Max Peck wrote:ImLawBoy wrote:If you're going to chastise people for flinging forum snark, you'd best invest in a hair shirt.
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That said, making blatantly obvious statements that don't address the issue raised is often the cause of snark. Perhaps you could have provided some info from the SPLC to advance the conversation in a more productive direction. I had done a cursory search prior to my post, but only found the 250 figure that Kurth referenced, but it seemed to be only about the people attending the Tiki march the night before, and not about the rally the following day.
I've never denied that I'm a sarcastic asshole. When someone goes out of their way to point out (justly, there is no doubt) that my comments are shallow and superficial, I'm merely inclined to acknowledge their effort.
Whoa, now. Who's flinging forum snark? Also, I did check SPLC before I posted that, and I didn't see any decent figures relevant to my question about the actual number of neo-Nazis and white supremacists.
Coincidentally, I just saw this article on The Daily Beast:
How Many Nazis Are There In America Really?
The Southern Poverty Law Center hasn’t counted the members of the so-called “alt-right.” A press representative tells The Daily Beast that they’re not aware of any nationwide surveys designed to count them. However, they estimate that the KKK counts between 5,000 and 8,000 members nationwide. Back in the 1920’s, when cities across the south were erecting monuments to Confederate generals, the Klan had 4 million members. As Roger L. Simon points out, this would be an impressive decrease even if the population of the U.S. hadn’t swelled since the 1920’s. Back then, the Klan constituted about 4 percent of the entire U.S. population. Now, the KKK is near its nadir. That would make them less than 0.003 percent of the population, even on the higher end of the SPLC’s estimate. “It’s a small group of real bad people,” Simon writes.
This seems to support the notion that the media is, yet again, feeding fear and convincing Americans to be VERY AFRAID.
And, to be clear, I'm not saying they shouldn't be covering the events in Charlottesville. Not by a long shot. But I think the coverage -- like so much of the rest of what passes as journalism today -- is irresponsible because it doesn't put the issues in context.