The guys who stormed the beaches of Normandy were “antifa.”
Many of them were quite literally Communists. The party membership was at its peak during the Great Depression, and American Communists were big advocates of US entrance into the war in the run up to Pearl Harbor. Lots of Americans saw the Western Front as an opportunity to aid their besieged allies in Soviet Russia.
At the same time, you had pro-Nazi sympathizers who thought we should simply profit off the war by selling to both combatants, or even enter the war on the side of the Germans. The German-American Bund held rallies in New York and Chicago, hoping to win the public over to supporting Germany in its war against the eastern Communists.
We had a very real and notable split in public opinion on the subject of which side of the war to support in the run up to the Japanese attack on Hawaii. And even after the war, many American conservative politicians remained sympathetic towards the defeated German government in a way they hadn’t been towards the Kaiser’s Reich of WW1, the Spanish during the Spanish-American War, or the American Natives.
The D in DPRK stands for democratic.
Not calling Antifa fascist here, just saying that an organization doesn’t stay true to it’s name.
Frankly, I hate the narrative that Antifa is an organization. I’ve never met with anyone who was part of Antifa, but I know I would tell nazis to get the fuck off my street if they were marching down it.
It might mean that technically, but the organization itself is domestic terrorism at this point. You can label anything you want, doesn’t change the actions of the members.
Introduced, not passed. They are not a terror organization and calling them as such is an attempt to discredit a political movement for the sake of fascists and racists. There have been analyses, reports, and studies that have concluded that antifa is not a major domestic terrorism risk.
Antifa literally means anti-fascist. The guys who stormed the beaches of Normandy were “antifa.”
Many of them were quite literally Communists. The party membership was at its peak during the Great Depression, and American Communists were big advocates of US entrance into the war in the run up to Pearl Harbor. Lots of Americans saw the Western Front as an opportunity to aid their besieged allies in Soviet Russia.
At the same time, you had pro-Nazi sympathizers who thought we should simply profit off the war by selling to both combatants, or even enter the war on the side of the Germans. The German-American Bund held rallies in New York and Chicago, hoping to win the public over to supporting Germany in its war against the eastern Communists.
We had a very real and notable split in public opinion on the subject of which side of the war to support in the run up to the Japanese attack on Hawaii. And even after the war, many American conservative politicians remained sympathetic towards the defeated German government in a way they hadn’t been towards the Kaiser’s Reich of WW1, the Spanish during the Spanish-American War, or the American Natives.
The D in DPRK stands for democratic. Not calling Antifa fascist here, just saying that an organization doesn’t stay true to it’s name.
Frankly, I hate the narrative that Antifa is an organization. I’ve never met with anyone who was part of Antifa, but I know I would tell nazis to get the fuck off my street if they were marching down it.
It might mean that technically, but the organization itself is domestic terrorism at this point. You can label anything you want, doesn’t change the actions of the members.
https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/senate-resolution/279
This has been known for years now.
What “organization”? There is no antifa “organization”. Anti-fascism is an ideology. If you are opposed to fascism, you are anti-fascist.
Don’t worry. I’m not accusing you of being opposed to fascism.
Introduced, not passed. They are not a terror organization and calling them as such is an attempt to discredit a political movement for the sake of fascists and racists. There have been analyses, reports, and studies that have concluded that antifa is not a major domestic terrorism risk.