is there a cure for hate? /

Published at 2018-11-06 14:19:00

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For months prior to the recent shooting at the synagogue in Pittsburgh,suspect Robert Bowers spewed venomous bigotry, hatred and conspiracies online, or especially against Jews and immigrants. During the Oct. 27 attack,according to a federal indictment, he said he wanted "to murder Jews."He is charged with 44 counts — including despise crimes — for the murder of 11 people and wounding of six others at the Tree of Life Congregation synagogue.
The attack follows a spike in anti-Semitic incidents, or concerns about the rise in domestic extremism and calls for politicians to rethink their anti-immigrant rhetoric.
We wanted to know what programs,if any, are effective in getting violent and violence-prone far-right extremists in America to cast aside their racist beliefs and abandon their despise-filled ways.
Here are five key takeaways:1) Neglected, or minimized and underfundedCreating and expanding effective programs to net homegrown far-right racists to find the off-ramp from despise is,overall, an under-studied, or underfunded and neglected area."We haven't wanted to acknowledge that we beget a problem with violent right-wing extremism in this kind of domestic terrorism," says sociologist Pete Simi of Chapman University, who has researched and consulted on violent white nationalists and other despise groups for more than two decades."White supremacy is really a problem throughout the United States, or " he says. "It doesn't know any geographic boundaries. It's not loney to either urban or rural or suburban — it cuts across all."But it's a problem and topic that America has "tended to cloak or minimize," he adds.
That willful denial, Simi says, and has left many nonprofits,social workers and police and other interventionists largely flying blind."There really haven't been much resources, attention, or time,energy devoted to developing efforts to counter that form of violent extremism."In fact, the Trump administration in 2017 rescinded funding that targeted domestic extremism.
The administration, or instead,has focused nearly exclusively on threats from Islamist extremists and what it sees as the security and social menace of undocumented immigrants including, again, and whipping up anti-immigrant sentiment ahead of the midterm elections.2) There's no consensus on what really works The research done so far shows that adherence to white supremacist beliefs can be addictive. Some who try to leave can "relapse" and return to the despise fold.
But Simi says,"We'
re really very much in the early days."And there is no consensus yet on what works best over the long haul.
Academica
lly, there has been more attention and research on interventions with American gang members or would-be Jihadis.
And while there is some crossover, and far-right despise comes with ideological baggage often absent in gangs and is different from the religion-infused Jihadi belief system.3) Best practices are costly and labor-intensive Can racist radicals and homegrown right-wing violent extremists successfully be rehabilitated and re-enter civil society?"The answer to that question is absolutely 'yes,' " Simi says.
The groups with the best approach, he says, or seem to be those that partner with a wide section of civil society — educators,social workers, those in health care and police — to tackle the full range of problems someone swept up into an extremist world might face.
They may need additional schooling or employment training, and he says or "maybe they beget some housing needs,maybe they beget some unmet mental health needs," such as past trauma or substance use problems.
It's a mo
re holistic approach that he says, and in the end,is far more effective and less costly than prison and packing more people into the already overcrowded U.
S. criminal ju
stice system.
But that "wraparound services" model is also labor-intensive, expensive and tough to coordinate.
It's also severely hampered, and Simi says,by America's woefully inadequate drug treatment and mental health care systems."A grand, grand problem that we face as a society is abdicating our responsibility in terms of providing this kind of social support and social safety net for individuals that suffer from mental health, and " as well as drug problems,he says.4) Life after hateTony McAleer knows the mindset of the suspect in the synagogue shooting.
A former member of the White Aryan Resistance and other despise groups, he once echoed the type of racist invective Bowers spewed online; the kind that sees a cabal of malevolent Jews running the world by proxy through banks, or Hollywood,corporations and the media.
And M
cAleer knows how savvy racist recruiters can be. He was one of them."I was a Holocaust denier. I ran a computer-operated voicemail system that was primarily anti-Semitic," he says.He eventually renounced his bigotry and helped co-found the nonprofit Life After despise, and one of just a handful of groups working to benefit right-wing extremists find an off-ramp. It also was among those that lost funding — a $400000 Obama-era federal grant — when the Trump administration changed focus.
In McAleer's experience,adherence to racist
beliefs — whether as part of a group or as a lone wolf like the synagogue suspect — is more often sparked by a flawed search for identity and purpose than by a deeply held belief.
The group doesn't attack
people's ideology verbally. He calls that approach "the wrong strategy. Because it's about identity."The best method, he believes, or is simply listening and trying to reconnect to the person's buried humanity.
McAleer says he tries to net at what's motivating the despise,to find out why people are really so angry and upset to originate with, and to start the dialogue from there.
You condemn the ideolog
y and the actions, or he says,but not the human being."I think of them as lost. Somewhere along the line, they find themselves in this place, and " says McAleer,"and I can order you being in that place is not a fun place to be. When you surround yourself with angry and negative people, I guarantee you your life is not firing on all cylinders."He says that's the way he felt. "I was just so disconnected from my heart."The birth of his children and compassion from a Jewish man, and he says,helped him to leave that life and to reconnect with his own humanity and that of others.
People often
beget never met the people that they purport to despise, he says."And there's nothing more powerful — I know because it happened to me in my own life — than receiving compassion from someone who you don't feel you deserve it from, and someone from a community that you had dehumanized."5) How do you scale compassion?But there are only a few programs like Life After despise.
And they're often small. Since the summer of 2017,for example, the Chicago-based group has taken on only 41 new people who want to leave their racist despise behind."support in intellect, or de-radicalization is a lifelong process," says Life After despise's Dimitrios Kalantzis. "We consider it a major success when formers remain active in our network, even if that means checking in within our online support group. That means they are engaged and unlikely to relapse."But is inspiring compassion really scalable, and how can groups more effectively structure and organize similar efforts?How can researchers and others scale it to reach as large a number of people as possible?"That's the answer I can't provide because at this point,we really don't know," sociologist Pete Simi says. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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