jaye, the feminist-turned-men鈥檚 rights activist documentary filmmaker who made the documentary the Red Pill, the event. Among the speakers, Oliver Hoffman who founded an Austrian men鈥檚 right party, acknowledged that men鈥檚 rights activist should work with white nationalists.
The event concluded with the publishing of a non-feminist declaration, backed by AVFM and by men鈥檚 rights activists around the world including UK-based Infowars correspondent Paul Joseph Watson; Canadian YouTube personality Karen Straughan; and Americans such as male supremacist Paul Elam and Fox News contributor Suzanne Venker. The shrill ends with a call to start 鈥渢he non-feminist revolution鈥 and is written in conspiratorial language. Its opening reads:
Feminists attack liberty, justice, equality and meritocracy. They attack men, women, and children, and relations between the sexes. All feminist narratives have been shown to be demonstrably one or more of the following 鈥 baseless conspiracy theories, fantasies, lies, delusions or myths. In many countries, virtually all institutions have been deeply corrupted by feminists, and by people in positions of power bowing to feminist influence.
Neo-Nazis go to jail: Elsewhere in the UK, two men were jailed for being members of the banned racist neo-Nazi group National Action. They were in a plot to murder the Labour member of Parliament Rosie Cooper. The group had the murder of Labour MP Jo Cox in 2016.
UK sees increased attacks against Muslims: Meanwhile, a by Muslim advocacy group Tell MAMA shows that there has been a spike in hate attacks against Muslims, with 30 percent more attacks over the previous year. There has also been a 16 percent increase in online attacks against Muslims in the country.
Sweden
Richard Spencer tries to go to Sweden: After a series of humiliations on American soil, white supremacist Richard Spencer attempted to to Sweden for the country鈥檚 politicians鈥 week in Almedalen, invited by the editor-in-chief of the Nordic Alt-Right website Christoffer Dulny. Dulny is himself banned from the US after the deadly white supremacist 鈥淯nite the Right鈥 rally in Charlottesville last August.
It is unclear why Spencer thought he could get into the country, having been banned several times already from the Schengen area, a group of 26 countries that includes Sweden. The most recent ban dates from 2017 when Spencer tried to enter Poland and is to last five years.
Spencer was sent back to the United States during a layover in Poland. Dulny tweeted that Spencer the audience in Almedalen via Skype. He has since deleted the tweet about Spencer鈥檚 appearance.
Hungary
Milo paid $25,000 for May speech: After far-right troll Milo Yiannopoulos鈥檚 visit to Hungary in May, it was recently聽聽that he was paid $20,000 by the Hungarian state for his one hour speech. Not including the speaker鈥檚 fee and Yiannopoulos and his crew鈥檚 still unknown flight fare, the event itself cost an additional $55,000 to Hungarian taxpayers. Despite the state funding the event, many journalists were prevented from attending and the editor-in-chief of a leftwing publication was expelled before the start of the event. A of the event shows a security guard pushing him down the stairs.
Austria
Trial of anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim activist group concludes: The 17 members of the Austrian chapter of the anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim activist group Identit盲re Bewegung 脰sterreichs (IB脰, Generation Identity Austria) were of the more serious charges of incitement to hatred and forming a criminal organization, after a trial against them for their anti-immigrant activism in the country. However, one member was fined for bodily harm and harassment and another for property damage.
Pettibone banned from Instagram: The far-right American YouTube personality Brittany Pettibone, who has been participating in and supporting many identitarian actions, including a recent mission to 鈥渟top immigrants鈥 in the Alps, was momentarily from Instagram in the aftermath. Pettibone she was banned for posting a picture in support of the exonerated identitarians. She is the partner of Martin Sellner, the leader of IB脰 and of identitarians鈥 European umbrella group, Defend Europe. Her Instagram page was then reinstated after a week.
Austria鈥檚 party in power wants to watch over kosher and halal meat purchases: Still, the actions of the anti-immigrant activists pale in comparison to those of the party in power in Austria, Freiheitliche Partei 脰sterreichs (FP脰, Freedom Party of Austria), with which the activists have some ties. In the state of Lower Austria, the party a law requiring Jews and Muslims to register with the government if they want to purchase kosher and halal meat. It would restrict their ability to purchase more than a certain quantity of meat and require them to prove they reside in Lower Austria to purchase it. An FP脰 spokesman claimed an earlier iteration of the law was about animal protection, not religion.
Austrian government acts against mosques and imams: The national government is also planning on shutting down seven mosques and expelling imams from the country, in what the country鈥檚 far-right vice-chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache 鈥渏ust the beginning鈥 of a crackdown on 鈥減olitical Islam.鈥 Germany is also planning to open more migrant detention centers on its border with Austria after political from interior minister Horst Seehoffer and other anti-immigrant forces pushed Germany chancellor Angela Merkel to enact anti-immigrant measures.
Russia
Facebook reacts to White Rex: The Huffington Post reported that Russian neo-Nazi Denis Nikitin, the former soccer hooligan who founded White Rex 鈥 a white nationalist clothing brand that MMA fights for white supremacists and neo-Nazis throughout Europe 鈥 was using Facebook for his business. Nikitin, through White Rex, has been instrumental in facilitating networking among European neo-Nazis and white supremacists, and even meeting and inspiring American groups. White Rex has been involved in British neo-Nazis in combat camps, including of National Action, in 2014.
After asserting White Rex did not breach Facebook鈥檚 community standards when HuffPo reported the page, Facebook took it down after the of HuffPo鈥檚 article.
What is WEX?: An investigation by the Russian publication found a link between the Russian Orthodox millionaire funding the upcoming World Congress of Families* (WCF) congress in Moldova, Konstantin Malofeev, and a successful Russian cryptocurrency exchange platform, WEX. WEX has been of running a fraudulent exit scam after selling Bitcoins for inflated prices and preventing people from cashing out their wallets due to a technical malfunction鈥攐ne that still allowed users to deposit money into them. WEX emerged from the ashes of the collapsed fraudulent cryptocurrency exchange platform BTC-e, whose owner is facing extradition to the US for money laundering.
A journalist from RBC claimed to be a potential client of WEX in order to visit its facilities and discovered that the WEX headquarters shared a building with Malofeev鈥檚 company Tsargrad. Other sources also indicated that the person at the head of WEX, Dmitry Vasiliev, might have approached Malofeev for his influence over the Safe Internet League, which lobbies for more internet censorship, for help with the Bitcoin exchange operation, and gotten his support. They also indicate he might be running the platform with one of Malofeev鈥檚 former business partners, Evgeny Zhulanov.
Moldova, where Malofeev is funding the WCF鈥檚 upcoming Congress, was approached by another Russian oligarch to Bitcoin mining farms in the separatist region of Transnistria. A former Soviet Republic, Transnistria is contested by Moldova and Russia. It has passed cryptocurrency-friendly .
Upcoming events
World Congress of Families: The twelfth annual conference of the WCF will be on September 13-16, 2018 by the country of Moldova. It is being by WCF, the anti-LGBT hate groups International Organization for the Family, the global petition platform affiliated to WCF Citizen Go, and Din Suflet, the charity of the wife of the pro-Russian Moldovan president. It is also by Russian Orthodox oligarch Konstantin Malofeev. At WCF conferences, vicious anti-LGBT rhetoric is aired and participants plan anti-LGBT legislation and campaigns. The events have also become a vector of Russian soft power in Europe.
Junk scientist to talk at anti-LGBT event: In November, the Francisco de Vitoria University in Madrid will be an international congress for the 50th anniversary of the student revolts of May 1968, which they see as the moment of 鈥渢he so-called sexual revolution.鈥滱nti-LGBT junk scientist Mark Regnerus and the founder of the anti-LGBT hate group the Ruth Institute*, Jennifer Roback Morse, will be on a panel on the 鈥渧ictims of the sexual revolution.鈥