We were able to identify at least 29 people killed in the U.S. in 2021 by domestic extremists. This is 6 more than in 2020, but still less than in previous recent years. The main reason? Those years had more extremist shooting sprees, which cause death totals to rise. A lot.
Extremist shooting sprees were behind all the highest yearly death tolls except 1995, the year of the Oklahoma City bombing.
Even leaving shooting sprees aside, firearms allow extremists to kill people cheaply, easily, almost effortlessly. Almost every year, firearms are the weapons most used by domestic extremists to kill.
The vast majority of the extremist murders in 2021 were committed by right-wing extremists--26 out of 29. However, there were two murders by black nationalists and one by a domestic Islamist extremist.
Over the past decade, right-wing extremists have been responsible for about 75% of all killings by domestic extremists. I thought left-wing deadly violence might rise during the Trump years, but basically it didn't (2017 had a number, but 2018-2019 had 0 and 2020 just 1).
When you examine the killings by right-wing extremists during that same time period, it turns out white supremacists were responsible for nearly 3/4 of them. This 10-year average has changed little over the past 7 years. White supremacists kill more than other extremists.
Part of the reason for this is that white supremacists not only engage in a lot of ideologically-motivated deadly violence, targeting perceived enemies, but also group-related violence (killing suspect informants, internal rivals, members of other groups, etc.), and traditional
deadly violence ranging from violence against women to home invasions.
Among white supremacists, white supremacist prison gangs commit the most murders--they are quite deadly--but they are hardly alone. One significant contributor to death totals in earlier decades, however,
racist skinheads, have seen their numbers drop significantly over the past decade. This is due to the decline of this subculture, in part bc of the rise of the alt right, which has appropriated for itself many of the young males who in previous eras might have become skinheads.
Extremists killed three law enforcement officers in 2021. Most years, 1-3 officers are killed by extremists each year. Over the past 10 years, left-wing extremists (mostly black nationalists) and right-wing extremists have been roughly equal in their killing of officers.
This is only one measure of extremist-related danger/violence, I should stress. Extremists attempt or carry out terrorist plots, armed standoffs & shootouts, hate crimes, spontaneous violence at traffic stops and residence visits, traditional crimes, and more.
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The earliest murder I can point to being connected to the militia movement is an interesting story. I propose to tell it in this thread.
One of the pioneers of the militia movement was Mark "Mark from Michigan" Koernke, the mustachioed bundle of braggadocio who became popular in the early 1990s with his pass-around VHS tapes and his shortwave radio program. His sign off? "Long live the Republic. Death to the
New World Order. We shall prevail."
Though the big militia group in Michigan was the Michigan Militia, w/units around the state, Koernke had his own little militia of followers, which he called by various names, ranging from the Michigan Militia-at-Large to the Colonial Marines.
Time for yet another Show and Tell thread about sovereign citizens. In these threads I show artifacts and ideas from this unusual movement, along with some explanation and context, and maybe a bit of snark.
Okay, let's get going!
The above ID card has several postal hallmarks of sovereign citizen, including "zipcode exempt," "near 78767," "general delivery," & "Texas Republic."
Below we see documents a sovereign is preparing to mail. I am half convinced sovereigns are the ones keeping the USPS running.
Sovereign citizen license plates are always fascinating--one could collect these as a hobby and never run out of variations.
This is a video showing British sovereign citizens doing things that would be so typical for American sovereign citizens. To provide a little context: "common law courts" are bogus courts that sovereign citizens sometimes establish notionally or actually, and which are typically
used as pretexts for other actions ranging from "paper terrorism"-style harassment to the sort of arrests threatened here. Common law courts in the sovcit movement date back to the late 1970s but became a huge fad in the movement in the 1990s, when scores of them sprung up. This
resulted in a lot of arrests, deflating the fad, so the only have appeared occasionally since (though they do create similar entities, including county assemblies and jural societies). Another thing the sovereign citizen frequently does, like the "constables" here, is to create
It's Friday, so let's Learn about Extremism! Today I want to tell you a little about one of the many women who played important roles on the far right in the United States.
I present to you Mary Lyrl Van Hyning (1892-1973), who was a prominent far right activist from the 1930s
through the 1950s, as the editor of an antisemitic and conspiratorial publication, Women's Voice, as a publisher and distributor of a variety of right-wing tracts, and as a speaker and conference organizer.
She also could rock a hat.
Van Hyning got her start with the isolationist Mother's Movement in the years before World War II. She and other far right women in Chicago formed the group known as "We, the Mothers, Mobilize for America, Inc."
In early 1941, Van Hyning began what would be a 20 year career of
1/ In the 1980s, paramilitary training was very popular within the white supremacist movement. White supremacist leaders like Louis Beam and Glenn Miller organized large
"Jesus Hitler, an ‘adrenaline junkie’ and the plot to train Michigan neo-Nazis"
2/ paramilitary groups, while others, such as James Wickstrom (the "National Director of Counterinsurgency" for the Posse Comitatus) regularly held paramilitary trainings for their followers. Perhaps the most "serious" white supremacist group involved in paramilitary training was
3/ a Christian Identity group known as the CSA (Covenant, Sword, and Arm of the Lord), which even invited other groups and individuals to come to their compound and be trained.
Rioters grab a Capitol Police (?) riot shield and pass it back towards the crowd--the second one they grabbed here. Riot shields would also be passed forward to use against the police.
The man in the front with the pole appears to be using it to strike an officer. The police are off-camera during the assault. The first ones you can see are Metro DC police--not sure if they were the original ones here or reinforcements.