Net effects
The effects of the Internet on the White Supremacist Movement are already apparent. While there is heated debate about whether there is an increase of white supremacist activity, sparked in part by a study put out last February by the Anti-Defamation League on the resurgence of klans, there seems to be a rise in the number of groups, which is attributable at least in part to the Internet. “The number of racists hasn’t necessarily increased that dramatically, but there are more options for those individuals,” explains the Anti-Defamation League’s Brian Marcus, who has been tracking the Internet usage by hate groups for the past fifteen years. “It’s like a supermarket effect where you can pick and choose. Twenty years ago, you would join one local group. That was who you identified with, hung out with. Now with the Internet, you are opened up to information from different groups. People have much greater exposure to different groups,” he says. Videos much like the following, display the Net's ability to unite varied users and disseminate information to them.
This increase in groups has not lead to a more fractioned dispersed community, or as one might expect. Instead thanks to the Internet, it is highly unified with greater cooperation within groups and a wider reach, extending internationally.
Click to explore intra-group activities or the international scene.
Posted by Team B 4:14 PM