Right-wing terror groups on the rise

Author: Joel Wendland
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 08/13/09 13:25


GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. – Timothy McVeigh, the perpetrator of the single
largest act of domestic terrorism in US history in Oklahoma City in
1995, stands only as the most well-known right-wing militia member.

In the 1990s, McVeigh, white supremacist secessionist Randy Weaver,
the anti-American secessionist Freemen of Montana, David Koresh and
his armed cult, and various state "militias" were among the many armed
and paranoid individuals and groups who justified or used violence as
retribution against government entities.

They formed the terroristic vanguard of the right-wing backlash
against the US government then headed by Democrats.

According to a new report, titled "The Second Wave: Return of the
Militias," from the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which tracks
the activities of terror and hate groups in the US, the militias are
experiencing a resurgence.

The SPLC report found that one law enforcement agency uncovered 50
"militia" training groups and the increase in the use of "paper
terrorism" against enemies (creation of phony property liens in
so-called "citizen courts").

Another strong signal of the right-wing paramilitary resurgence, the
SPLC reported, has been the renewal of popular right-wing
conspiracies, such as a needed armed defense against an impending
invasion by Mexico of the Southwest, the government is building
thousands of interment camps for political prisoners or the phony
controversy over the citizenship of the President. (Notably major
media personalities like CNN's Lou Dobbs and FOX News' Glenn Beck has
helped spread these conspiracies.)

While the violence and conspiracies also targeted the government
generally in the 1990s, one big difference provides the pretext for a
qualitative change in the right-wing militia movement of today, SPLC
argued. "A key difference this time is that the federal government –
the entity that almost the entire radical right views as its primary
enemy – is headed by a Black man." The election of President Obama,
the report found, has produced "a remarkable rash of domestic terror
incidents."

The report also tied the rise in the right-wing terror movement to
statements and claims of right-wing media pundits and Republican
politicians who pander to hard-right constituents about the birth
certificate conspiracy, for example, or accuse the president of
authoritarian tendencies.

SPLC's Larry Keller reported that while the situation has not yet
returned to the level of terror experienced in the 1990s, the signs
are ominous. "The situation has many authorities worried," Keller
wrote. "Militiamen, white supremacists, anti-Semites, nativists, tax
protesters and a range of other activists of the radical right are
cross-pollinating and may even be coalescing."

"In the words of a February report from law enforcement officials in
Missouri," Keller added, "a variety of factors have combined recently
to create 'a lush environment for militia activity.'"

So far violent attacks on police, women, Dr. George Tiller and
Holocaust Museum security guard Stephen T. Johns have been carried out
by people tied to the Republican Party-controlled National Right to
Life group, and white supremacist organizations or individuals who
have publicly expressed racial hostility toward President Obama
personally.

"The current political environment is awash with seemingly absurd but
nonetheless influential conspiracy theories, hyperbolic claims and
demonized targets," Chip Berlet, a researcher with Political Research
Associates told SPLC. "And this creates a milieu where violence is a
likely outcome."

The report warned law enforcement and the media to take such threats
and signs of right-wing paramilitary resurgence seriously.
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