From ACT For America <[email protected]>
Subject The Parallels between Radical Islam’s ISIS and Antifa
Date November 10, 2020 12:09 PM
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The Parallels between Radical Islam’s ISIS and Antifa

By Lisa Merriam
Small Wars Journal [6]

ISIS and Antifa much alike. “Mass movements are interchangeable,” said
Eric Hoffer in The True Believer. From Hezbollah to Al Qaeda, from Occupy
Wall Street to the Revolution Abolition Movement, these groups share more
than an anti-American philosophy. They use the same marketing techniques.

We explain how ISIS retails its ideology in our book Weaponized Marketing:
Defeating Islamic Jihad with Marketing that Built the World’s Top Brands.
Antifa is going to market the same way.

ANTIFA AND ISIS SHARE MARKETING GOALS

Position and propagandize the ideology. “No justice-no peace” is real
in riot-torn neighborhoods.
Amplify reach and project strength. Just a few blocks may be affected, but
all of Portland is synonymous with rioting.
Unnerve and dishearten enemies. Mayor Ted Wheeler cowered, then fled from
Portland mobs.
Create confusion and insecurity. Burned out blocks, sparse police
protection and upcoming election fraud create uncertainty.

Boost morale of supporters and sympathizers. The riots energize and attract
supporters like the Oregon Health and Science University and Kamala Harris.
Influence and intimidate decision-makers. Defunding police and
“cancelling” opposition voices are prominent examples.
Recruit believers. Action is persuasion. You do first, then believe.

SEGMENTING THE MARKET

Antifa and ISIS have similar market segments. From the committed core
supporters and sympathizers radiate out to impact the confused and
vulnerable, surrounded by apologists and enablers, “useful idiots” like
CNN’s “fiery, but mostly peaceful” reporting and Jerry Nadler’s
riots are a “myth” assertion.

COMMITTED CORE: APPEALING TO EXTREMISTS

Both ISIS and Antifa claim they are movements of the oppressed. That is
rarely true in mass movements. Saul Alinsky notes in Rules for Radicals, it
is the middle class that produces radicals like Fidel Castro, Mao Tse-Tung,
Nikolai Lenin, and Adolf Hitler. ISIS and Antifa leaders come from the same
comfortable social strata.

Olivier Roy studied jihadists behind 140 European terror attacks. He
describes a and ISIS recruit that is remarkably similar to Antifa rioters.
Both attract the frustrated, bored, those with low self-esteem, and petty
criminals.

Frustrated people are easiest to radicalize. Eric Hoffer says: “A man is
likely to mind his own business when it is worth minding.” Antifa rioters
come from the spoiled middle class; educated, “privileged,” yet
frustrated by underachievement. Consider Matthew Banta. His dead-end day
job was “office worker” at the Oshkosh Counselling Wellness Center. But
when not making copies and fetching coffee, he was Antifa, the
swashbuckling “Commander Red” of United Action Oshkosh. He was arrested
with a flame thrower at a Green Bay riot.
Boredom motivates activism.

Universities are shut, bars closed down, borders sealed to back-packer
through Europe. “There is no more reliable indicator of a society’s
ripeness for a mass movement,” Hoffer writes, “than the prevalence of
unrelieved boredom.” Clara Kraebber studies “Women, Gender, and
Sexuality” and “Native American History” at Rice University (tuition
$49,112/year), while living with her parents in their $1.8 million home on
Manhattan’s Upper East Side and Litchfield, CT country estate. She spent
her summer protesting for Black Lives Matter and was recently arrested for
felony rioting in New York, to break the tedium of attending university
remotely.
Low self-esteem fuels the fanatic.

A generation that earned trophies from showing up has a deep yearning to
matter and a desperation for power. In place of achievement and ability,
people seek meaning and power through the near-religious virtue signaling
as thousands of white people kneel on 6th Avenue and swarms of white people
bully other white people in restaurants.

Petty crime is a precursor to extremism. Dr. Roy notes ISIS recruits
“have a past of petty delinquency and drug dealing.” The same is true
for Antifa. Samantha Shader, who allegedly attempted to kill New York City
police officers, faced charges going back years in eleven states, from drug
busts to assaults. Petty crime made her pathetic. Taking a stand against
police elevated her into a heroine.

The brand attributes that of ISIS appeal alike to Antifa. For the
discontented underachievers, those escaping the tedium safe spaces, the
purposeless with low self-worth, for misfits who can’t stay out of
trouble, the appeal of a mass movement can be irresistible. Dr. Roy
explains: “They are people who feel devalued, despised and by becoming
terrorists they suddenly become supermen, heroes.”

SHARED MODEL AND METHODS: CO-CREATED, OPEN-SOURCE, DECENTRALIZED

The marketing manual for Islamic jihadists, The Call for Global Islamic
Resistance, by Abu Mus’ab al-Suri advocated for “leaderless,”
co-created, open-sourced marketing. No organization to join; no membership
card to carry. Show up and start doing “the work,” and you are in. It
is how Antifa murderer Michael Reinoehl can be described as an “Antifa
sympathizer” despite professing to be “100% Antifa.”

“Leaderless” is not exactly true of both ISIS and Antifa. The real
leaders are shadowy on purpose. The people you see doing the dirty work,
getting arrested, throwing bombs, and killing people are never
organizational leaders. They don’t personally bloody their hands. That is
for expendable soldiers like Salman Ramadan Abedi, the ISIS suicide bomber
at the Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, and Antifa’s Michael
Reinoehl.

Leaders provide loose ideological direction, suggest actions, propagate the
brand, coordinate nationally and internationally, and provide funding. ISIS
is organized by various into local cells like Antifa with Rose City Antifa
in Portland and New York Antifa. Ally groups expand reach. ISIS counts Boko
Haram in Africa and Abu Sayyaf in East Asia as associate groups. Antifa
runs with the New Afrikan Black Panther Party, the Revolution Abolition
Movement, and the shadowy NYPDK (New York Police Department Killers).

Individuals can form organizations, with their own activities and funding.
Antifa’s Torch Network offers resources to help people do just that. They
empower individuals to “create together” with an “open mind about
tactics and organization“ according to Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook.

All the Same: Illiberal, Violet, Nihilist, Anti-Semitic

Antifa and the fascists have more in common with each other than they do
with mainstream America. Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook says Antifa is
“illiberal;” against freedom of thought and speech, the entire Bill of
Rights. The Nazis would agree. Eric Hoffer writes of pre-war Germany: “It
was a toss-up whether a restless youth would join the communists or the
Nazis.” Speaking of post-war social change in Britain, Edward Hallett
Carr observed: “The socialization of the national has as its natural
corollary the nationalization of socialism.” One of the biggest
differences between Antifa and fascists is Facebook only takes down Fascist
content.

Antifa would feel right at home in ISIS, tearing down statues, terrorizing
the population, and slandering Jews. The recent riot even featured a
“Death to America” banner. Where have we heard that before?

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

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government funding or grants so that we are not muzzled from speaking the
truth. We rely on the generosity of patriots who believe in the importance
of our work so we can continue exposing America's enemies foreign or
domestic and mobilizing Americans to stand up and defend freedom. We would
be so grateful for your support. [7]_
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