А вот это, о крайне правых, требует, конечно, отдельной темы, и я с удовольствием бы поговорила, но, к сожалению, я не вижу здесь ни репов, склонных к центризму, ни демов, способных "поступиться принципами".
А с одной Аннушкой беседовать в стиле "да, это именно так!" будет скучно.
Очень хотелось бы послушать нормальных репов, которые "не мага" и "антитрамп", которые понимают, что америка и так была и будет грейт, которая отлично простояла 200 лет и простоит на тех же принципах еще много лет, если будет придерживаться консервативной морали, а не популистских и конспиративных теорий и культа личности.
https://news.yahoo.com/experts-warn-inc ... 29033.html
Individuals rather than organized groups more likely to commit extremist crimes as inflammatory Republican rhetoric escalates.
"Before the internet and before social media, how an individual was likely to radicalize is that it was going to be through a face-to-face relationship that they had in the physical world,” Jensen said.
“So they had a cousin that was involved in a skinhead gang and they recruited them, or there was a group active in their neighborhood and they saw a flyer and took an interest in it.
“It was a much more labor-intensive process to get people involved."
With the advent of social media, white supremacist ideas and groups are available “at the click of a button”, Jensen said. Individuals have a much easier path to becoming radicalized.
At the same time, the threat of rightwing terrorism has been exacerbated by the normalizing of political violence, or violent rhetoric, by elected officials and media personalities. Prominent figures can provide a gateway for people to commit violence when they demonize immigrants or the LGBTQ+ community, or indulge conspiracies like the great replacement theory, Jensen said.
“They get this disinformation and conspiracy theories that are a bit more watered down: does not make calls to violence, but they provide the mechanisms for people to follow that narrative to the places where they will encounter that rhetoric.”
Susan Corke, intelligence project Director at the Southern Poverty Law Center, said the far right has been “increasingly mobilized since the beginning of the Trump era."(с)