If you don't read anything else I have to say, read this: Do not ignore the alt-right. You have to fight them in ways that are effective, as opposed to being not effective. You should also avoid methods that are actively beneficial to the alt-right. I'm not sure how the previous concept is debatable for people who want to fight the alt-right. I'm sort of tired of getting an argument back that says "I EITHER HAVE TO PUNCH EVERYONE I SEE IN FRONT OF ME IMMEDIATELY OR NOT FIGHT AT ALL".
I'm not sure who's saying anything of the sort. I'm arguing for the spirit of nazi-punching to be on the table as an option, and it's exhausting to have this constantly framed as a hyperviolent impulse to assault anyone over any shade of disagreement. I'm not arguing in favor of every instance of people in masks beating someone.
I've also pointed out repeatedly that the violent behavior of antifa is ridiculously exaggerated. There are exceptions but they are few. As I already said, counter-protesters generally show up ready for a fight, because they have to be by nature of the situation they're putting themselves in, but few show up wanting a fight.
Almost every claim of excessive violence gets debunked as bad faith framing of the encounter or agent provocateurs. In other words, propaganda. They rely on the fact that most will see a headline or a 20 second video clip and retain their first-impression reaction indefinitely without digging any deeper. The same thing the conservative side of politics does in general. And I know that part of this argument is that fighting them gives them that propaganda material. But maybe we should be more concerned about the fact that some are participating in spreading their propaganda while making that argument?
And I'm tired of seeing "Yeah, ok, but you shouldn't fight the alt-right in ways that benefit them" without any further explanation, which may not be explicitly stating "never fight", but when you put all the wordplay going on from everyone saying this together without any further explanation, that's what it amounts to in practice.
If you want to get anywhere with expressing the idea that something should be done in ways that are effective vs not-effective, then you need to explain what is effective and what isn't. Nobody is explaining what is effective. The only thing put forward has been "do all the same things but more cold and emotionless". And.... ok.... Besides this, I don't know what to make of the anti-nazi punching crowd's stance other than "ignore them" or "rational debate". Both haven't been said explicitly very much in this round of this debate in this thread, but this has come up dozens of times around here and I'm pulling some continuity from previous rounds in order to make sense of things. Because if I don't do that, it's like... "Don't confront them because they just feed off that but nobody's saying don't confront them just do it in ways that are effective."
I feel that antifa's nazi-punch squad and say, a random disorganized mob punching and pillaging everything is a very small and often fleeting distinction.
Honestly, the conspiracy theorist deep inside me thinks antifa is just another far right group that fights far right groups to sow further violence and breed a persecution PR for actual far right groups. Or even to shift blame for half the punching and pillaging a far right mob might do.
Agent provocateurs are a classic strategy employed against the left. Police have even been forced to admit to doing it in court. Identifying and mitigating them is something that comes up in any review of direct action protocol with experienced left-wing activists.