From Counter Extremism Project <[email protected]>
Subject Extremist Content Online: Neo-Nazi Propaganda Promoting Violence Located On DeviantArt
Date July 20, 2021 4:30 PM
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The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the methods used by
extremists to exploit the Internet and social media platforms to recruit fol


<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>
Extremist Content Online: Neo-Nazi Propaganda Promoting Violence Located On
DeviantArt

 

(New York, N.Y.) — The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the
methods used by extremists to exploit the Internet and social media platforms
to recruit followers and incite violence. CEP researchers located over a dozen
neo-Nazi propaganda accounts on DeviantArt that encouraged violence and
glorified white supremacism. CEP researchers also found multiple neo-Nazi
accounts on Instagram that posted white supremacist propaganda and drawings of
the Christchurch attacker, as well an account that offered knives and pepper
spray for sale. CEP also located a white supremacist clothing store on Etsy. On
Facebook, nine pro-ISIS accounts were discovered. Finally, an extreme right
prisoner support group encouraged the sending of “white identity” magazines to
incarcerated individuals.

 

Neo-Nazi Propaganda That Promotes Violence and Hate Located on DeviantArt

 

The week of July 11 to July 17, CEP researchers located over a dozen accounts
on DeviantArt that posted propaganda that encouraged violence, sought to
recruit for an extremist group or glorified white supremacism.

 

The oldest account had been on the sight for approximately two years, while
the most recent account, which posted a wide variety of neo-Nazi content,
including content promoting white supremacist mass shooters Patrick Crusius
<[link removed]> and Robert Bowers
<[link removed]>, had been created
in July 2021. An account that had been created on DeviantArt in March 2021
posted recent propaganda from the neo-Nazi group The Base
<[link removed]>, which included a recruitment
email address for the group. An account also created in March 2021 posted
content praising the Christchurch terrorist attack and encouraging additional
violence. At least three DeviantArt accounts had similar user names as two
individual users of the Fascist Forge
<[link removed]>
 forum and posted remarkably similar images to art and propaganda that appeared
on the forum.

 

DeviantArt’s Terms of Service
<[link removed]> prohibit using the site “to
upload, post, or otherwise transmit any material that is…offensive…unlawful,
threatening, menacing, abusive, (or) harmful.” While several pieces of content
were removed after they were reported, numerous pieces of reported content,
including those that glorified white supremacist mass shooters, sought to
recruit for a neo-Nazi extremist group, and posted various neo-Nazi symbols
remained on the site.

 

Pro-ISIS Accounts Located on Facebook

 

CEP researchers located nine pro-ISIS accounts on Facebook during the week of
July 11 to July 17. Content posted on the profiles included at least one
full-length ISIS propaganda video, multiple video clips taken from official
ISIS videos, propaganda photo sets, and text-based propaganda. In many cases,
ISIS logos used in propaganda clips were covered up by emojis or other
graphics. Accounts began posting ISIS content between mid-June and mid-July.
Most video clips located on Facebook had between 15 and 125 likes or reactions.
Two of the nine accounts were removed by Facebook after CEP reported them. Four
days after the content was reported, ISIS propaganda was still available on the
seven accounts not removed, including clips taken from the group’s official
videos, as well as text and imagery supporting the terrorist group.


Neo-Nazi Content, Drawings of Christchurch Attacker, Store Offering Knives and
Pepper Spray Located on Instagram

 

CEP researchers located multiple accounts on Instagram that spread neo-Nazi
propaganda or glorified acts of white supremacist terrorism. CEP found six
accounts that either posted propaganda supporting the neo-Nazi Atomwaffen
Division or used the group’s iconography in their profile photos. 

 

CEP also located a post that included an edited photo from the Christchurch
terrorist attack video and digital drawings of the perpetrator. An account was
additionally found that used a drawing of the Christchurch attacker as its
profile photo and contained white supremacist and antisemitic text in the
account’s profile. 

 

A Ukrainian Instagram store with almost 11,000 followers was also located that
sold knives and pepper spray and used neo-Nazi and white supremacist imagery.
In March
<[link removed]>
, CEP previously found a similar store offering pepper spray and neo-Nazi
t-shirts. Two of the seven accounts that CEP reported were removed by
Instagram, which included the store selling pepper spray and knives. The five
accounts that Instagram did not remove included profiles that posted Atomwaffen
Division propaganda or used the group’s logo.

Pepper spray sold on Instagram by a white supremacist store with almost 11,000
followers

 

White Supremacist Clothing Store Located on Etsy

 

On July 13, CEP researchers located a clothing store operated by a known white
supremacist on Etsy. The store offered t-shirts and other clothing and
accessories using imagery including modified black suns/sonnenrads, modified
swastikas, and an image of the notorious founder of the American Nazi Party,
George Lincoln Rockwell. Etsy removed the store after CEP reported it.

 

Extreme Right Prisoner Support Group Encourages Sending “White Identity”
Magazine to Incarcerated Individuals

 

An extreme right-wing prisoner outreach organization encouraged its followers
to send a “white identity” magazine to incarcerated white supremacists. In 
August
<[link removed]>
 2020, the same group urged their supporters to send articles to imprisoned
white supremacists to help them radicalize other inmates. The group was founded
in December 2019 and seeks to provide money, books, and letters to white
supremacists in prison, including mass shooters such as Dylann Roof
<[link removed]>, Robert Bowers
<[link removed]>, and Patrick Crusius
<[link removed]>, and various
members of the Atomwaffen Division and The Base. In May
<[link removed]>
, the group began accepting the privacy cryptocurrency Monero. The group’s
website has published antisemitic writing from prison by the accused Poway
synagogue shooter, John Earnest. The organization maintains a Telegram channel,
Gab account, and a website that uses Cloudflare as its name server and
registrar. 

 

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