Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 18 – After its
American internet providers refused to continue to carry it, the American
neo-Nazi publication, The Daily Stormer,
relocated to the Russian domain; but before it could begin posting, the Russian
authorities first requested and then ordered that it be taken down.
Given the vicious content of this
publication, one can only welcome the decision of Russian officials. But Moscow
is getting more credit than it deserves because The Daily Stormer -- and more than 100 additional neo-Nazi sites
that have been blocked on Western social media -- are now functioning without
problems on Russian social networks (meduza.io/feature/2017/08/17/amerikanskie-i-evropeyskie-ultrapravye-massovo-pereselyayutsya-v-rossiyskiy-internet-chto).
“Western
ultra-right groups have begun to migrate to the Russian segment of the Internet
because of Facebook’s blocking of these groups. In ‘VKontakte,’ one can find
more than a hundred nationalists groups whose users include people from the US,
Germany, Sweden and other countries,” the Meduza news agency says.
Most of these groups migrated to the
Russian social networks last year, but some have done so “already after the
events in Charlottesville,” the agency says.
One US extreme nationalist told Meduza that “’VKontakte for us is a new
discovery,” where they can more freely disseminate their messages.
The management of that network says
that it will block groups that call for cruelty and violence but not those that
simply put out an ideological message. A few of the neo-Nazi groups have been
blocked, it appears; but most continue to operate. Both Russian law and Russian
practice allow for their removal, but penalties are minimal in most cases,
lawyers say.
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