By Bill Donohue, Catholic League president
Part I of this two-part series on the Southern Poverty Law Center
(SPLC) focused on six conservative organizations that SPLC falsely labels as
“hate groups”; to read it click here. Part II assesses its claim that two genuine hate groups, Antifa
and Black Lives Matter, should not be treated as such.
“Designating Antifa as Domestic Terrorist Organization Is
Dangerous, Threatens Civil Liberties.”
That is how SPLC views Antifa. The evidence shows that its
characterization is seriously inaccurate.
Antifa is a loosely-knit group that espouses, and engages in,
violence. In July 2019, police shot and killed Willem van Spronsen after he
tried to ignite a 500-gallon propane tank attached to a government building in
Tacoma, Washington. He was armed with a rifle and incendiary devices. Shortly
before the attack he sent a manifesto to friends, saying, “I am antifa.” After
his death, Antifa colleagues called him “a martyr.” Memorials were organized in
Washington and Oregon.
A month later, Connor Betts killed nine and injured dozens in a
mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio. Though he was not a member of Antifa, he openly
supported them on social media.
Mike Isaacson is the founder of an Antifa group in Washington,
D.C. He proudly justifies violence. According to Mark Bray, a Dartmouth
historian, people like Isaacson justify their use of violence as self-defense
against fascists. Their idea of self-defense includes hurling glass bottles and
bricks at the police. This has led liberals such as Rep. Nancy Pelosi to
condemn Antifa’s violence.
Attorney General William Barr, under President Donald Trump,
referred to Antifa as a “new form of urban guerrilla warfare,” similarly to
what Mao Zedong promoted.
Antifa members have been arrested many times for carrying guns,
knives, hatchets, gasoline, clubs, chemical irritants, pipes, hammers,
fireworks, and homemade explosives.
A Baltimore Antifa activist explained that when peaceful protests
don’t succeed, you “fight them with fists,” and if that doesn’t work, you
“fight them with knives,” and if that fails, you “fight them with guns,” and if
that doesn’t get the job done, you “fight them with tanks.”
In 2016, the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI warned
state and local officials that Antifa was engaging in “domestic terrorist
violence.”
Yet SPLC says it is dangerous to label Antifa a
domestic terrorist group.
“Black Lives Matter Is Not a Hate Group.”
After George Floyd was killed by a police officer in 2020, Black
Lives Matter (BLM) labeled it a hate crime committed by a white cop, Derek
Chauvin. That led to over 600 attacks on 220 American cities.
Yet when the left-wing African-American Minnesota attorney
general, Keith Ellison, examined this case, he said it was not a hate crime. “I
wouldn’t call it that because hate crimes are crimes where there’s an explicit
motive and bias.” He added, “We don’t have any evidence that Derek Chauvin
factored in George Floyd’s race as he did what he did.”
This led author David Horowitz to comment, “All the outrage
against police racism and all the mayhem fueled by that outrage, was based on
no evidence whatsoever.”
The fact is that during the 103 days of unrest following the death
of Floyd, there were 633 violent protests all across the nation, and BLM was
involved in 95 percent of those incidents. The riots were responsible for an
estimated two billion dollars in insured property damage and untold more in
uninsured property damage. There were twenty-four deaths and countless
others who were injured, including many cops.
Yet SPLC says “Black Lives Matter Is Not a Hate Group.”
But guess who is a hate group? White Lives Matter. SPLC calls it a
white supremacist group, led by a middle-age homemaker, Rebecca Barnette. If
she doesn’t sound like a violent Antifa or BLM analog on the right, that’s
because she isn’t.
The only violence associated with White Lives Matters occurred
years ago when they clashed with counter-protesters in Anaheim, California.
White Lives Matter was responsible for stabbing three of them. As it turned
out, the five who were arrested were released by the police after it was
determined that they acted in self-defense.
Are there things that White Lives Matter has said that are
hateful? Yes, and it stands to reason that they should be included in any list
of hate groups. But in comparison to BLM, these racists are at least not a
violent threat to the social order. They are more kooky than a menace.
SPLC not only unfairly labels respectable social conservative
organizations as hate groups, it shamelessly exculpates left-wing violent
organizations, defending them as if they were the Boy Scouts.
Worse, the mainstream media cites SPLC’s list of hate groups as if
it were the Gospel truth. It is for these reasons that the Catholic League
concludes that SPLC is a bona-fide hate group—it goes to the mat for true hate
groups while smearing those that are not.
As with Part I, we are sending Part II to Washington lawmakers and many other interested parties. It’s time SPLC was outed as a dangerous fraud.
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