RobDownSouth
BoycotDivestSanctio
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2002
- Posts
- 78,371
Who is Andy Ngo and why should I care what happened to him?Who was it that attacked Andy Ngo and almost killed him?
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Who is Andy Ngo and why should I care what happened to him?Who was it that attacked Andy Ngo and almost killed him?
Who is Andy Ngo and why should I care what happened to him?
Sorry, but it actually is. Stop covering for the Antifa terrorists.Neither half of that is true, and it took me less than one minute of searching to find three cites to that effect.
He's an online journalist. He was recording an Antifa riot in Portland and they practically killed him for recording them.Who is Andy Ngo and why should I care what happened to him?
I've never met anyone from that group here or in real life.How bizarre
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This is not the least bit surprising. They're a violent hate group.I did back in 2020.
They were nice enough people before they got themselves into 'uniform'. After that they were not so nice.
Sorry, repetition still doesn't prove the truth. Except maybe in MAGAland.Sorry, but it actually is.
https://files.libcom.org/files/Antifa, The Anti-Fascist Handbook.pdfSo if you're against 'Antifa', what ever the fuck that means, you support fascists?
The “slippery slope” argument is commonly used against restricting speech on political grounds in general, and against anti-fascism in particular. As Kevin Drum wrote in Mother Jones: . . . Whenever you start thinking these are good reasons to overturn—by violence or otherwise—someone’s invitation to speak, ask yourself this: Who decides?
If we take a look at the track record of anti-fascism, however, a consistent pattern emerges that is so familiar to anti-fascists that it’s annoying: When local fascist organizing declines, so does local anti-fascist organizing.
I'm not overly familiar with this group, but I can read a book, and your question about how independent they are from each other is a good one.The fact that the lifespans of most antifa groups are determined by the activities of their fascist enemies is so well-known that it actually constitutes a common critique of how antifa organize.
antifa members are mentally deranged and morally bankrupthttps://freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/4340658/posts
WHAT ANTIFA BELIEVES
We believe we should have the right to call anyone a Nazi.
We believe we should be the only ones who decide if the charge is true.
Nobody who is friends with someone accused of being a Nazi is allowed to defend them — they’re Nazis TOO!
Then, if we decide someone really IS a Nazi, we get to shoot them.
And then the world owes us a Gold Star for killing a Nazi.
Also, we’re against the death penalty, so nobody else gets to kill anyone. Especially nobody gets to kill us.
But we still get to kill anybody.
And finally, if you disagree with any of this, you’re a Nazi.
antifa members are fascist bullieshttps://files.libcom.org/files/Antifa, The Anti-Fascist Handbook.pdf
Same book and link (Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook):
I'm not overly familiar with this group, but I can read a book, and your question about how independent they are from each other is a good one.