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  • 2020-12-08 (xsd:date)
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  • Is This Eisenhower's Antifa Membership Card? (en)
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  • In late 2020, social media users shared an image mocked up to look like a membership card belonging to former U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower for the Global Antifascism Initiative. This antifa membership card is fake. We could find no evidence that a group named Global Antifascism Initiative existed, much less one joined or founded by Eisenhower. The hoax meme may be a play on the fact that Eisenhower commanded Allied forces in Europe during World War II, which ultimately defeated fascist Axis powers led by Nazi Germany. To be clear Eisenhower didn't originate or join the modern-day anti-fascist movement, known colloquially by the portmanteau antifa. If it was founded by any one individual, that historical fact has been lost to time, as the antifa movement is a loose collection of local activists, not a structured, centralized organization. Anti-fascist activists initially came on to the scene in Europe during the period between the First and Second World Wars. They challenged supporters of fascism directly in the streets in an effort to block fascists from accessing social and political power. The contemporary antifa movement in the U.S. has its roots not with Eisenhower but in the punk rock scene of the 1980s, when activists took it upon themselves to protect performance spaces from a burgeoning neo-Nazi movement, either by blocking neo-Nazis from entering clubs or removing them by force. They may have been relegated to little more than a curiosity in music history had it not been for the political rise of U.S. President Donald Trump in 2015, at which time, as Vox reported, black and red flag-waving antifa activists emerged to counter right-wing extremism. Antifa in 2020 is used as something of a right-wing boogeyman, invoked by Trump and various supporters of Trump as a scapegoat for civil unrest. The media profile of the group has been raised to the mainstream, thanks to their counterprotests during high-profile incidents like the 2017 Unite the Right white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. But antifa's level of involvement in planning and carrying out violent street protests has generally been exaggerated. (en)
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