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Information Week Article On "Cyberhate" Regurgitates Jewish Propaganda

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Anchorage Activist
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The Information Week website just published an article on "cyberhate". However, it focuses exclusively on pro-white groups, ignoring virtually all other groups.

And the reason quickly becomes obvious. The author uses the Simon Wiesenthal Center as his exclusive source of information. The Center is a virulently anti-white Jewish supremacist organization.

Click HERE for source.

Online Hate Activity Rises, Extremists Using Web 2.0 Technologies

A report by the Simon Wiesenthal Center highlights how extremists have turned to YouTube, Facebook, online games, and Second Life to recruit new members.

By K.C. Jones
InformationWeek
May 27, 2008 01:23 PM

The Internet has recently experienced the largest increase in online hate activity in 10 years, according to a report released by a Jewish human-rights organization.

"The Simon Wiesenthal Center has been monitoring digital hate for nearly two decades," said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Wiesenthal Center. "As we begin our second decade, we find that as the Internet continues its historic expansion, extremists are keeping pace in the scope in technological sophistication of their efforts. In this election year, the Internet continues to be used to demean and threaten African Americans, Jews, immigrants, gays and virtually every religious denomination."

The Simon Wiesenthal Center released statistics on digital hate and terror this month and announced that hate groups have begun to use Web 2.0 technologies.

The report, which was released last week and includes information about online hate groups since 1995, said extremists have turned to YouTube, Facebook, online games, and Second Life to recruit new members.

Titled "Online Terror + Hate: The First Decade,"the report states that the Internet's global reach, difficulties monitoring communications, and a market of more than 1 billion users make it a prime tool for extremists and terrorists.

The Wiesenthal Center said the first extremist Web site popped up in 1995. Today, the center counts more than 8,000 Web sites that promote hate and terrorism or display extremist or discriminatory postings. That's a 30% increase from last year, according to the report.

Extremists use the Web to promote their views, demean others, raise money, and recruit and train new members around the globe. They do so through videos, blogs, games, comments, and virtual worlds.

The report said that the Islamic Thinkers Society, Podblanc, and Border Patrol represent some of the most problematic examples of hate on the Internet.

The report says the Islamic Thinkers Society represents a Queens, N.Y. group that claims nonviolence but denies the Holocaust.

Border Patrol encourages players to shoot Mexican immigrants trying to cross the border. The antagonists in the game include "Breeder," a mother with children; "Drug Smuggler"; and "Mexican Nationalist." The game circulates through e-mail and various Web sites. It gained widespread attention from mainstream media reports two years ago.

"Podblanc: white now" touts itself as "White nationalism's answer to YouTube." It offers on-demand video of white supremacists, including one that depicts neo-Nazis murdering immigrants and another that shows avatars insulting African Americans' intellectual capacities.

The Wiesenthal Center, a United Nations nongovernmental organization, urges Internet users, other NGOs, and policymakers to help identify and fight against Web sites that promote hate.

The Wiesenthal Center has been credited with fostering tolerance and understanding, but it has also been criticized as being overzealous and defamatory in some instances.

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3 message(s). Last at: May 28, 2008 1:32:09 PM
sumit sharma
commented on May 28, 2008 2:05:43 AM
there is a massive increase in the online networking these days every one want to make their own community or group
for online games updates
http://www.onlinegamesxl.com

and if want to share and display your games online with this site contact sumitsharma@infobase.in

bucketofsquid
commented on May 28, 2008 11:11:47 AM
sumit, The purpose for this article was not for you to promote your personal business. Stop being such a jerk! I can't put what I really think of you into a post because the language filter objects to those terms.

This article is about how evil people are spreading hate via the internet and you go and post "Hey! Spread your hate here!". That is really horrible!

Anchorage Activist
commented on May 28, 2008 1:32:09 PM
This article reeks of anti-white bias. The author chooses to exemplify "white nationalism" as an exclusive form of "hate" while disregarding other forms of extremism, including Islamofascism and Jewish supremacism.

Indeed, the cited source of the information, the Simon Wiesenthal Center, is itself a Jewish supremacist organization. By proclaiming the Jewish singularity of the Holocaust, it promotes the idea that Jewish suffering is somehow worse than anyone else's suffering. This implies that Jewish life is intrinsically more valuable than Gentile life. And that belief epitomizes Jewish supremacism.

Try casting a wider net before writing an article about "hate" next time. Jewish groups are not entitled to be the sole definitors of hate.

Comments can be posted WITHOUT registration. I don't know how long my comment will remain up. However, it's obvious that K.C. Jones is in desperate need of education on Jewish supremacism.

The one bright spot: At least they gave Podblanc some free publicity.


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Posted : 28/05/2008 10:48 am
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