Unregistered
08-30-2020, 10:34 PM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_group
A hate group is a social group that advocates and practices hatred, hostility, or violence towards members of a race, ethnicity, nation, religion, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation or any other designated sector of society. According to the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), a hate group's "primary purpose is to promote animosity, hostility, and malice against persons belonging to a race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity/national origin which differs from that of the members of the organization."
Antifa promotes animosity, hostility, and malice towards people of American national origin, and BLM promotes animosity, hostility, and malice towards people of the human race (specifically white people), and BLM also has proclaimed loudly that they hate the United States of America.
Four categories associated with hate groups' propensity for violence are: organizational capacity, organizational constituency, strategic connectivity, and structural arrangement. The larger an extremist group is and the longer it has existed, the more prone the group is to engage in violence. Regionally, hate groups based in the West and Northeast are more likely to engage in violence than those based in the South. If a group has a charismatic leader, it is more likely to be violent. Groups that share a conflict-based relationship with another group are more likely to engage in extreme violence. The amount of ideological literature a group publishes is linked to significant decreases in a group's violent behavior, with more literature linked to lower levels of violence.
Antifa and BLM seem to have organizational capacity, organizational constituency, strategic connectivity, and structural arrangement. They are both extremely violent.
Counter-terrorism expert Ehud Sprinzak argues that verbal violence is "the use of extreme language against an individual or a group that either implies a direct threat that physical force will be used against them, or is seen as an indirect call for others to use it." Sprinzak argues that verbal violence is often a substitute for real violence, and that the verbalization of hate has the potential to incite people who are incapable of distinguishing between real and verbal violence to engage in actual violence.
Antifa and BLM both express hatred of white people as justification for extreme violence and the destruction of American society.
According to the 7-stage hate model, a hate group, if unimpeded, passes through seven successive stages. In the first four stages, hate groups vocalize their beliefs and in the last three stages, they act on their beliefs. Factors that contribute to a group's likelihood to act include the vulnerability of its members as well as its reliance on symbols and mythologies. This model points to a transition period that exists between verbal violence and acting out that violence, separating hardcore haters from rhetorical haters. Thus, hate speech is seen as a prerequisite of hate crimes, and as a condition of their possibility.
It is sad how niggers and Antifa not just engage in hate speech, but also use it as justification for extremely violent behavior towards the people that they dislike.
Unlike Antifa and BLM, this website, and our members do not condone violence of any kind towards niggers or humans. Instead, we promote positive relationships among humans, and we seek to make the world a better place for humans.
Besides, it hardly qualifies as "hate speech" if all we are doing is relaying factual information about niggers. :)
A hate group is a social group that advocates and practices hatred, hostility, or violence towards members of a race, ethnicity, nation, religion, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation or any other designated sector of society. According to the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), a hate group's "primary purpose is to promote animosity, hostility, and malice against persons belonging to a race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity/national origin which differs from that of the members of the organization."
Antifa promotes animosity, hostility, and malice towards people of American national origin, and BLM promotes animosity, hostility, and malice towards people of the human race (specifically white people), and BLM also has proclaimed loudly that they hate the United States of America.
Four categories associated with hate groups' propensity for violence are: organizational capacity, organizational constituency, strategic connectivity, and structural arrangement. The larger an extremist group is and the longer it has existed, the more prone the group is to engage in violence. Regionally, hate groups based in the West and Northeast are more likely to engage in violence than those based in the South. If a group has a charismatic leader, it is more likely to be violent. Groups that share a conflict-based relationship with another group are more likely to engage in extreme violence. The amount of ideological literature a group publishes is linked to significant decreases in a group's violent behavior, with more literature linked to lower levels of violence.
Antifa and BLM seem to have organizational capacity, organizational constituency, strategic connectivity, and structural arrangement. They are both extremely violent.
Counter-terrorism expert Ehud Sprinzak argues that verbal violence is "the use of extreme language against an individual or a group that either implies a direct threat that physical force will be used against them, or is seen as an indirect call for others to use it." Sprinzak argues that verbal violence is often a substitute for real violence, and that the verbalization of hate has the potential to incite people who are incapable of distinguishing between real and verbal violence to engage in actual violence.
Antifa and BLM both express hatred of white people as justification for extreme violence and the destruction of American society.
According to the 7-stage hate model, a hate group, if unimpeded, passes through seven successive stages. In the first four stages, hate groups vocalize their beliefs and in the last three stages, they act on their beliefs. Factors that contribute to a group's likelihood to act include the vulnerability of its members as well as its reliance on symbols and mythologies. This model points to a transition period that exists between verbal violence and acting out that violence, separating hardcore haters from rhetorical haters. Thus, hate speech is seen as a prerequisite of hate crimes, and as a condition of their possibility.
It is sad how niggers and Antifa not just engage in hate speech, but also use it as justification for extremely violent behavior towards the people that they dislike.
Unlike Antifa and BLM, this website, and our members do not condone violence of any kind towards niggers or humans. Instead, we promote positive relationships among humans, and we seek to make the world a better place for humans.
Besides, it hardly qualifies as "hate speech" if all we are doing is relaying factual information about niggers. :)