In his Tuesday press conference, Donald Trump talked at length about what he called āthe alt left.ā White supremacists, he claimed, werenāt the only people in Charlottesville last weekend that deserved condemnation. āYou had a group on the other side that was also very violent,ā he declared. āNobody wants to say that.ā
I can say with great confidence that Trumpās final sentence is untrue. I can do so because the September issue of The Atlantic contains an essay of mine entitled āThe Rise of the Violent Left,ā which discusses the very phenomenon that Trump claims ānobody wantsā to discuss. Trump is right that, in Charlottesville and beyond, the violence of some leftist activists constitutes a real problem. Where heās wrong is in suggesting that itās a problem in any way comparable to white supremacism.
What Trump calls āthe alt leftā (Iāll explain why thatās a bad term later) is actually antifa, which is short for anti-fascist. The movement traces its roots to the militant leftists who in the 1920s and 1930s brawled with fascists on the streets of Germany, Italy, and Spain. It revived in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, when anti-racist punks in Britain and Germany mobilized to defeat Neo-Nazi skinheads who were infiltrating the music scene. Via punk, groups calling themselves anti-racist actionāand later, anti-fascist action or antifaāsprung up in the United States. They have seen explosive growth in the Trump era for an obvious reason: Thereās more open white supremacism to mobilize against.
As members of a largely anarchist movement, antifa activists generally combat white supremacism not by trying to change government policy but through direct action. They try to publicly identify white supremacists and get them fired from their jobs and evicted from their apartments. And they disrupt white-supremacist rallies, including by force.
As I argued in my essay, some of their tactics are genuinely troubling. Theyāre troubling tactically because conservatives use antifaās violence to justifyāor at least distract fromāthe violence of white supremacists, as Trump did in his press conference. Theyāre troubling strategically because they allow white supremacists to depict themselves as victims being denied the right to freely assemble. And theyāre troubling morally because antifa activists really do infringe upon that right. By using violence, they reject the moral legacy of the civil-rights movementās fight against white supremacy. And by seeking to deny racists the ability to assemble, they reject the moral legacy of the ACLU, which in 1977 went to the Supreme Court to defend the right of neo-Nazis to march through Skokie, Illinois.
Antifa activists are sincere. They genuinely believe that their actions protect vulnerable people from harm. Cornel West claims they did so in Charlottesville. But for all of antifaās supposed anti-authoritarianism, thereās something fundamentally authoritarian about its claim that its activistsāwho no one electedācan decide whose views are too odious to be publicly expressed. That kind of undemocratic, illegitimate power corrupts. It leads to what happened this April in Portland, Oregon, where antifa activists threatened to disrupt the cityās Rose Festival parade if people wearing āred maga hatsā marched alongside the local Republican Party. Because of antifa, Republican officials in Portland claim they canāt even conduct voter registration in the city without being physically threatened or harassed.
So, yes, antifa is not a figment of the conservative imagination. Itās a moral problem that liberals need to confront.
But saying itās a problem is vastly different than implying, as Trump did, that itās a problem equal to white supremacism. Using the phrase āalt-leftā suggests a moral equivalence that simply doesnāt exist.
For starters, while antifa perpetrates violence, it doesnāt perpetrate it on anything like the scale that white nationalists do. Itās no coincidence that it was a Nazi sympathizerāand not an antifa activistāwho committed murder in Charlottesville. According to the Anti-Defamation League, right-wing extremists committed 74 percent of the 372 politically motivated murders recorded in the United States between 2007 and 2016. Left-wing extremists committed less than 2 percent.
Second, antifa activists donāt wield anything like the alt-rightās power. White, Christian supremacy has been government policy in the United States for much of American history. Anarchism has not. Thatās why there are no statues of Mikhail Bakunin in Americaās parks and government buildings. Antifa boasts no equivalent to Steve Bannon, who called his old publication, Breitbart, āthe platform for the alt-right,ā and now works in the White House. It boasts no equivalent to Attorney General Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III, who bears the middle name of a Confederate general and the first name of the Confederacyās president, and who allegedly called the NAACP āun-American.ā It boasts no equivalent to Alex Jones, who Donald Trump praised as āamazing.ā Even if antifaās vision of society were as noxious as the āalt-rightās,ā it has vastly less power to make that vision a reality.
And antifaās vision is not as noxious. Antifa activists do not celebrate regimes that committed genocide and enforced slavery. Theyāre mostly anarchists. Anarchism may not be a particularly practical ideology. But itās not an ideology that depicts the members of a particular race or religion as subhuman.
If Donald Trump really wants to undermine antifa, he should do his best to stamp out the bigotry that antifaācounterproductivelyāmobilizes against. Taking down Confederate statues in places like Charlottesville would be a good start.
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