collins1129's review

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dark informative fast-paced

4.75


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lily1304's review

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challenging dark reflective medium-paced

3.5

Unfortunately I was already fairly familiar with white supremacist organizing thanks to living in Minneapolis-St. Paul in 2020, but I actually learned a lot here about antifascism. Lavin even referenced Unicorn Riot, an independent journalist group I follow. I realized how much of their work documenting protests and infiltrating white supremacist groups online - that all falls under Lavin's conceptualization of antifascism. So I appreciated that perspective.

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bry97's review

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dark informative tense medium-paced

5.0

Incredibly written, informative and important look into the far right movement online. I love that Lavin didnt remove themself from the text but draws from their perspective as someone who is both queer and Jewish. Adding that level of humanity helps to ground the book and add an extra sense of urgency- driving home the point that the “far right” isn’t a bunch of vague online trolls, but a real threat to be confronted.

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outtoexist's review

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challenging dark informative slow-paced

3.75

I enjoyed this book, but often the writing was difficult to orient myself in, as someone who doesn't know the names of right-wing politicians much less mass shooters. It felt wandering at times, and I often lost the thread of the chapter about half way through only to remember when she started to sum it up at the end. That said, the information and details on white supremacist groups in this book are horrifying but essential to know. Understanding how normal ass people get sucked into these hatefilled groups is the only way to understanding how to get them out of it. Seeing them as full people who weren't always neo-nazis and who see their neo-nazi-ism as a deeply held belief they've read & researched. It is essential to know their experience to know how to define them - not to excuse their behavior, but to better understand how they got where they are and how they can be brought back into the light.

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acy's review

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challenging dark informative reflective sad tense medium-paced

4.5


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niamhellen's review

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dark informative tense medium-paced

3.75


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internationalreads's review

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dark funny informative medium-paced

3.5


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greysonk's review

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dark tense slow-paced

4.25


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happiestwhenreading's review

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challenging dark informative sad tense medium-paced

4.0

This book really started to pop up in my Instagram feed after the siege of the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Since the election – and especially since Trump has been banned from most (all?) social media, I’ve heard more and more about the radicalization of people through social media and this book seems like a great dive into that topic!

“The thing about hate, though, is it metastasizes. The thing about channels that are filled, twenty-four hours a day, with stachoastic violence–testosterone-filled megaphones shouting for blood–is that, sooner or later, someone is going to take them up on it…racist networks have proven over and over again that the steady dissemination of murderous propaganda leaves a trail of blood behind it.”
Talia Lavin, “Culture Warlords”

While I probably appreciated the chapter on social media the most (Chapter 7: Tween Racists, Bad Beanies, and the Great Casino Chase), I learned A LOT from this book and how the internet plays a big role in how white supremacy has gained a foothold in our current world. Coming off the heels of the 2020 Election, the insurrection of the Capital, and the banning of Trump on social media platforms, the question that is begging to be answered is: where do we go from here? How do we make changes that disallow hate to have a platform? And how do we heal this divide? Those are questions I don’t necessarily have an answer for, but I think this book is an important piece to strategizing out some possibilities.

One chapter of the book that I vehemently disagree with is Chapter 9: Antifa Civil War. Lavin says that Anitfa is “a collection of individuals scattered throughout the country who are loosely pursuing the same goal: preventing fascist, far-right organizing through a varity of tactics” (pgs 215-216), and that “more than anything, it’s a way to keep ourselves – and our more vulnerable friends and neighbors – safe in a world where hate wants to swallow us whole” (pg. 216). After all of the destruction of federal property in various cities in the United States, I do not believe them to be a tempored group and I believe Antifa’s actions are just as wrong as the alt-rights. I would like to believe there isn’t a place for either one of those extreme groups in our country, and I cling to the believe that more people feel this way than don’t. Admittedly, I am not well-researched in Antifa or their methods, but from the mainstream media, I am not a supporter of their tactics, and I had a hard time agreeing with Lavin on much of anything in this chapter.


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amarchetta's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective

3.0

I’m glad I read this book because it reflected the grueling work the author did in her research. It was difficult to get through due to the weight of the material present. I hate to give this a lower star rating because of the incredible insights the author could provide, but I didn’t find the flow/format of the book very readable. I can’t say anyone would enjoy reading the vicious hate spewed by the book’s subjects, but the work itself wasn’t as engrossing as I had hoped. 

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