Extremist Content Online: Neo-Nazi Group Using GiveSendGo to Crowdfund Propaganda Campaign
(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. Last week, CEP researchers located a crowdfunding campaign on GiveSendGo to benefit a Scottish neo-Nazi group planning to promote antisemitic videos and neo-Nazi propaganda. An E-commerce platform stopped providing services to a neo-Nazi web store after CEP action, and researchers also located a Facebook page selling white supremacist clothing.
In addition, CEP researchers found multiple neo-Nazi Telegram channels linking to a directory of 3D printed firearms. White supremacists praised the Buffalo gunman and shared his manifesto on Telegram and imageboards following his sentencing.
Lastly, an al-Qaeda media outlet released a video online featuring the late Ayman al-Zawahiri calling for a mass global uprising, and an ISIS bomb-making video was found on the Internet Archive. The pro-ISIS al Azaim Foundation released a video stating that the Taliban cannot protect diplomatic personnel in Afghanistan, and the group also released issue 22 of the Voice of Khorasan web magazine.
Scottish Neo-Nazi Group Fundraises for Laser Projector on GiveSendGo
CEP researchers located a fundraiser from a Scottish neo-Nazi group on the crowdfunding platform GiveSendGo for purchasing an outdoor laser projector. The crowdfunding page stated that they would use the projector to promote a specific antisemitic and pro-Nazi propaganda video and attract media attention. The link for the crowdfunding campaign was shared on multiple Telegram channels.
CEP reported the campaign to GiveSendGo on February 15 for violating their Terms that prohibit “items that promote hate, violence, (or) racial intolerance,” however, the campaign was still online on February 21.
There have been several recent instances where the extreme right has used lasers to project antisemitic messages. A message promoting Holocaust denial was broadcast on the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam earlier in February using a laser, and antisemitic slogans were projected on buildings in Florida in October.
In December, CEP located a Telegram chat connected to a channel for projecting antisemitic messages using a laser. The device the Scottish group was hoping to purchase was one of the laser devices recommended by the December chat.