Home » SPLC: self-perpetuating propaganda machine

Comments

SPLC: self-perpetuating propaganda machine — 13 Comments

  1. Simple economics.

    When the demand for hate groups and hate crimes outstrips the supply, they must be invented.

  2. Yup. The left has a serious supply and demand problem when it comes to systemic racism in this country.

  3. I don’t think this will kill the SPLC, but corporations will likely feel less pressure to donate, and the return on doing so will be less useful.

  4. On FNCs program “The Five”, courtesy of Obama critic Matt Margolis, comes this written and clip account between Greg Gutfield and the painful voiced Jessica Tarlov. Tarlov tries to defend the SPLC, but Gutfeld brings strong counter-examples for the win.

    Sure. There’s always bigotry and racism somewhere, says Gutfeld. But is the Left’s well funded NGO system responsible for creating the Racist White Supremacist bogeyman? Or was all this hysterical galloping in the media, beginning in 2014 (by citation counts of words like “racist” or “racism”), really organic? Or not? https://pjmedia.com/matt-margolis/2026/04/23/greg-gutfeld-absolutely-shreds-jessica-tarlov-and-it-was-vicious-n4952128

    Tarlov cannot hold her own. I recall that in 2010 or -11, the Economist magazine reported on a poll, YouGov In
    believe, of Tea Party supporters. It found racist sentiments in this group no different than in the average American. Yet the Taxed Enough Already movement was smeared as racist bigots!

    And even when race hustling second term Prez. Barry turned the volume, the stats by advocacy groups for about a decade maintained that neo-Nazi’s in the US and KKK supporters were no more than 10-12000, and no less than 4-6,000. And virtually stable in both’s counts. According to the ADL and SPLC! (In other words, both group’s stats mostly overlapped, and no bulge in the tale of the numbers were reported….Until race monger Barry became more nasty, producing the citation count in media cited by Gutfeld.

    Now, assuming an even spread of race hostile organizations, were the the Charlottesville turnout for Unite the Right” protest in 2017 an indicator of swelling bigots? No.

    I recall then calculating that the turnout in Charlottesville was about right, assuming protesters drove no more than 5-8 hours to be there, about one day’s driving distance. So, again, the hysteria is all vile theatrics of the rising Woke kind. Like with climate crisis, it was not vindicated by honest estimates and considerations.

    This topic and discussion of the DOJs charging documents against the SPLC have exploded on the Right in the last few days, since Sunday. Meantime, the NYTimes “reports” on a rightside backlash against, for example, richly funded former NGO execs, who lost funding in USAID cuts last year.

    My God, behold the river of tears!

  5. the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) actually did decent work in the field of civil rights.

    Did it? Was it ever anything but a grift and politicized? They were founded in 1971, after the main work of the civil rights movement had been done. They sued to force Alabama to reapportion its legislative districts.

    They were suing the Klan by 1979. Did suing the Klan actually advance civil rights? In 1919 when the Klan was actually politically powerful, perhaps it might have, but by 1979? The Klan was perhaps a criminal organization, perhaps a terrorist one, but they were not politically powerful and had only a small number of members, not like in the 1920s when about 20% of Indianans were members and nationally they numbered in the millions. Suing them might have been a good thing, like suing the left-wing terrorist groups operating then would have been, but seems more like a criminal issue than a civil rights issue.

    But the skinsuiting was done by Morris Dees in the 1980s; he was only original one left in the organization by 1986 when they stopped even pretending to be about civil rights. Dees was ousted in 2019 over “treatment of minority and female employees,” according to CNN.

    I was too young to know what SPLC was up to in the 1970s, was it really civil rights or was it just the same stuff as now, and the 1970s national media was not going to be any more honest about it then they would anyway. (I do remember their work in the 1990s and it was the same kind of stuff they’ve been doing lately.) But I think it’s wise to start questioning whether these people and organizations who appear to “change” are really changing, or have they operated this way all along and we’re only now finding it out.

  6. Burn that foul nest of criminals, seditionists and traitors to the ground.

  7. SHIREHOME,

    I agree. I’m so tired of this crap being exposed and no one in jail, or other real consequences.

  8. Yes, I think something will happen to them. The indictment apparently has damning evidence, and the trial will be in Alabama, not DC.

  9. Who knew that the SPLC invented the self licking ice cream cone by repurposing (inverting) one of their favorite props!

    Don’t make me draw a picture!

  10. @Niketas Choniates: They were suing the Klan by 1979. Did suing the Klan actually advance civil rights?

    I’d say so. I grew up in the South and I knew people in the Klan. Sure, most of the heavy lifting was done by the Civil Rights movement and the general shift in the zeitgeist, including the South.

    But suing the Klan out of business was a good thing to do and took some dangerous people off the streets.

    Including my high school surfing buddy, who became a Green Beret, then went whole hog into the Klan and the paramilitary White Patriot Party. He was sentenced to prison for ten years for conspiring to buy a rocket launcher to blow up the SPLC headquarters.

    Later he discovered that many members of the White Patriot Party were informants, including the head of the party.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

Web Analytics