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Stormfront becomes an important “icebreaker” explains Kelso (at left), who runs Stormfront’s day-to-day operations. He says he wouldn’t have signed up for Stormfront if it weren’t for the option of using a pseudonym. “If you give people the chance to tip toe into the water, they are more likely to come in than if they have to take a dive. I felt like, ‘I don’t know is these people safe. What will happen to me if I join?’ I got my toes in the water and then over the months and years I saw the water’s not bad, so I went deeper and deeper. That’s happened to many of us,” he said.

The challenge in New York City though is greater. Stormfront helps people to connect, but there is still a lot of fear of meeting up in public. One avid poster, Keith, complains, “I've often attempted to meet people through this website, and it seems that there is an irrational terror of actually going out and chilling at a beer hall for a few hours with cool people.”

“I wouldn't call it an irrational terror—there are real nuts out there,” one local responded, referring to anti-racists.

Plans were made to meet up for beers, with larger hopes for a rally or at least a road trip this summer to one in Kentucky. “It will only happen if you make it happen,” posted one inspirer.

Other cities, like Houston and West Palm Beach are more successfully active with weekly gatherings, which are more akin to barbeques than rallies, but with political discussions and speakers. One of Stormfront’s goals, according to Kelso, is to expand these regular meet-ups from scores of cities where they are now to hundreds.

Click here for a close up on Southern Poverty Law Center map (at right) of groups in New York State.

Click here to read about strategic networking that helps groups like Stormfront and its opponents push forward.

Click here to jump to a discussion on the Web's net effect.

Posted by Team B 2:39 PM  

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