‘Unite the Right’ organizer gets approval for rally anniversary event in D.C.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/loca...1dd6a09b549_story.html?utm_term=.92517be32b5f

An organizer of last year’s deadly white-supremacist gathering in Charlottesville has received initial approval from the National Park Service to hold a rally across from the White House on Aug. 12, the anniversary of last year’s event.

Jason Kessler, who organized the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville with Richard Spencer and other white-supremacist leaders, submitted a National Mall Special Event permit request on May 8 to hold a “white civil rights” rally in Lafayette Square “protesting civil rights abuse in Charlottesville.”

The Park Service approved the request but has not yet issued a permit. The news was first reported by WUSA-TV. A Park Service spokesman said the agency is gathering information from the organizers on details of the event, and that information will be used to create the permit.

Hundreds of white-nationalist marchers engaged in violent clashes and street battles with counterprotesters at last year’s rally in Charlottesville while police initially stood by and the fights accelerated. Later that day, after the rally had been shut down by law enforcement, authorities said that James Alex Fields Jr., a self-identified Nazi, drove his car into a throng of anti-fascist marchers, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring dozens of others.

A Virginia State Police helicopter that had been monitoring events in Charlottesville crashed later that day, killing two state troopers inside.

Kessler applied to hold an anniversary rally in Charlottesville, but the city denied his request. He then sued the city, saying his First Amendment rights were being denied. The case has not been decided. Kessler said in an email that he expects to win the lawsuit and will have rallies in Charlottesville and Washington on Aug. 12 if he prevails in court.

Kessler estimated in his Park Service application that the D.C. event would draw 400 people.

A week after last year’s rally, Kessler tweeted that Heyer “was a fat, disgusting Communist” and that her death was “payback time.” He later repudiated the tweet, saying he had been drinking and taking Ambien and Xanax.

A University of Virginia graduate, Kessler was banned from the school’s campus in April after multiple reports from students that he had threatened them, according to the university. In an online post, Kessler dismissed the allegations against him and said his attorneys would look into the matter.

“I am not surprised at him holding a rally away from Charlottesville, where he is not welcome,” said Susan Bro, the mother of Heyer. “It will be interesting to see how the citizens of D.C. and others respond to his rally.”

With its bloody brawls and scenes of far-right marchers chanting racist and homophobic slogans, the events of Charlottesville rocked the nation, which saw them play out on television and social media. The fallout was exacerbated that day and later in the week when President Trump blamed both sides for the violence rather than forcefully condemning the white supremacists and neo-Nazis for their views and actions. Trump insisted there were “some very fine people” among the white-supremacist marchers.

Kessler said in an email interview Wednesday that he chose Washington because he wants Trump and elected officials to know about “the civil rights abuse by the Charlottesville government that led to the violence at last year’s rally.”

The rally is for white civil rights, Kessler said, because “white people are being denied the ability to organize in political organizations the way other groups do, free of harassment, to face the issues important to us.”

Seth Wispelwey, a United Church of Christ minister in Charlottesville who helped form Congregate Charlottesville, a faith-based group created in response to last summer’s white-supremacist actions, called for opposition to Kessler’s plans. “The language of white civil rights is cover for white-supremacist ideology,” he said. “We also know that if we care about our country’s future we can’t let this fascist plan go forward. I would urge people of conscience to show solidarity with the people of D.C. against this racial terror.”

Spencer, who took part in the 2017 rally and led a torchlight march of hundreds of white supremacists through the U-Va. campus the night before, said he is not planning to take part in the D.C. anniversary rally.

The Unite the Right rally has had long-lasting effects in Charlottesville, where it led to the resignation of the city’s police chief and an apology to the city from the mayor at the time, Michael Signer. The city’s response to the rally was sharply criticized in an independent report that said Charlottesville was ill-prepared and that the city had devised a flawed plan leading to “disastrous results.”
 
His explanation is nonsense. Trump already made it clear that he was partial towards the Unite the Right rally, with him actually clarifying that the violence was the issue. Jason Kessler obviously is trying to bait ANTIFA protesters for Round 2.
 
His explanation is nonsense. Trump already made it clear that he was partial towards the Unite the Right rally, with him actually clarifying that the violence was the issue. Jason Kessler obviously is trying to bait ANTIFA protesters for Round 2.
If thats the case then I'm all for it. Watching tards beat each other to death is always entertaining
 
Another round of rabid ultra-partisan wastes of precious air beating each other bloody in the streets of the nation's capital?

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Now I know how the Romans must have felt when the colosseum was still a thing
 
Out of curiosity, are these unite the right things actual white supremacists, or are the media using that term to mean people who don't hate trump enough? It's so hard to tell now...
 
Now I know how the Romans must have felt when the colosseum was still a thing
eh, not exactly

people who fought in arenas were fuckin' ripped and trained to kill

these people, on the other hand, are a bunch of basement dwellers and college drop-outs

not to say it won't be entertaining, it'll just be a different kind of entertaining
Out of curiosity, are these unite the right things actual white supremacists, or are the media using that term to mean people who don't hate trump enough? It's so hard to tell now...
It's a mix of both. Some are what most would call "alt-right." Some are just everyday conservatives. It won't stop the media from treating them the same, though.
 
I like how the article doesn't even bother to mention Antifa even a single time, as if it was just one side of the aisle acting like invalids and not every single person involved behaving like a caveman. Also, this is the stupidest fucking idea I've heard all day, and I just finished reading an article advocating for more efficient human trafficking. Why the fuck would you want a Charlottesville 2.0? That entire fucking rally was a shit-fiasco and we had to hear about it for months.
 
eh, not exactly

people who fought in arenas were fuckin' ripped and trained to kill

these people, on the other hand, are a bunch of basement dwellers and college drop-outs

not to say it won't be entertaining, it'll just be a different kind of entertaining

Yeah, that's what I was mostly meaning. Not to mention, the gladiators themselves were basically the professional wrestlers of the time where most of the heavy hitters had the most amount of fans that rooted for them.

That said, it'll be like the colosseum in terms of entertainment, only all the combatants are infinitely more retarded and unlikable
 
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I can't wait to watch some streams of two tard armies beating the shit out of each other over issues that don't exist.
What will be interesting is who strikes first or if it will just be the equivalent of two dogs barking at each other

Oh but if it really does break out into thunderdome, Molotov cocktails and brass knuckles I will :popcorn:

Call me desensitized.
 
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Out of curiosity, are these unite the right things actual white supremacists, or are the media using that term to mean people who don't hate trump enough? It's so hard to tell now...

You have to keep mind that both sides have multiple sub-factions with different interests and goals.

At the previous marches, there were actual Neo-Nazis but they weren't as easy to pin down. There were two reasons for this: 1. It's hard to tell because the media uses hyperbole and labels everyone outside of the narrative as Nazis; 2. The Neo-Nazis tried to look presentable and blend in. Last time they opted for polos instead of masks and swatsikas. The point was to win sympathy by looking less awful. They planned it out, if wasn't just a coincidence.

The Neo-Nazis also brought in people to stir shit up, hoping that normies would get caught in the crossfire. They were planning for a fight and hoping it'd make them look cool and anger people on the right so they could increase recruitment.

There were others on the "right." Off the top of my head there were: Southerners who wanted to defend their flag/memorials, actual Neo-separatists, the proud boys (social conservative jocks), evangelicals, Trump Democrats, the Neo-Nazis that don't give a shit about positive publicity, college Republicans, libertarians, and normie Republicans. Many actually wanted to defend free speech or whatever.

The left has sub-factions too with different interests. For example, there are antifa that really just want to defend progressive counter-protestors. Still, there were others that wanted to start shit like their far right counter-parts (horseshoe theory).

*Edit*
Imo this protest -if it goes through- will bring out the worse in people, just like the last two. The fanatics will throw everyone into a fury and are actively trying to stir shit up. I can also see this just not taking off if the moderates realize that it's going to be messy. Previously, people were caught off guard how nutty it was. Imo a number of folks didn't realize there were actual Nazis trying to cause fights because they dismissed it as left wing hyperbole.
 
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