We’re the New GOP!


A whiter future: pro- and anti-Trump supporters clash outside Trump Towers in New York. Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo

A whiter future: pro- and anti-Trump supporters clash outside Trump Towers in New York. Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo

Every few weeks, William Johnson, the chairman of the white nationalist American Freedom Party (AFP), holds a lunch for members, the goal being to make America a white ethnostate, a project that begins with electing Donald Trump. This week, it’s at a grand old French restaurant called Taix, in Echo Park, Los Angeles – an odd choice on the face of it. Echo Park is a trendy hood. It’s hipster and heavily Hispanic. In fact, given the predominance of Latino kitchen staff in this city, it may be wise to hold off on the Trump talk until the food arrives.

“About three months ago,” Johnson begins, “I was talking to Richard Spencer about how we need to plan for a Trump victory.” Spencer is another prominent white nationalist – he heads the generic-sounding National Policy Institute. “I said: ‘I want Jared Taylor [of American Renaissance] as UN Ambassador, and Kevin MacDonald [an evolutionary psychologist] as secretary of health and Ann Coulter as homeland security!’ And Spencer said: ‘Oh Johnson, that’s a pipe dream!’ But today, he’d no longer say that, because if Trump wins, all the establishment Republicans, they’re gone… They hate him! So who’s left? If we can lobby, we can put our people in there.”

Around the table five young men, roughly half Johnson’s age (he’s 61), nod and lean in. They all wear suits and ties, address the waiter as “sir” and identify as the “alt right”, the much-discussed nouvelle vague of racism. “Are you guys familiar with the Plum Book?” Johnson asks. “It’s plum because of the colour, but also because of the plum positions – there are 20,000 jobs in that book that are open to a new administration.”

“So we need to identify our top people!” says Eric, one of the men at the table.

“Just anyone with a college degree!” Johnson says.

“Right.” Eric is practically bouncing in his seat with excitement. “We need to get the word out. We are the new GOP!”

[…]

It’s not every day that a brown journalist gets to sit in on a white-nationalist strategy meeting. But these are strange times. Racism is trending. Like Brexit, Trump has normalised views that were once beyond the pale, and groups like the AFP have grown bold. Their man’s stubby orange fingers are within reach of actual power, so maybe it’s time to emerge from the shadows at last.

I first met Johnson in May after he signed up as a Trump delegate before being swiftly struck off by the campaign when the press found out. He’s a surprising figure. An avid environmentalist, fluent in Japanese and, in person, not the bitter old racist I’d expected but rather a jolly Mormon grandfather, bright eyed and chuckling, a Wind in the Willows character. Eric is even more unexpected. Tall and impassioned, he came to racism via hypnotherapy, of all things. He sells solar panels for a living and practises yoga. Together with his friends Matt and Nathan, who are also here at lunch, he runs an alt-right fraternity in Manhattan Beach – “a beer and barbecues thing”. They’re called the Beach Goys. “We’re starting a parody band,” he beams. “We’ve found a drummer!”

Between them they represent two poles of a racist spectrum, young and old. And judging from this lunch, it’s the millennials who are the more extreme. Johnson wants white nationalists to appear less mean and he finds the “JQ”, the Jewish Question, archaic. But Eric loves the meanness of the alt right. “We’re the troll army!” he says. “We’re here to win. We’re savage!” And antisemitism is non-negotiable. In fact, he’d like to clear up a misnomer about the alt right, propagated by the Breitbart columnist Milo Yiannopoulos, who is often described, mistakenly, as the movement’s leader. Milo casts the alt right as principally a trolling enterprise, dedicated to attacking liberal shibboleths for the “lulz”– there’s precious little actual bigotry. But Eric insists otherwise. Yes, they like to joke, they have memes, they’re just as funny as liberals – have I heard of their satirical news podcasts, the Daily Shoah and Fash the Nation? But make no mistake, the racism is real. Eric especially enjoys The Daily Stormer, a leading alt-right news site, which is unashamedly pro-Hitler.

What unites Johnson and Eric is what they describe as “the systematic browbeating of the white male” – namely all this talk of privilege, the Confederate flag, Black Lives Matter and mansplaining. But beyond that, it’s the “looming extinction of the white race”. This is the language they use. Also: “Diversity equals white genocide.” The alt right loves to evoke genocide while harbouring Holocaust deniers. Their point is that white people are melting away like the icecaps, and they have a primal drive to stop it. In 2044, non-Hispanic whites will drop below 50% of the US population. “The generation of the white minority has already been born,” Eric says. “Look at South Africa and Rhodesia. That’s where we’re headed. Total disenfranchisement.”

It’s definitely worth clicking over and reading the in-depth article at The Guardian. It’s unpleasant, it’s upsetting, and it’s scary. There’s no point ignoring this though, we do that at our peril.

Comments

  1. says

    Let’s watch Trump lead the alt-right off the cliff along with the far right.

    What, do they think he’s going to win? He’s just going to leave them hanging, take their money, and let them stand blinking in the harsh searchlights in their basket of deplorables.

  2. rq says

    I read as far as the caption on the picture (“We’re everywhere … etc.”) and I’m already scared.
    The thing is, I know these kinds of people are everywhere, even among my friends (I’m pretty sure, though no one has come out and said anything terrible… lately… that I know of…). What scares me most is that their views are becoming legitimized and amplified beyond anything they (the views) could possibly be worth, and I don’t like that.

  3. kestrel says

    Strangely not surprised to hear the guy is a good Mormon. I am related to a bunch of them, and have had some long in-depth talks with them, and their racism is truly scary. They don’t think of it that way, of course, but it’s there all right. The rest are probably religious as well.

  4. quotetheunquote says

    @rq #2:

    Not really meaning to get personal, this is intended rhetorically but….

    …even among my friends

    Really? You have friends who might be even a little bit sympathetic to the AFP (or its equivalents, wherever you happen to be…)?

    I have relatives who are like that, but surely no friends; we don’t get to choose our relatives (unfortunately).

  5. Patricia Phillips says

    I am curious as to what the white ethnostate idiots propose to do with indigenous people -- kill us all and finish Custer’s job? Ship us to Canada? The Moon? WHAT? Yeah, I know, these are disgusting excuses for humans and I probably DON’T want to know.

  6. rq says

    quotetheunquote
    Well, it happened like this: I married a husband who grew up in a far more restrictive and conservative environment, and he has a bunch of childhood friends who harbour all kinds of innnnteresting conservative views on all manner of things. Now, I don’t talk politics with them, but I have absolutely no doubt that among them there are those who would be sympathetic to the AFP. They’re not exactly people I hang out with on a daily basis, and yes, I have selected my own friends rather well, but I do consider most of Husband’s also my friends, if only marginally -- and there’s about two times a year or less where we spend a small amount of time together socially. Sadly, if at least one of them can be a huge (yuuuuge?) fan of Trump because ‘he says it like it is!’, then there is probably AFP sympathy there somewhere, too. Considering the outright racist and anti-immigrant views of his family, his friends can’t be all that different.
    So that’s kind of how that statement was supposed to work.

  7. says

    Patricia:

    Yeah, I know, these are disgusting excuses for humans and I probably DON’T want to know.

    Pretty sure they’d have no problem carrying out the colonial mandate: “kill the Indian, save the man.”

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