Texas mall shooter among growing number of
Hispanic white supremacists
Russell
Contreras
https://www.axios.com/2023/05/11/allen-texas-shooting-mauricio-garcia
A mass
shooter at a mall in Allen, Texas, with purported neo-Nazi views is the latest
in what experts say is a growing number of Hispanics pushing the doctrine of
white supremacy.
The big
picture: Advocates warn that racist organizations and websites are evolving to
pull in more recruits, including Hispanics.
Catch up
quick: Texas authorities on Tuesday said that 33-year-old Mauricio Garcia, who
was killed by police, held "neo-Nazi ideation," had patches and
tattoos linked to white supremacy and appeared to have scouted the mall before
the shooting but chose victims at random.
The
shooting left eight people dead and several injured, including Latinos and
Asian Americans.
Some
conservatives have dismissed Garcia's ties to white supremacy, including Elon
Musk, who called for scrutiny over the police allegations and appeared to
promote an unfounded conspiracy theory about the shooter.
Reality check: Dismissing the influence of white
supremacy among some Hispanics ignores how racist groups are changing to appeal
to more people, Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and
Extremism at Cal State University, San Bernardino, tells Axios.
For example, the Daily Stormer, the neo-Nazi
website known for building internet harassment campaigns, launched a
Spanish-language version of its site in 2017.
Some far-right militias have recruited Latino
members.
"There are people within nearly every
community who can respond to misogynistic, aggressive, conspiratorial rhetoric,
and then become radicalized fairly quickly," Levin says.
Zoom in: Experts tell Axios that far-right
extremism within the Latino community stems from three sources: Hispanic
Americans who identify as white; the spread of online misinformation; and
lingering anti-Black, antisemitic views among U.S. Latinos that are rarely
openly discussed.
"To deny that racism and prejudice exist in
our Hispanic community would be like denying the history of all of the
countries that form this continent," Maribel Hastings and David Torres
write in a column published in English on Wednesday on the website for
America's Voice, an immigrant rights group
"It's neither surprising nor strange that
Latinos, like other groups in this society, have their own prejudices and such
hatred against their peers that it drives them to commit barbaric acts."
Other Hispanic provocateurs include Nick Fuentes,
identified as a "white supremacist" in Justice Department filings.
Fuentes has questioned whether the Holocaust happened and is one of the
nation's most well-known Hispanic far-right figures.
Cuban American Enrique Tarrio, the former leader
of the Proud Boys, was found guilty this month of seditious conspiracy for his
role in the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection. The Anti-Defamation League
calls the Proud Boys an extremist group with a violent agenda.
In August, Jose Gomez III, of Midland, Texas, was
sentenced to 25 years on hate crime charges for attacking an Asian family he
believed was Chinese and responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic.
What they're saying: "The ongoing
normalization and amplification of white supremacy and far-right extremism
poses a growing threat to communities of all stripes across the nation,"
Stop AAPI Hate said after the Allen shooting.
Levin said
the normalization included messages repeated by former Fox News host Tucker
Carlson about "white replacement theory" — a once-fringe racist
theory that Carlson and some Republican officials have helped go mainstream.


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