From Counter Extremism Project <[email protected]>
Subject Extremist Content Online: Pro-ISIS Content Found On Facebook
Date May 31, 2022 4:35 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: Pro-ISIS Content Found On Facebook

 

(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. On Facebook, CEP researchers located
ten accounts that posted pro-ISIS propaganda. In addition, Turkish authorities
claimed to have captured a man believed to be ISIS leader Abu Hasan al-Hashimi
al-Qurashi.

 

Last week, the co-founder of a Rise Above Movement-inspired active club was
interviewed during a livestream on YouTube, receiving over 430 views. Shortly
after the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, where a gunman murdered 19 children
and two teachers, users of 4chan’s pol board encouraged violence against
Latinos and spread conspiracy theories. On Twitter, a neo-Nazi account claiming
to support two different groups was located, and a Telegram channel allegedly
belonged to a new accelerationist neo-Nazi group was found. A neo-Nazi site
that has a presence on the surface web launched a .onion address to prevent
future takedowns.

 

Finally, supporters of the Buffalo shooter continue to use online platforms to
praise the attack, including on BitChute where a song praising the shooter and
calling for more attacks on African Americans was uploaded.

 

Pro-ISIS Accounts Located on Facebook

 

During the week of May 22 to May 28, CEP researchers found ten accounts on
Facebook that posted pro-ISIS propaganda. Content included clips from official
ISIS propaganda videos and recently released videos from a pro-ISIS propaganda
media unit, Amaq propaganda photos, segments from ISIS’s weekly newspaper, and
Amaq news releases. The appearance of some video clips and pictures were
modified, such as removing ISIS logos or adding special effects. Two accounts
had profile photos taken from ISIS propaganda videos. CEP reported the accounts
to Facebook, which only removed one of the ten accounts. Some content,
including official ISIS videos, were removed by Facebook, but the accounts
themselves remained, and in some instances, pro-ISIS content remained on those
profiles.



ISIS propaganda video clip on Facebook. Screenshot taken May 26, 2022.

 

Online Pro-ISIS Communities Do Not Address Alleged Capture of Leader

 

On May 26, Turkish authorities announced the capture of a man believed to be
ISIS leader Abu Hasan al-Hashimi al-Qurashi
<[link removed]>.
Al-Qurashi was named ISIS’s leader on March 10, 2022, after his predecessor, 
Amir Muhammad Sa’id Abdal-Rahman al-Mawla a.k.a. Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi
al-Quraishi
<[link removed]>
, was killed during a raid by U.S. special forces on February 3, 2022. Online
ISIS supporters did not comment on the Turkish government’s claim. InFebruary
<[link removed]>
, pro-ISIS online communities did not immediately respond to the killing of
Amir Muhammad Sa’id Abdal-Rahman al-Mawla.

 

White Supremacist Active Club Chapter Co-Founder Interviewed on YouTube
Livestream

 

On May 22, the co-founder of a Rise Above Movement-inspired
<[link removed]> active club
chapter was interviewed during a podcast livestream on YouTube. The host
introduced his guest as a leader in the “dissident white nationalist scene.”
The active club chapter co-founder stated that he is located in North Carolina
and that his group has between three and six members but was accepting new
recruits. He also alleged that the group was a target for infiltration from
federal law enforcement but claimed that they were focused on distributing
stickers and physical fitness and hoped to hold music and charitable events and
banner drops in the future. Echoing an essay on an active club affiliated blog,
the chapter co-founder stated that the group’s aesthetic and activities were
designed to attract young people. During the livestream, the host repeatedly
used homophobic slurs, and the active club chapter co-founder used an
antisemitic slogan, in addition to stating that hate was an essential
characteristic because “If you hate it’s because you love something so much,
that anything that raises a hand against it is got to be (sic) just obliterated
because that’s what hate is.”

 

The livestream had over 430 views by May 26 and contained an overlay
advertisement on the bottom of the YouTube video. At least 20 individuals
participated in the YouTube chat affiliated with the livestream. CEP reported
the video to YouTube who did not remove it.

 

Both individuals advertised the active club chapter’s Telegram channel. The
channel has posted white supremacist and antisemitic slogans, content
supporting the racist great replacement conspiracy theory, music from white
power bands, and propaganda content from other groups, including the 
Nationalist Social Club
<[link removed]>, 
Nordic Resistance Movement
<[link removed]>, and 
National Action <[link removed]>.

 

The livestream host, a Tennessee-based white supremacist, has over 1,600
subscribers on his YouTube channel and over 86,000 total views on 181 videos.

 

In a different video posted to YouTube on May 19, the livestream host stated
that while he did not endorse the May 14 Buffalo, New York mass shooting, he
would “never disavow violence.” He said that “if it’s organic violence against
the system, I will never disavow it.” The video had over 530 views twelve days
after it was posted.

 

Following School Shooting, 4chan Users Promote Violence Against Latinos and
Conspiracy Theories

 

Following the May 24 shooting at a school in Uvalde, Texas, where 19 students
and two teachers were murdered, 4chan’s pol board users promoted violence
against Latinos and spread conspiracy theories. One post with over 300 replies
that were still accessible two days later stated that white people should not
care about acts of violence committed against people of color, and that the
murder of non-whites was positive for the country. 19 (38%) of the first 50
comments supported the original post, ten (20%) explicitly disagreed with the
original post, and 21 (42%) were neutral, did not address the issue, or made
off-topic comments.

 

Multiple other posts on the imageboard alleged that the government was either
aware of the attack beforehand or allowed it to happen as part of a plot to
confiscate firearms. One post made on May 25 that had over 300 comments within
24 hours claimed that the U.S. government supplied the attacker with weapons.
Multiple other posts made racist or antisemitic comments.

 

Twitter Account Using Feuerkrieg Division Logo Not Removed

 

CEP reported a Twitter account that used the logo for the accelerationist
neo-Nazi groupFeuerkrieg Division
<[link removed]> in its profile
photo and urged freedom for an alleged potential mass shooter
<[link removed]>
 belonging to a separate neo-Nazi group, Injekt Division, in the profile photo.
The account’s tweets are private, however, the username corresponds with one
previously used by a member of the Injekt Division. Twitter did not remove the
account after CEP reported it.

 

Telegram Channel and Website for Neo-Nazi Group Located

 

On May 25, CEP researchers located a Telegram channel and website belonging to
a new accelerationist neo-Nazi group that claims to have been founded in 2022.
Propaganda on the group’s website, which is visually similar to images
previously released by the Atomwaffen Division, promotes attacks against the
electrical grid and calls for violence, including one that uses a photo from
the Buffalo shooter’s video. The website also quotes James Mason
<[link removed]>’s book Siege
<[link removed]>. The
website uses Porkbun as its registrar and Cloudflare as its name server. The
group’s Telegram channel had 33 members four days after it was created. The
group claims to vet recruits using Element and Session.

 

The website is visually similar to a different site that ceased operating in
late 2021 that belonged to a separate small, internet-based, neo-Nazi
accelerationist group. Over several years, several small neo-Nazi groups have
recruited via the internet, encouraged violent accelerationism, and shared
similar iconography to the Atomwaffen Division. These groups often exist for
short periods before the members move on to other similar groups or movements
<[link removed]>
.

 

Neo-Nazi Website Launches New .Onion Site

 

A neo-Nazi website that seeks to spread the work of James Mason and endorses
the group National Socialist Order (NSO) launched an identical site with a
.onion address on May 24. The site stated that a presence on the dark web would
ensure that their work could not be removed in the future.

 

In December
<[link removed]>
 2021, the surface website was briefly offline before switching domain
suffixes. In addition to content from Mason, the site contains writing from
former members of the Atomwaffen Division and current members of the NSO and
lists members from the former as “prisoners of war.” On March 2, the site
claimed that the bulk of its readership was between 16 and 18. Tor accessible
.onion addresses have been used by several white supremacist groups and
websites, including the Daily Stormer, the Atomwaffen Division, the National
Socialist Order, imageboards, and smaller accelerationist groups
<[link removed]>
 that endorse violence.

 

Song Glorifying Buffalo Shooter Located on BitChute

 

On May 25, CEP researchers located a song on the BitChute streaming platform
praising the Buffalo shooter and calling for additional violence against
African Americans. The song used the phrase “hail the saints” to refer to a
pantheon of white supremacist terrorists and mass shooters and advocated for
acts of violence. The track used a computer-generated voice and the uploader
used imagery from a former McDonald’s advertising mascot that the extreme right
has co-opted. BitChute did not remove the video after CEP reported it, claiming
that it did not violate their community guidelines. The video had 71 views
after being on the website for approximately 28 hours.

 

###





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