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How White Extremists Teach Kids to Hate

By Mark Keierleber | January 27, 2021
Concept of control. Marionette in human hand. Objects are colored on red and blue light.

Alt-right groups use online gaming communities popular among teens to recruit culture warriors


Updated, Jan. 29

Five days after extremists used the fringe video gaming platform Dlive to livestream a mob attack on the U.S. Capitol, a youthful white nationalist logged onto the site and offered his take about the future of a movement he helped create.

In a drawn-out rant, the alt-right provocateur Patrick Casey downplayed the Capitol insurrection while deriding social media platforms for cracking down on hate speech supporting an overthrow of the U.S. government. As he spoke, he was rewarded with a barrage of animated lemons 鈥 the website鈥檚 digital currency that鈥檚 netted white nationalists tens of thousands of dollars in real-world cash donations 鈥 from a supporter with the username 鈥淧ropagandaDepartment.鈥

鈥淥ur days on Dlive seem to be numbered,鈥 said Casey, referring to the youth-focused social media platform , many of whom have been banned on mainstream platforms like YouTube and Twitch, its Amazon-owned competitor. Yet, after a pro-Trump mob of militiamen, conspiracy theorists and white nationalists stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, leaving five people dead, even Dlive began to expel prominent streamers 鈥 several of whom, like Casey, were among the site鈥檚 highest-earning personalities, according to research by Megan Squire, a computer science professor at Elon University and senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The violent insurrection at the Capitol reawakened many Americans to the persistent reality of white supremacists among us and how far they鈥檙e willing to go to exert their ideologies. Last week, the Biden administration   to conduct a 鈥渃omprehensive threat assessment鈥 into 鈥渄omestic violent extremism,鈥 calling it 鈥渁 serious and growing national security threat.鈥 Then, on Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security warning that 鈥渋deologically-motivated violent extremists鈥 present a heightened threat across the U.S. But even as political leaders vow to root them out, extremists are busy doing what they have done for decades: Recruiting the next generation of hate-filled zealots.

Now, Squire and other experts on extremism are sounding the alarm about the ways alt-right groups weaponize video games and streaming platforms like Dlive, which is owned by the peer-to-peer file sharing service BitTorrent, to radicalize and recruit teens. While they said the current political climate presents a wide opening for youth to fall down a dystopian rabbit hole, experts recommended a range of strategies that parents and educators can use to identify warning signs and intervene.

At a moment of social unrest where baseless conspiracy theories have been peddled by prominent government leaders, the pandemic has forced millions of students to learn from computer screens all day, away from a support network of teachers and other adults. Even on the most mainstream online platforms, conspiracy theories are just a few clicks away.

鈥淎 lot of it is happening in plain sight,鈥 said Jinnie Spiegler, the director of curriculum and training at the Anti-Defamation League, who oversaw a surge in interest during the Trump administration for classroom materials about youth radicalization after teachers observed troubling behaviors in their own classrooms. 鈥淭here鈥檚 the concern on a personal level that young people are getting sucked into it, frankly,鈥 she said, adding that a growing proliferation of hate speech online 鈥渟ets the stage for that next level of literal white supremacist ideology.鈥

Squire uses her expertise in data mining to understand online extremism, including the way white nationalists became Dlive鈥檚 top earners, raking in tens of thousands of dollars in recent months playing video games while espousing disinformation and chatting with fans. Among those identified are white nationalists who鈥檝e idolized Adolf Hitler and another with in 2019 at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. Casey and Dlive didn鈥檛 respond to requests for comment.

Many of the site鈥檚 top streamers, including Casey, are figures in the 鈥淕royper鈥 movement, a loose who experts say tend to skew young. In , for example, a prominent white nationalist boasted about how 鈥測oung zoomers鈥 鈥 a reference to Generation Z 鈥 could find his videos on the site鈥檚 homepage 鈥渂ecause I鈥檓 their number-one earner now.鈥 Meanwhile, the has discussed candidly that his site is 鈥渕ainly designed to target children鈥 as young as 11 years old.

Alt-right provocateur Patrick Casey discusses the U.S. Capitol riot, and its political ramifications, in a video on the gaming platform Dlive.

Knock, knock: it starts with a joke

Casey, whose group has focused on recruiting college students and the fatal 2017 鈥淯nite the Right鈥 rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, doesn鈥檛 resemble the neo-Nazi archetype. If anything, his clean-shaved face and black polo shirt would allow the 31-year-old to blend in with Best Buy鈥檚 GeekSquad.

Likewise, the Dlive website doesn鈥檛 look anything like a rickety, dark-web outpost for the Ku Klux Klan. It embraces childish imagery, like animated ninjas and ice cream cones, and allows people to play and discuss mainstream video games like The Division 2 and Minecraft. Yet the website also hosts streamers who deny the Holocaust ever happened and fantasize about the murder of Black Lives Matter protesters, relying on the same racist tropes as yesteryear. As Casey spoke, his fans flooded the comments with animated gifs of former President Donald Trump, gorillas and Pepe the Frog, a cartoon that鈥檚 been co-opted by racist trolls.

Megan Squire

Alt-right streamers use 鈥渁 three-pronged approach,鈥 Squire said, in their bid to reach younger audiences online: They disseminate their message on leading social media platforms like YouTube, mainstream video games and on platforms like Dlive and Twitch where people livestream videos of themselves playing video games to build a fanbase. The last prong, she acknowledged, is foreign to many adults.

鈥淧eople of my demographic look at that and they鈥檙e like, 鈥榃ait, people would watch another person play video games for 10 hours at a time and then give them money for it?鈥 she said. But many alt-right provocateurs are well-versed in the gaming culture 鈥 and have long used strategies to appeal to a younger crowd.

鈥淭hey want to look and appear hip, popular with the young kids,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he biggest thing they like about [Casey] is the gaming. He鈥檒l game sometimes all night. He鈥檒l game six or eight hours at a time,鈥 while simultaneously engaging with fans in the chatroom and touting disinformation. When he鈥檚 not gaming, he offers political commentary in a format that resembles a cable news segment. Along the way, he scores donations 鈥 in the form of lemons 鈥 from a captive audience.

In some cases, extremists on fringe websites have organized to target the users of mainstream platforms, Squire said. She of 鈥淒iscord raiding,鈥 in which communities from fringe sites bombard groups on the messaging platform Discord 鈥渇ull of people they don鈥檛 like and just harass them.鈥

Though it鈥檚 a jump to claim that 鈥渧ideo games are radicalizing our children,鈥 they鈥檝e long failed to combat harassment, said Daniel Kelley, associate director of the Center for Technology and Society at the Anti-Defamation League. 鈥淥n the road to radicalization, these are spaces where kids can be inoculated to the fact that hate 鈥 specifically against people based on their identity 鈥 is not a transgressive thing,鈥 adding that streaming sites like Twitch and Dlive are 鈥渁n outgrowth of the game community where hate is normalized.鈥

That process, experts said, often begins with a callous joke. In the modern era, such jokes are often distributed as memes. What may begin with a crude 鈥渄ead baby joke鈥 can eventually be weaponized as propaganda, including posts pronouncing the Holocaust was a hoax.

Steph Loehr, who goes by the moniker FerociouslySteph on the video game streaming platform Twitch, faced a barrage of attacks and death threats after stating in a video that some gamers are white supremacists. (YouTube)

Steph Loehr, a performer on the video game streaming platform Twitch who goes by the online moniker 鈥淔erociouslySteph,鈥 has been subjected to the strategy firsthand. Defining hate speech as a joke shields people from accountability, she said. As long as the speaker is able to establish their rhetoric as humor, they鈥檙e rewarded with protection from those who aren鈥檛 laughing.

鈥淓specially if your joke is well-crafted, you can get people on your side saying that person is overreacting or they鈥檙e losing their minds because they thought this was terrible,鈥 said Loehr. 鈥淲hereas the sensitive person is getting pushed out, alienated, attacked for reacting at all.鈥

On , . In an effort to stamp out abusive behaviors on its platform, Twitch to a new Safety Advisory Council last year 鈥 but the move quickly fell victim to controversy. After Loehr said during a livestream that 鈥渁 lot of you gamers are actually white supremacists,鈥 many in the community erupted in outrage. Loehr, who is transgender, was subjected to a barrage of harassing memes and death threats. She was also 鈥渄oxxed,鈥 with her home address and other personal information shared online. Though less pervasive than on Dlive, a review of Twitch livestreams quickly turned up imagery popular among alt-right personalities.

Yet Loehr still has faith in the Twitch platform, and said it鈥檚 making strides in addressing abuse. But she acknowledged its darkest tendencies could be harmful to children.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a joke that being a Twitch streamer is being a babysitter, but it really is a lot of the time,鈥 the 27-year-old said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 disturbing to me when big content creators don鈥檛 moderate their spaces and aren鈥檛 being good role models for the kids that are watching them 鈥 because there are a lot of kids watching.鈥

In an email, a Twitch spokeswoman shared the that prohibit 鈥渂ehavior that is motivated by hatred, prejudice or intolerance.鈥 The policy specifically prohibits content that 鈥渆ncourages or supports the political or economic dominance of any race, ethnicity, or religious group, including support for white supremacist/nationalist ideologies.鈥

While Dlive, Twitch and other social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter have taken unprecedented steps since the Capitol siege to remove posts or accounts that violate their terms of use, Kelley, of the Anti-Defamation League鈥檚 Center for Technology and Society, blasted the company for being reactive. Rather than taking a proactive approach, he blamed them for doing far too little before 鈥渂odies hit the ground.鈥

Brotherhood in disguise

Though the Capitol insurrection has set a new spotlight on the persistent presence of white supremacy in American politics, recruitment efforts aimed at teens have been in place for decades. Their tactics left an impression on criminologist Shannon Reid, who was part of the punk rock scene in the 1990s. At the time, she recalled the scene had two competing factions: The neo-Nazi skinheads and the anti-racist skinheads. For neo-Nazis, concerts and live music venues were what the digital space is today: Places where they appealed to young people and enticed them to join the movement.

鈥淲e have been ignoring them, especially that middle school, high school group. Everybody is thinking about the old guy with the beard and ignoring the younger group who are actually much more violence-prone.鈥 鈥Shannon Reid, professor who researches youth in the white power movement

Today, Reid is an associate professor of criminal justice at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, where she researches youth involvement in the white power movement. Yet despite the recruitment efforts鈥 established history, many questions remain unanswered. While opinion polling has long found that young people are overwhelmingly left-leaning, for example, it remains unclear how many children and teens espouse far-right, extremist ideologies beyond . Part of the problem, Reid argues, comes down to priorities. She argues that American researchers and policymakers have for what they are: Members of street gangs.

鈥淲e have been ignoring them, especially that middle school, high school group,鈥 she said. 鈥淓verybody is thinking about the old guy with the beard and ignoring the younger group who are actually much more violence-prone.鈥

Still, Reid noted several risk factors that are identifiable by parents and educators and 鈥渙verlap very strongly with the gang literature,鈥 including incarcerated parents and poor school performance.

Brad Galloway, who previously led a chapter of a Portland-based neo-Nazi group with ties to organized crime, is now a research analyst and case manager at Life After Hate, a nonprofit that鈥檚 helped hundreds of people disengage from hate groups. As a teen in the late 1990s, he was recruited by a friend who leveraged Galloway鈥檚 affinity for music and history and led him down a dark path.

鈥淎 lot of people that report being involved in the violent far-right say that they had past trauma or some tough things happen throughout their life鈥 like adverse childhood experiences, he said. After identifying a person鈥檚 interests and vulnerabilities, he said that recruiters play on that while offering a sense of purpose and belonging.

Brad Galloway

鈥淐amaraderie and brotherhood was very important to making a person feel comfortable with those groups,鈥 Galloway told The 74. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 necessarily just ideology.鈥

A recent guide from American University鈥檚 Polarization and Extremism Research Innovation Lab outlines in which conflict is resolved through dominance and violence. 鈥淭his frequently leads to anti-democratic opinions and goals, such as a desire for dictatorship, civil war or an end to the rule of law,鈥 according to the guide. Drivers to radicalization can include trauma, a feeling of social isolation and 鈥 as Galloway pointed out 鈥 a desire for love and friendship. Red flags include statements about a 鈥済reat replacement鈥 or a 鈥渨hite genocide鈥 in which a white minority becomes politically oppressed, and a belief that a second American civil war is necessary.

The deadly pandemic, the guide warns, could make things worse as extremists exploit its profound disruptions to spread conspiracy theories. Among them are beliefs that ethnic or religious groups are 鈥渟uper spreaders,鈥 that COVID-19 is part of a 鈥淛ewish master plan conspiracy,鈥 and that the vaccine is part of a sinister plan by 鈥渆lites鈥 to control people.

鈥淓xtremists offer simple, false solutions to complex problems, while conspiracy theories offer a sense of control when we feel otherwise powerless,鈥 according to the guide.

Yet as mainstream platforms like Twitter crack down on disinformation, they鈥檙e creating a new hurdle, said Brian Hughes, the research lab鈥檚 associate director. People 鈥渙n the cusp of radicalization鈥 are migrating to alternative platforms like Telegram, a social media platform that鈥檚 been popular among extremists for years.

Such a reality, he said, is 鈥淐ausing a chain reaction that鈥檚 leading what you might call the MAGA rank-and-file to platforms where extremists are waiting for them 鈥 and are waiting to recruit them.鈥 

White nationalist Nick Fuentes speaks to his followers, known as 鈥淕roypers,鈥 on Nov. 14, 2020, in Washington, D.C. (Zach D Roberts/NurPhoto / Getty Images)

Give 鈥檈m the boot

Casey, the clean-cut, alt-right gamer, predicted the end of an era. After facing years of backlash, the insurrection forced social media companies to take unprecedented action 鈥 with Twitter commencing perhaps the most consequential and controversial by banning Trump, who had some 88 million followers, for potentially inciting further violence. On Dlive, the profiles of top-earning streamers vanished.

In , Dlive announced the suspension of several accounts after the site got shoved 鈥渦nder the spotlight due to some content streamed on our platform,鈥 a subtle acknowledgment that just days earlier to livestream the mayhem. It was clear, however, that it didn鈥檛 take the move lightly.

鈥淲hile we strongly advocate for the empowerment of our content creators,鈥 the company noted, 鈥渨e also have zero tolerance towards any forms of violence and illegal activities.鈥

Casey acknowledged what he had to lose. Not only did Dlive provide a revenue stream for the movement to fund real-world demonstrations, it gave him a platform to communicate directly with his most ardent followers. But in the aftermath, Casey sees a silver lining: People have like Telegram.

鈥淭hat, in its own, is somewhat of a plus,鈥 he said. While their presence on platforms like YouTube is beneficial to reach a wide audience, he said a mass migration to fringe channels could elevate their goal of 鈥渞eshaping the GOP.鈥

鈥淲e want these people to be on our side,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e want them to look at us instead of the Republican Party, instead of Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro and all of the others,鈥 referring to the president of the conservative Turning Point USA and the editor emeritus of the right-wing news website The Daily Wire.

Still, researchers said that 鈥渄eplatforming鈥 abusive accounts is critical. Loehr, the Twitch livestreamer, agrees.

鈥淢aybe people will find other places to speak, but I don鈥檛 think you鈥檙e emboldening them,鈥 she said. 鈥淰iolence is a response to losing power for these people so it鈥檚 not a surprise that things can get ugly,鈥 but deplatforming is critical to disrupt their access to impressionable minds, she said. 鈥淚t just becomes harder for them to radicalize people and reach people, and that鈥檚 a good thing.鈥

Schools and parents can also play a role in keeping children safe from online extremist materials, experts said, and should begin with open communication. By understanding teens鈥 point of view, caring adults have a chance to spot red flags and an opportunity to present them with accurate information.

鈥淎 punishment is an easy fix, but if you鈥檙e not really understanding what鈥檚 going on with that young person or that group of young people, you鈥檙e not solving the problem.鈥 鈥Jinnie Spiegler, of the Anti-Defamation League on countering white supremacist recruiting 

Spiegler of the Anti-Defamation League suggested that schools teach students about the power of propaganda 鈥 and ways to fight back.

鈥淚n some ways, there鈥檚 nothing teenagers hate more than feeling like they鈥檙e being manipulated and used,鈥 she said, so deconstructing the goals of propaganda could be useful in curtailing its stronghold.

Each year, more than 2,000 schools nationwide use the Anti-Defamation League鈥檚 in the classroom, including resources and training on preventing cyberbullying and combating anti-Semitism.

But one thing adults should avoid, she said, is a punitive approach unless a teen鈥檚 behavior violates school rules or becomes illegal.

鈥淎 punishment is an easy fix, but if you鈥檙e not really understanding what鈥檚 going on with that young person or that group of young people, you鈥檙e not solving the problem,鈥 she said. In fact, punishment could make the situation worse by reinforcing a belief that 鈥淲e鈥檙e so marginalized, we鈥檙e so oppressed, and that鈥檚 why we have to show our power and fight these people.鈥

A screenshot of alt-right provocateur Patrick Casey鈥檚 鈥淩estoring Order鈥 broadcast on the gaming platform Dlive.

Beyond Trump

After years in which alt-right groups idolized Trump, President Joe Biden鈥檚 inauguration presented a major turning point in white nationalists鈥 grip. Though 鈥渦nity鈥 was the central theme to his inaugural address, he offered a sharp rebuke to political extremism and white supremacy 鈥 鈥渄omestic terrorism that we must confront and we will defeat.鈥

鈥淧olitics doesn鈥檛 have to be a raging fire, destroying everything in its path,鈥 Biden said. 鈥淓very disagreement doesn鈥檛 have to be a cause for total war. And we must reject the culture in which facts themselves are manipulated and even manufactured.鈥

But the vision of unity that Biden offers won鈥檛 be easily won. Before Trump departed on Air Force One for the last time, he offered a promise to his most hardcore supporters gathered on the tarmac of Joint Base Andrews to wave goodbye: 鈥淲e will be back in some form.鈥 But by that point, .

In his Dlive rant, Casey said that Trump was 鈥渢he closest we have to a sympathetic elite,鈥 but criticized his failure 鈥渢o support people getting a little rowdy at the Capitol.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 a tough pill to swallow, but Donald Trump is not our Caesar,鈥 he said. Even though Trump was banned from Twitter and impeached for the second time, Casey said he failed to complete the job 鈥 offering lessons to future 鈥渞ight-wing strongmen鈥 who 鈥渢ry to do what Donald Trump did only better,鈥 highlighting the reality that hate groups, too, are also vying for a comeback.

鈥淭he narrative here is that Donald Trump tried to stage a coup and overthrow the government,鈥 Casey said. 鈥淎t that point, if you鈥檙e going to be treated as if you did it, well, I鈥檓 not going to say it but, ya. Either you go all the way or you don鈥檛 do it at all.鈥

Correction: The messaging platform Discord is independently owned. An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that is was owned by Microsoft.

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