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Far Right Extremist seems to be an accurate label.

Using the screen name Dionysus, he posted on MyMilitia.com, a forum dedicated to organizing militia groups, about his plan to “conduct a little experiment” in 2021.

“I’m not a dumbass suicide bomber,” Pendley wrote. “But even if I only have a handful of fellow patriots standing beside me, I will happily die a young man knowing that I didn’t allow the evils in this world to continue unjustly treating my fellow Americans so disrespectfully.”

He also claims to have been part of the Jan 6 insurrection.

On January 11, 2021, he told an associate on Facebook that he went to the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C. on January 6, 2021, made it to the platform where he interacted with police officers but did not enter the building. He told another associate on Facebook that he had taken a piece of glass from a window at the building.

ref: https://conandaily.com/2021/04/09/seth-aaron-pendley-biograp...

How was he part of the "insurrection" if he did nothing illegal?
It's possible the insurrection claims were just crap that he made up. It seems likely the FBI would have been dealing with him back in January, if he were part of the group trying to overthrow the election.
The FBI was focused on finding those who had achieved notoriety - e.g. the dude with the confederate flag, the guys with zip-ties, or those who vandalized / looted the building.
For the same reason a getaway driver is part of a bank robbery despite "not doing anything illegal."
Aiding and abetting of a getaway driver is more involved than a bystander watching a tour group jump the velvet rope.
Perhaps, but calling them a tour group is specious. Their social media posts, testimony and beating of a police officer to death clearly indicates otherwise.

And while the suspect didn't admit to anything incriminating while in Washington, according to the article, it seems unlikely that someone who posts about their mass destruction plans on a right-wing militia forum would just coincidentally have been there sightseeing while an insurrection (or, charitably, an attempt at one) was underway.

The whole reason a getaway driver exists is to help people conduct a bank robbery, whereas just protesting outside Congress is not only legal but constitutionally protected. By that logic, the elected Democrat officials who continued to attend BLM "protests" night after night knowing that every night, people at those specific "protests" were violently attacking cops using them as cover were much more criminal - yet the mainstream American press never applied this logic to them because the whole thing is just partisan bullshit.
You know the rule here and especially on sites like this one. Logic and hypocrisy doesn't apply to the left; only to anything against them which is only the 'far-right'.

As for BLM, don't worry. All those who donated millions to the BLM cause have just funded the lifestyle of their dear founder for her $1.4M LA home. So much for the so-called 'Marxist revolution' that they all desperately needed.

There's a term called for this and its called 'an exit scam'.

[0] https://www.dailywire.com/news/blm-co-founder-buys-1-4-milli...

Jesus. Just showing up at a rally at your elected representatives place of employment is now the same as “being a getaway driver at a bank robbery”?
Given that he said he attended the riot, and was disappointed people didn't show up armed, I think it's pretty obvious what his intent was. Let's not pretend he was some innocent bystander just there for a political rally. Whether he actually entered or did not is open to interpretation given that's just what he said unless there's actual evidence by way of pictures confirming he was even at the riot in the first place.

A LOT of people said they didn't go inside once they discovered they'd potentially be facing prison time for doing so. A LOT of people lied.

Yeah, I don't think the right wing can disown this one. Illegal methods are obviously unacceptable and this guy is a loser, but after the last election the right wing needs to be honest about the situation. One of their biggest political opponents is the big tech companies and they need to organise against them.
The big tech companies aren’t opponents of the right wing - they are the right wing - they want low taxes, reduced governmental oversight, and are vast multi billion dollar for-profit corporations.

They do oppose extremist far right content. Not the political movement, but rather the content which they cannot legally host without facing repercussions themselves.

This is the right wing losing control of the far right wing.
Odd that despite being right wing and wanting all those right wing things you mentioned, the vast majority of donations on a company-wide and down to the employee level go to Democrat/left-wing causes and politicians. That's not even counting the many many in-kind donations they regularly serve up to left-wing candidates and causes.

It's also interesting that despite being right wing, it is rare to witness a higher-up or decision maker at any FAANG espouse conservative views on social media.

Whereas it's not unusual for them to be calling for stuff so crazily left-wing it would even make AOC blush. And often in a trollish or provocative manner; they're not gonna deplatform and unperson themselves after all.

Not to turn a blind eye to what would have been a tragic loss of life, but how resistant is Amazon to such an attack, data-wise?

How much collateral economic damage can you do by taking down an AWS data center?

Yet another alleged would-be bomber who seems to have been goaded by the feds, I'm not too concerned about the alleged would-be loss of life.

I don't know the particulars, but I imagine that Amazon is insured, so they wouldn't suffer greatly from the loss of one data center. Lost storage would be painful to some, but if folks are backing up regularly it shouldn't be a huge hit. I doubt amazon does long-term storage at the same sites as their cloud servers, so data loss should be fairly minimal -- though, if a long-term storage facility got hit, we'd probably learn a lot about amazon's commitment to redundancy. Smaller websites would be at the biggest risk, I think, but the internet would largely route around the damage within a few hours.

I don’t know much about this data center but I imagine it’s pretty massive. It’s probably highly redundant with multiple pipes in and out on all ends. I highly doubt this guy could procure enough explosives to take out the entire data center.

Granted, I’ve never blown one up so I don’t know what the hell I’m talking about.

I would speculate that you only need to generate enough blasts inside to damage hard drive disk heads through the shock waves. Plus perhaps take out the fuel tank and the external power cables. And if you build your datacentre with straw like the OVH little pig...
Seems like a pretty tall order for one bomber to be able to do any significant damage to a facility that size.

My understanding is that these facilities run on a fairly skeleton crew, especially at night, with staff generally spending most of their time in offices, rather than on the data-center floor. May have intended to carry out his plan with no loss of life.

Very little.

AWS is comprised of independent regions, each with at least three availability zones, each one comprised of at least a datacenter. AZs sometimes fail, and the impact is usually minimal.

AWS services are usually at least redundant across 3 AZ, and properly deployed client architectures should be as well. So taking out a whole AZ will cost lots of money and lost capacity, but in terms of data loss and user-facing impact, it's probably minimal.

I think a backhoe and a map of where all the fiber is would work better than a bunch of explosives. Construction folks find lots of unintended places where "redundant" paths converge, on accident. If you went about that with purpose, I imagine it could be very disruptive. Imagine a former employee from some place like Zayo with a grudge.
He's clearly mentally ill. Unfortunately, that won't stop a lot of bigots from exploiting this to further their agenda against the far right.
Woke up on the wrong side of bed again, dang?
I wonder, does such a person share a lot of characteristics of his mental state with someone who on the other side of the political spectrum, breaks into factory chicken farms to free birds, or who torches an entire dealership of SUVs to save the planet?

Is there not something a little bit fascinating in realizing that regardless of the particular political belief driving them to do something, there must be something that goes haywire in the mind to think that "this is so right that I am justified in destroying property, people to get it done". Maybe when you get to that state (regardless of the particular issue at hand), you should ask as a final check "am I absolutely sure I'm not crazy"? (lol)

Also makes you wonder if, for all the convictions you have about some issue, maybe you would equally be as passionate on the other side of it if you had simply been raised by different parents, been fed different points of view, etc. Maybe our belief that we are morally right is not as great a motivator of action as we think it should be?

It wouldn't be post about far-right extremist attacks without someone in the comments trying to "whataboutism" it about leftists.
Because leftist used revolutionary terror to achieve their goals as well.

It's not whataboutism if they have a history of doing it.

Whataboutism doesnt mean that what was brought up is not true, just that it distracts from the original criticism. The classic example is “Soviet Union has problems? Well, look how the US is treating black people.”
If someone is criticizing you in bad faith, and from a position of utter hypocrisy, it is fair enough to point that out. There is nothing to gain from battling an adversary like that on their terms.
Sure, I am just commenting on the statement that it is not whataboutism because it is true.
It was in context of possible mindsets. That's not whataboutism either. Because it talks about possible mindsets not current state of affairs.

No one was talking about current far right or far left politics in US until the message I replied to.

Or someone else making snarky comments like this in response. Let's not pretend that the problem of people being brainwashed into extreme beliefs and even acting on them inside the various echo chambers of the internet is limited to any particular demographic. It's one of the elephants in this increasingly digital room of ours that achingly needs addressing.
We need to be clear that domestic terrorism in the US is evenly split between pseudo-Islamic extremism and the far right. Terrorist action from the left currently counts for a tiny amount of this violence.
While the riots of last summer were not characterized as terrorism, they were instances of political violence resulting in massive property damage and multiple deaths.

https://www.google.com/search?q=fiery+but+mostly+peaceful

There's a palatable element of partisanship distorting the presentation of these issues. Instead of looking for equivalence or ranking which side is worse, perhaps we should blanketly condemn political violence.

> While the riots of last summer were not characterized as terrorism,

You can see how this destroys anything that you're about to say, right?

To try to engage with your point: there's a difference between a demonstration (BLM) and bombing a church (far right). There's a difference between riots (BLM) and mass murder at a synagogue (far right). There's a difference between organising a march (BLM) and driving cars into protestors at that march (far right).

Stop trying to draw equivalence between these things. They are not the same.

> There's a palatable element of partisanship

The FBI isn't a partisan organisation and they're very clear: the current domestic threats are from the far right and islamic extremism.

It is hard to have this discussion here. It is almost as if you didn't read my comment at all. Instead you go straight for inflammatory.

https://www.npr.org/2018/01/26/580677742/the-massive-case-of...

From NPR (2018), widely regarded as having a left slant, "The Massive Case Of Collective Amnesia: The FBI Has Been Political From The Start"

When someone talks about mass shootings in churches (Charleston - 9 dead), and synagogues (Pittsburgh - 11 dead, 6 wounded; Powey - 1 dead, 3 wounded) or cars being driven into protestors (Charlottesville - 1 dead, 19 injured) and you pop off to say [okay I know these aren't terrorism but how about these examples of property damage? The left is just as bad] you are being inflammatory.

You posting that NPR link is incoherent. For that to make any sense you'd have to be claiming that, during the Trump administration, the FBI was deceptively hiding terrorism by the left and by islamicists and pushing excessive focus on the right.

> Instead of looking for equivalence or ranking which side is worse, perhaps we should blanketly condemn political violence.

>You posting that NPR link is incoherent

From where I stand your entire reply is incoherent and inflammatory. You accuse me of seeking equivalence before citing the most inflammatory examples of political violence by one side. This despite the fact that I explicitly suggest that equivalence or ranking isn't interesting to me.

Historical context of the FBI's evolving political agendas may help to illustrate that we may in fact be inside of a bias bubble. Especially if you are asserting that the FBI is apolitical. The mainstream presses' presentation of political violence last summer may also be instructive.

At the end of the day, I'm not sure why it is important which flavor is more terrorist-y. It seems like an irrelevant partisan distinction. I'd like to avoid that debate, thanks.

at the end of the day, it is important which flavor is actually terrorism, and the fact that it tends to be concentrated in neo-islamic and neo-fascist right wing people is a tool that we can use to help fix the problem.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COINTELPRO https://www.aclu.org/blog/national-security/discriminatory-p...

1) Given that those succumbing to group think and confirmation bias are generally unaware of their biases, how would we know that we are not experiencing something similar now?

2) What are the implications for civil liberties, if the state targets political opponents of the current administration?

3) Could these issues be resolved targeting political violence generally, instead of making partisan pleas and accusations?

4) If political extremism & intolerance are issues driven by the contentious political environment, are these partisan blame games contributing to the climate of toxic political divisiveness or helping to resolve it?

what are the implications for civil liberties, if the state targets terrorists? It's probably not great. But it's probably better than having more Oklahoma City bombings or capitol building attempted insurrections.

Could 'these issues be resolved targeting political violence generally, instead of making partisan pleas and accusations'? No -- in factual reality world, there is an ideology which is responsible for the problem, and so it seems sensible to focus on that ideology. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/oct/22/white-supremac...

"are these partisan blame games contributing to the climate of toxic political divisiveness"? I'll tell you what's contributing to the climate of toxic political divisiveness -- overwhelmingly, the right wing, its conspiracy theorists, and their enablers; see, for example, qanon/8chan, the count of trump's lies while in office. These are radical outliers. Let's worry about that before we start worrying about the impact of us complaining about that.

>> While the riots of last summer were not characterized as terrorism,

>You can see how this destroys anything that you're about to say, right?

Not so much, unless you would like to dispute that riots count as violence. Or that terrorism is politically motivated violence. :)

The problem is that far-right extremism is by far the biggest violent threat, a multiple of Islamist extremism or far-left extremism. This applies not only to the US but most of Europe as well.

Feel free to check out any of the pieces below

https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2020/10/27/in-ameri...

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/24/us/domestic-terrorist-gro...

https://cco.ndu.edu/PRISM/PRISM-Volume-6-no-2/Article/839011...

https://www.europol.europa.eu/activities-services/main-repor... (p. 11)

For the US, that's likely. For Europe it heavily depends on how you count. Is a far-right loner murdering a politician the same as a group of Islamists murdering 200 people in Madrid? That is, are you counting events or impact? By events, the far right might (which is hard to calculate, because it's fuzzy, e.g. Turkish Grey Wolves are considered to be a far right group, but are Islamists) be more than Islamic terrorism, by impact they certainly are not in the last decades.
“I’m not a dumbass suicide bomber"

is exactly what a dumbass suicide bomber would say...

That's the problem with crazy people, they don't realize their ideas are out of bounds.
That's very true. It's quite scary to see two very extreme sides both trying to achieve hopelessly impossible and utopian goals through either a violent 'revolution' or an 'insurrection' because it is the result they didn't like or get.

Maybe there are some that are so crazy that they see Nazis everywhere on the internet or with someone that they disagree with and call for a medieval-like banishment from society i.e cancel culture. Possibly suffering from VR sickness from playing Wolfenstein VR, but who knows.

Now you have another extremist that 'allegedly' planned to attack an AWS data-center for whatever reason and ultimately was willing to die trying. Perhaps some of these crazy people just believe anything they see on the internet through a mysterious Q person conspiracy theory and go down that rabbit hole and here we are.

>Maybe there are some that are so crazy that they see Nazis everywhere on the internet

>Perhaps some of these crazy people just believe anything they see on the internet through a mysterious...

The sad part is that those who see Nazis under their bed aren't listening to Internet disinfo, but official sources like WaPo, MSNBC or CNN.

I don't think it would be a hugely wrong to say both ends of the spectrum think they're "outside" of the normal world. Their world has different rules and morals and thus they would be executing along those.

In their world, you're the one who needs to ask if you're crazy agreeing living your life while agreeing to conditions X,Y, and Z.

[amrchair psychology disclosure]

The willingness to use violence against people or property seems like it would be a further leap. Operating outside of the mainstream ideologies isn't necessarily a slippery slope. Reasonable people should be able to disagree without using violence.
Do you believe, by extension from this, that states are governed by unreasonable people, and that if they were reasonable war would never be necessary?
Unreasonable or perhaps immoral?

If we start from the premise that the state is defined as an institution monopolizing violence, then it stands to reason that one or the other is true.

If the ends justify the means and the morality of the methods used are irrelevant, then perhaps we can say that the state generally or wars specifically are rational.

These are questions of absolutism, which is fine in theory, but in practice we need to make room for pragmatism.

But back to the specific context of the article, the use of violence against an Amazon datacenter seems unreasonable. It fails a basic sanity check. The individual undoubtedly could have chosen other non-violent methods to express himself.

"this is so right that I am justified in destroying property, people to get it done"

I do not think that this is necessarily a sign of something "haywire in the mind". The powerful use this logic all the time, and yet it is not a mainstream view that ordering an air strike, for instance, is clearly a sign of mental illness.

Perhaps it should be.

It’s only wrong if you fail. If you succeed you were a “revolutionary”.
I think it's more like: if you are on your own you are crazy, if you are in a big group you are revolutionary, if you win you were right, or something like that.
"You know, if one person, just one person does it they may think he's really sick and they won't take him.

And if two people, two people do it, in harmony, they may think they're both f___ots [slur elided] and they won't take either of them.

And three people do it, three, can you imagine, three people walking in singin a bar of Alice's Restaurant and walking out. They may think it's an organization.

And can you, can you imagine fifty people a day, I said fifty people a day walking in singin a bar of Alice's Restaurant and walking out. And friends they may thinks it's a movement."

From Arlo Guthrie's song "Alice's Restaurant"

True. Also, until you win, you are a "terrorist," unless backed by a major power, whose media will call you a "freedom fighter."
> I wonder, does such a person share a lot of characteristics of his mental state with someone who on the other side of the political spectrum

This sounds like the "horseshoe theory":

"In political science and popular discourse, the horseshoe theory asserts that the far-left and the far-right, rather than being at opposite and opposing ends of a linear political continuum, closely resemble one another, analogous to the way that the opposite ends of a horseshoe are close together."

It's no surprise that "[t]he horseshoe theory has been criticized by those from both ends of the political spectrum who oppose being grouped with those they consider to be their polar opposites [...]" by the way ;)

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horseshoe_theory for the full article.

moebius strip would describe this more accurately than a horse shoe
I thought of a donut shape, but Möbius strip is good too.
Thank you for sharing that. I was not aware of the term, but I have been aware of the idea.

In a narrow manner I have seen this up close.

The people some call Antifa, a term they also use themselves, will show up for protests and demonstrations. Nobody invited them, many would prefer that they were not there. In general, they detract fromt the message of the protests.

Black clad people with various accoutrements needed to fight the police and damage privat property and related activities.

They do not want to talk much with the organizers, and they have no wish to leave.

Their expected presence means that a lot more cops show up with shields and what not to do battle.

I swear that the cops want to fight them, and they want to fight the cops.

These are young men (the people fighting the police are nearly all men from what I have seen, but this was back 10 years ago)

They have a lot of aggression, and they like to break stuff, fight and cause mayhem.

The young men on the other side (and again mostly men) who also wish to fight, break stuff and because mayhem is pretty much identical in mindset, in approach and in action.

Their willingness to hide behind a "political ideology" to further their political wishes through violence.

I think what cause they end up fighting for is somewhat arbitrary. They meet some chick who is left wing, or right wing. They grow up in a certain place with parents of a political persusation.

They may well and up aggressive and causing trouble without the excuse of a political or religious ideology.

As someone with quite a few left-wing friends, this comment was pretty funny to read. I have no idea why people think they can pick apart the inner machinations of the minds of people they've seemingly never spoken to, not into whose ideology they have the slightest insight or interest. Very strong "boomer opining at their suburban kitchen table about the problem with today's youths" energy.

Any given person who identifies as an antifascist is vastly more likely to have deeply sincere & considered political beliefs than essentially anyone else you know in your life.

Almost everyone identifies as anti-fascist. That's why references to Hitler are references to things considered universally awful. A problem many have with Antifa is that they took a term and made it their own, implying that everyone else is not against fascism.
I think the biggest misunderstanding is that Antifa is some sort of group or organised movement.

That's it. Of course being anti-fascist or anti-capitalist are some of the main talking points of left wing protesters and sure, there might be groups of organised protestors. But there is no one organisation behind it all and that is the misconcenption many people have when they hear the word Antifa.

No one should be afraid or ashamed of claiming to be anti-fascist, just because some people who have claimed to be that have not acted ethically!

> implying that everyone else is not against fascism.

Weird how you take them opposing fascism and you doing nothing about fascism to correctly conclude that you're doing nothing about fascism but then baselessly blame them.

"you don't know me mannnnnnnnn"

>Any given person who identifies as an antifascist is vastly more likely to have deeply sincere & considered political beliefs than essentially anyone else you know in your life.

jfc bloviate more why don't you.

please get offended at sweeping generalizations about the left and the respond by making sweeping generalizations about everyone not identified with the left. I'm sure it'll convince everyone.

(comment deleted)
Almost like one-dimensionalizing a whole lot of ideas doesn't make much sense in the first place.
There is an alternative explanation for the observations of "horseshoe" theory. One of the examples often given by that theory is how both far-right and far-left is more authoritarian compared with mainstream. To me the better model would be viewing the current political paradigm as being extreme about individual freedoms.

In other words - when you are at the south pole every direction is north. This tells us more about where we currently are, and not about the similarity of those other directions.

I know that we don't like her here but Ayn Rand had another explanation to that which seems plausible as well - that both are extreme manifestations of the same concept - collectivism.

As someone else notices above, both Far Right and Far Left have quite a bit of disregard to personal freedoms so Ayn Rand may be onto something here...

> there must be something that goes haywire in the mind to think that "this is so right that I am justified in destroying property, people to get it done"

I’m not sure that this guy is mentally unstable, simply because he made a very bad decision.

from someone who has had the opportunity to talk to such people, they share: 1. lack of ability to separate fact from fiction in information they consume. 2. lack a desire to build, create, or problem solve in general. 3. Parent and society issues in that they carry open emotional wounds in general mental terms.

Also note, that extreme-ism in dogma whether it's religion or political philosophy seems to attract such damaged people.

Mt own HO is that we suffer in certain parts of the world from more of this due to lack of real mental health infrastructure to alleviate such things.

I recently got the book "High Conflict" - it goes into this question in some detail.
I think there's crossover but I don't think those two groups are motivated by the same thing.

My observation is that far-right activists tend to feel that they're being deliberately stabbed in the back by the powers that be, rather than seeing themselves as collateral damage. They're also significantly more likely to be paranoid, and they perceive their targets as you would an invading army.

Far-left activism isn't like that. They don't perceive The Man as sadistic, they perceive him as disinterested. "Nobody cares about global warming" vs. "they're deliberately raising the temperature of the earth to hurt me." I also get the vibe far-left activists often engage in activism for fun. It's an exciting mission to break into the farm with your friends. They almost always do it in groups, whereas you're more likely to see jilted right-wingers plan solo attacks like this guy.

(I'm not trying to paint the far-left as better here. I think they're often quite dishonest about their motivations, whereas the far-right is extremely up-front, pied piper gurus aside. I think that's one of the reasons paranoid schizophrenics gravitate more toward the far right, although it helps that their narratives are more about conspiratorial persecution.)

The demographic distributions are also different. Almost all far-right activists are male, whereas vegan & climate activists are mixed.

> They don't perceive The Man as sadistic, they perceive him as disinterested.

This doesn't fit with the whole oppression thing where essentially everything is done to hurt $class, $minority, or $cause.

The social thing seems accurate. There are far right networks, but their violent extremists appear to be mostly loners, which seems to be extremely rare on the far left. The gender distribution is a good point as well. Would the far right act the same if half their members were women?

The left-wing narrative is usually "[group A] is hurt by [issue and thus group B]", whereas the far-right is, "[group C] will hurt you, if you let them." I think it's a deliberate difference. The far right would never say Jews were accidentally conspiring against Americans, it wouldn't help them. But it helps the far left to say their issues are inadvertent, that [villain] can't help his bias, or that he doesn't have to do it deliberately.

Left-wing narratives are often decoupled from intention (e.g. systemic and unconscious bias) because it makes them easier to propogate, whereas right-wing narratives are the opposite - intention is ascribed whether or not it's there, also because it helps the narrative propagate. They're selling to different human tendencies, I think.

Watch the far-right protest. Their eyes usually convey fear or animalistic aggression, even when they're dominant. Far-left groups carry very different emotions, even violent ones like Antifa.

I'm not sure, class warfare isn't a thing that's accidentally happening according to those that subscribe to the theory, it's intentional. Not as a genocidal "let's annihilate the lower class" war, but to perpetually oppress, enslave and exploit them.

The Great Purge didn't consider its targets as accidentally doing harm, they were portrayed as a "fifth column" that sought to destroy the Soviet Union. That external enemy is what creates group cohesion and strengthens the resolve of members. "They're just people like you and me, but the circumstances make their behavior harmful to those people over there" isn't what you mobilize with, so we get White Supremacy behind everything or Patriarchy conspiracies that read like The Protocols.

I get what you're saying but Marxists don't bomb the homes of billionaires, or shoot them. There's no actual warfare, genuine violence is directed at the right, not the rich. They do make a show of constructing a set of gallows in front of Jeff Bezos' house but they don't actually do anything to him, and that's a big difference. I think it's because they don't have the fight-or-flight terror that drives far right-wingers to push the gas pedal of their car into crowds of protestors. They might, in a different system. But I think then the ideology would be different.

In the 70s there were genuine left-wing terrorists like the Weathermen, which might be a good comparison, but the vibe I get is that they liked violence first, and fell into a movement that gave them a justification to perform it. They didn't seem scared to me. The far left rarely seems genuinely scared, but the far right seems very scared.

The difference to me is that nowadays, left-wing threat narratives tend to exist to justify behaviour they already want to engage in, whereas right-wing threat narratives exist much more to be scary. Toward the center things are similar but the differences are quite stark at the fringes.

I don't mean this as a technical argument or anything. I could be wrong, I'm just trying to describe my instinct.

> The Great Purge

Was a genocide by people who attained power, not the fringes of society acting out for weird psychological reasons. I wouldn't really compare the motivations. Dictators are dictators, right or left, and the support they get is much more transactional. I'm also skeptical that Lenin was genuinely motivated by Marxism. I think Marxism was an excuse he could use to gain power.

I think it's just the conviction that the "problem" is very serious and the conclusion that an extreme measure is the only possible solution (due to reasoning based on incorrect or incomplete information).

I guess you could call that crazy, but it's more like stupid (due to lack of sufficient research/information) and impulsive (lack of second-guessing).

Anyone can fall for it imo, but for most people self-preservation overrides the will to sacrifice themselves (and others) for "the greater good". Which is what extremists are doing, believing their actions are right and the cost (incl. loss of lives) and self-sacrifice are necessary.

Common traits might be (off the top of my head) low in conscientiousness (not bound by rules, formality, low in impulse control etc.), mental instability (e.g. anxiety), high in-group loyalty (related to religiousness, and a sense of purpose or destiny).

Other things might include mood/anxiety disorders and paranoia or just personality traits associated with them.

it's not difficult to understand how he feels. he feels unfree and under control. he can't express himself and get heard. so the only remaining way to get in control of his own life is violence.
> I wonder, does such a person share a lot of characteristics of his mental state with someone who on the other side of the political spectrum, breaks into factory chicken farms to free birds, or who torches an entire dealership of SUVs to save the planet?

If I am convinced that in so doing I'm helping save the planet, a little property damage, sabotage or violent intimidation is a small thing to ask of me. Even if it saved only my family, I'd easily burn every SUV in the world to the ground. I just haven't found any reason to believe that it will save my family, or the planet.

> there must be something that goes haywire in the mind to think that "this is so right that I am justified in destroying property, people to get it done"

As an example, what is it that's gone haywire in me to believe that the police are sometimes justified in killing? We all pretty much accept different forms of institutionalized forms of violence that destroys property and people. It seems to me like a fundamental aspect of human culture and it shouldn't be surprising that someone who feels cornered or unjustly treated will somehow resort to violence, nor should it necessarily be considered sick behavior. Humans have always used violence as a tool to drive change (or maintain the current state of affairs), to assert their power and to communicate what is right and wrong. We should be extremely wary of the fact that normal, healthy people will resort to it if they believe it's necessary.

> Maybe our belief that we are morally right is not as great a motivator of action as we think it should be?

I rather think that our beliefs in what is morally right is fungible and circumstantial. We can create a moral framework for ourselves in which meeting our needs and wants at the expense of others' is justified, and we don't always have the capacity to see how our needs and wants can be met. Someone else can even create it for us, more easily if they can construct evidence for our convictions. That's how you get people to agree to shipping their neighbors off to concentration camps, how "yes" is an acceptable answer to "should we send a bunch of 20-somethings halfway across the glove to kill and cause havoc, stabilizing our oil prices?" or how freeing slaves might at one point have seemed as excessive and extreme as freeing birds.

When these types of conversations come around, I'm always a little concerned and disappointed that more people don't hold/verbalize this or a similar attitude. Instead there's a weird amount of armchair moral confidence that I can't understand.

Especially when there are clear politics, we seem to be asking "What makes those people the way they are?" and not "What would it take for me to become one of those people?"

People are violent in general. There is petty criminals, white collar crime, there is systematic oppression by the people in power towards those at the bottom, there is young people just letting out steam, psychopaths and so on and so on.

Non radical people simply don't have the need to use violence because they are happy with they way things are. They have the police and the military doing the violence for them.

The use of violence is not inherently good or bad and yes you can use violence to achieve a state of less violence. That would be in fact the idealized view of what a police force should do.

The rejection of right wing radicalism should not be on the point that they use violent means but of what they want to achieve. That is to oppress and/or murder anyone not sharing their political views, race, faith, sexual orientation, nationality and so on. Every rational human being should appose that.

Right wing terrorism is a real and current threat. If you prefer to cry how bad the left is, you are part of the problem.

The US army must be full of these “crazy” people then, no?

And the same with Silicon Valley, which keeps talking about disrupting industries, without regard for the people working in those industries.

>And the same with Silicon Valley, which keeps talking about disrupting industries, without regard for the people working in those industries.

It depends on what you mean by "disrupt". If you're talking about gig economy startups, I'm inclined to agree. However, if you're talking about "disrupt" in the sense of "providing a better product/service than incumbents", I don't see what's crazy about that, even if it does cause some people to lose their jobs. We shouldn't have to cling on to a worse way of doing things just so we keep people employed[1].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parable_of_the_broken_window

It's called conservatism
I sincerely hope this does not come across as provocative in the worst possible way, but what exactly defines this guy as Far-Right? I understand we're not given full context in this short article and that label is likely all too accurate, but it feels out of place as the rest of the writeup goes on to just describe him as a run-of-the-mill nutcase obsessed with the "big tech" boogeyman.
My guess is he was provoked by Amazon taking Parler off their servers.
It's sad you feel as if you have to apologize preemptively for asking a question.

It is a fair enough question, as there is a certain amount of bilateral support for bombing data centers. There are conceivable justifications for it from many points on the political spectrum.

That said, he talks like a right winger, not like a radical environmentalist or a militant communist.

... yeah, I don't know about any radical environmentalists or communists aiming for data centers. Radical environmentalists want to blow up other things.
I consider Kaczynski an environmentalist and he's an anarchist.

Take a time machine and move him straight from 1978 to 2018, what would he target? My guess is data centers would be on the list.

But that’s total conjecture. You’re just saying “well, if I made someone up, they’d target data centers.” My point is that the non-made up radical environmentalists/communists aren’t targeting data centers. My source is that in a previous iteration of this life, I happened to know a lot of communists and radical environmentalists.
Kaczynski isn't made up, he really existed, and still does. He's not a communist though, and I don't think communists have an issue with data centers, they love making lists as well. I'm not sure about your communists friends' positions on data centers if they felt they were being used as a tool of oppression, but I have a hard time imagining someone being unironically communist these days.
Kaczynski is real, but time traveler Kaczynski is not. The radical environmentalists Im familiar with are focused on protecting forests, or (the more ambitious ones) want to destroy power infrastructure. Blowing up data centers would be kind of a half measure for e.g. the deep green resistance crowd - if you’re willing to die for it, might as well go for the throat

For a taste of unironic communism in 2021: https://www.pslweb.org/ Some good people, some bad people, all in the throes of some pretty terrible ideology. shrug

To be clear, not endorsing any of these ideological positions, just happen to be familiar with them owing to a misspent youth.

It would fit well for Kaczynski's mix of anarchism, anti-smart-tech-revolution and environmentalism, I believe.

He went after AI researchers back then, attacking their hardware would make sense. I mean, I'm probably just a few years and a few bad turns away from seeing AWS & co ("Surveillance Capitalism, Inc.") as a large harm to humanity that needs to be stopped, so I'd be surprised if nobody is thinking that today. The scale of data centers likely makes them super hard targets for the super majority of groups or individuals, which is why we don't see a lot of attacks on them (yet).

I don't have a problem with communists. I do believe that they're coming from a good place, but are fundamentally mistaken in their analysis which does lead some of them down some very dark paths. It just feels like believing in the geocentric model of the universe (or flat earth, I suppose that's more current), which sounds like lots of fun, but would turn weird if you start to realize the person you're talking to actually believes it and isn't joking.

>It's sad you feel as if you have to apologize preemptively for asking a question.

Unfortunately, without disclaimers someone is bound to misinterpret the comment. If the comment isn't defensively worded in a way to explicitly prevent bad faith interpretations, someone is bound to come tilting. It is difficult if not impossible to imagine all the ways a given comment might be interpreted. Even seemingly unambiguous passages are construed to mean opposing things.

That's just where we are.

Well, according to the article he was active on Parler and MyMilitia.com, and was at the protests in Washington on Jan 6th, and complained that the insurrectionists didn’t go far enough. I’m not sure what else you’re looking for, exactly.
He was posting on MyMilitia.com about blowing up Amazon data centers to retaliate for "disrespect" shown to his tribe. Left wing extremists don't post on MyMilitia.com. They post on derrickjensen.org or whatever.
He posted on mymilitia.com, which you can read more about at https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/mymilitia-... and

>In public and private posts online, court documents say, Pendley claimed to have been at the Capitol on January 6, but not to have entered the building. He expressed disappointment that his fellow protesters weren’t more aggressive.

According to the government he called himself a "patriot" when describing how he would carry out an attack: https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.txnd.346637... . His goal for the attack was to provoke a big government response that would wake people up about government overreach.

I guess it depends on your personal standard of evidence, but when someone hangs out on far-right message boards, drives to DC with an AR rifle in his car to attend a far-right protest, and plans a bomb attack on behalf of a popular far-right cause in order to show people that the government is too powerful, at some point you probably begin identifying the person as far-right.

The FBI specializes in this kind of operation, providing encouragement, support, and money to unhappy young men who would most likely never get around to actually doing anything were it not for the FBI's involvement, always in such a way that it somehow doesn't quite legally qualify as entrapment, despite looking like entrapment to any normal person. The FBI are corrupt enforcers for the left now. A dozen agents will be dispatched instantly if there's a chance to bolster the myth that the US is super racist, like when a garage door pull fell down, but not a single one will be sent to question the person thought by tens of millions of Americans to have pulled illegitimate ballots out from under a table in the middle of the night during the election.
There is an issue with this, but I am not convinced it is as explicitly partisan as you suggest. I do agree that the definition of political extremist has broadened significantly after this recent election.

Here's an example of similar activity with the "Occupy Wallstreet" people. The maladjusted Muslim youth angle is also well known.

https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/how-fbi-...

https://theintercept.com/2015/03/16/howthefbicreatedaterrori...

https://mises.org/power-market/libertarian-terrorists

>"Former CIA director John Brennan recently singled out libertarians as among the people the government should go after. This is not the first time libertarians have been smeared. In 2009, a federally funded fusion center identified people who supported my presidential campaign, my Campaign for Liberty, or certain Libertarian and Constitution Parties’ candidates as potentially violent extremists."

> The FBI are corrupt enforcers for the left now.

If you are a literal militant Nazi, sure they are enforcers of everything left from you but so is basically anyone. If you mean actual political left or even any form of progressive politics, yeah good riddance.

The FBI is sure known for being very kind towards the civil rights movement. (nope).

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/26/fbi-bl...

The job of the FBI is to protect the current order. They will target anyone threatening that whether they agree with their reasons or not.

Now you do have a point regarding your critique on how the FBI runs things. I think their might be some perverse initiatives at play that lead the FBI towards building up treats that they can destroy as a way to justify their own existence and getting more funding. On the other hand there is no denying that right wing terrorism is a real issue in the US regardless of the meddling the FBI.

We have apologists for terrorists on HN now?
You may be wasting your energy complaining about a 20 day old account named hntroll
Get ready for more of this.

If Amazon hadn’t acquiesced to the left wing (eg. by taking down Parker) there would have been an equal likelihood that a left wing extremist would plot an attack.

Even more so, if a would-be terrorist can see data centers as virtually zero-casualty targets.

Not to mention state actors who will have an easier time „nudging“ domestic actors into „standing up for what’s right“ due to the low moral barrier.

Not to trivialize any of the politics but to me the key takeaway is if my revenue relies on aws, I should seriously consider multi region.

Given enough time, there is bound to be a disaster at some point. If all my data is in one data center, ...

I don’t know enough about aws so I think I need to study this a little bit more.

Even multi-AZ is sufficient against "crazy people attacking a DC".
Include reading about “availability zones” in your research. Your continuity plan might just need a multi-AZ strategy.
Motivations aside, I’m pretty sure an AWS data center is too big to take out with a car bomb or even a large truck bomb. If it’s like any other major commercial data enter I’ve been to, there are redundant, multi-tier systems for network, power and HVAC along with multiple path entry of electrical and network connections. There are also likely multiple zones (physically firewalled from each other) for fire suppression, so even if he triggered the sprinklers (or halon) it would likely only take 1/10 or so of their capacity offline (and not even that if it’s halon).

An attack like this is absolutely within their threat model too. Because it has been for pretty much every datacenter I’ve toured.

He plotted the attack on Signal. Time to ban that dangerous app from every platform! /s
Waiting for someone being labeled a ‘far-centrist’, since I can easily see motivations from all sides of the compass.
One of the worst problems of our political discourse (aside from the idea of a single political axis) is the idea that extremism results from distance from the center. There's nothing about this man's political perspective (that we know) suggesting he was in any way far-right. He is, if anything, a 'center-right' extremist.

Same kind of idea goes for proud boys, boogaloos, etc. I think they like the 'far-right' designation because it lets them liken these groups to fascism, which is about as accurate as likening AOC to Stalin.

People were told by other people in positions of legitimate authority that the election was literally stolen. Effectively meaning that the Republic has been usurped and democracy trampled.

Imagine, wherever you live, if some 'bad guys' actually did that: stuff ballots, silence officials, push through a win.

There are three reasons I can think of some kind of legit call to arms:

1) Your country is being invaded 2) Communists or Fascists are literally taking over the world. 3) Your government has been usurped in a coup etc.. <- this is essentially what the '2cnd amendment' is supposedly supposed to thwart.

Given the number of people who live in the fake news bubble and truly believe the election was a fraud, I'm surprised there isn't more of this.

Actually, it's unfathomable that there hasn't been some kind of armed attempt at 'something' when >100M people truly believe the election was not legit and they have guns.

It's made me think that a lot of Trumpers who believe that the election was stolen, don't truly believe it, rather, they just 'want to believe it' - as a mental cover for their loss. "The election was rigged" more or less as a slogan, not actually a fact.

Isn't this what media usually calls a terrorist?
No, the media (and law enforcement) does not usually refer to white American non-Muslim far-right extremists plotting acts of terrorism as “terrorists”.