Redneck Revolt: The Armed Leftwing Group That Wants to Stamp out Fascism
Redneck
lefties fight racism but don't much like liberals—and they like
their guns.
By
Cecilia Saixue Watt / The Guardian
14
July, 2017
The
cookout offered free food, a face-painting booth and a “protest
sign-making station” – a pile of cut-up cardboard boxes, paint
markers and rolls of packing tape. A group of neighborhood boys, each
no older than 12, gathered around. They wanted signs to tape to their
bicycles, so they could ride around and “tell Trump” what they
thought of him.
One
grabbed a piece of cardboard and wrote in big letters: “TRUMP’S A
BITCH.”
Max
Neely quickly stepped in.
“I’m
not sure you should use that word,” he said, his voice taking on a
fatherly tone. At 6ft2in, he towered over them. “That word isn’t
very respectful to women, and there are a lot of women around here
today that we should be respecting. Maybe you can think of another
word to use.”
The
boys conferred. Eventually, they settled on a different, less
offensive protest sign – at least in Neely’s eyes. “FUCK
TRUMP,” it read, followed by four exclamation points.
A
31-year-old activist with long hair and a full bushy beard, Neely had
a full day of political activism ahead of him: Donald Trump was in
Harrisburg to mark his 100th day in office with a speech at the
Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex. In other parts of the city, the
liberal opposition were also readying themselves: organizations such
as Keystone
Progress, Dauphin
County Democrats and
the local Indivisible group
planned to march in protest.
Neely’s
group were not among them. Instead, they had set up a picnic site in
a small park, offering a barbecue and leftist pamphlets. Someone had
planted a bright red hammer-and-sickle flag in the grass. On a nearby
table hung a black banner that bore the words “Redneck Revolt:
anti-racist, pro-gun, pro-labor”.
“If
you haven’t noticed, we aren’t liberals,” said Jeremy Beck, one
of Neely’s cookout friends. “You know, if you keep going further
left, eventually, you go left enough to get your guns back.”
Wooly
liberals, they’re not. Redneck Revolt is a nationwide organization
of armed political activists from rural, working-class backgrounds
who strive to reclaim the term “redneck” and promote active
anti-racism. It is not an exclusively white group, though it does
take a special interest in the particular travails of the white poor.
The organization’s principles are distinctly left-wing: against
white supremacy, against capitalism and the nation-state, in support
of the marginalized.
Pennsylvania
is an open-carry state, where gun owners can legally carry firearms
in public without concealment. Redneck Revolt members often see the
practice of openly carrying a gun as a political statement: the
presence of a visible weapon serves to intimidate opponents and
affirm gun rights. Many of the cookout attendees owned guns, and had
considered bringing them today – but ultimately they had decided to
come unarmed, in the interest of keeping the event family-friendly.
Redneck
Revolt began in 2009 as an offshoot of the John Brown Gun Club, a
firearms training project originally based in Kansas. Dave Strano,
one of Redneck Revolt’s founding members, had seized upon what he
saw as a contradiction in the Tea Party movement, then in its
infancy. Many Tea Party activists were fellow working-class people
who had endured significant hardships as a result of the 2008
economic crisis which, in his eyes, had been caused by the very
wealthy. And yet, Tea Partiers were now flocking in great numbers to
rallies funded by the 1%.
By
supporting economically conservative politicians, Strano thought,
they would only be further manipulated to benefit the already rich.
“The
history of the white working class has been a history of being an
exploited people,” he wrote.
“However, we’ve been an exploited people that further exploits
other exploited people. While we’ve been living in tenements and
slums for centuries, we’ve also been used by the rich to attack our
neighbors, coworkers, and friends of different colors, religions and
nationalities.”
Now,
eight years later, more than 20 Redneck Revolt branches have sprouted
across the US; the groups range widely in size, some with only a
handful of members. Max Neely is a member of the Mason-Dixon branch,
which encompasses central Pennsylvania as well as his native western
Maryland. Many members are white, but the organization seeks to build
on a “redneck” identity beyond race.
“I
grew up playing in the woods, floating coolers of beer down a river,
shooting off fireworks, just generally raising hell, all that kind of
stuff,” said Neely. “Things most people would consider a part of
redneck culture. We’re trying to acknowledge the ways we’ve made
mistakes and bought into white supremacy and capitalism, but also
give ourselves an environment in which it’s OK to celebrate redneck
culture.”
The
group draws a great deal of inspiration from the Young
Patriots Organization,
a 1960s-era activist group consisting primarily of white
working-class Appalachians and southerners. “I’m very impressed
with Redneck Revolt,” said Hy Thurman, one of the early founders of
the Young Patriots. “I think they’re right on with what they’re
trying to do.”
The
group opposed racism and worked closely with the Black Panthers, but
they did make use of the Confederate flag in their recruiting.
Thurman explained that it was used only strategically, to start
conversations with poor white people who might identify with the
symbol.
In
the same way that the Young Patriots once used the Confederate flag,
Redneck Revolt seeks to employ another emblem of rural America: guns.
Redneck
Revolt groups work on providing an explicitly anti-racist presence in
rural areas, and focus particularly on gun shows. Many members are
from places where guns are relatively normalized, and Neely wants
Redneck Revolt to serve as a viable alternative for people who might
otherwise join the growing right-wing militia movement.
Since
the 1992
Ruby Ridge siege,
the US has witnessed an increase in
anti-government paramilitary organizations. Oath Keepers, for
example, is a militia group that strives to defend the US
constitution, which the group believes is under threat by its own
government. They claim to be nonpartisan, but its members’ politics
tend to skew far right. During last year’s presidential election,
they announced that
members would be monitoring voting booths to prevent election
tampering, stating he was “most concerned about expected attempts
at voter fraud by leftists”.
But
groups like Oath Keepers have much in common with far leftists:
concerns about the infringement of human rights, objections to mass
surveillance and the ever reauthorized Patriot Act, anger at the
continued struggles of the working poor.
“We
use gun culture as a way to relate to people,” said Neely, whose
grandfather was an avid hunter. “No liberal elitism. Our basic
message is: guns are fine, but racism is not.”
Officially,
Oath Keepers’ bylaws prohibit anyone associated with a hate group
from joining, though their background checks have proven to
be inconsistent
at best.
But there are other rightwing groups around – the explicitly racist
kind.
“I’m
worried about Pikeville,” said Neely. “I’ve got friends out
there.”
Pikeville
is a small Kentucky town deep in the heart of Appalachia. It has no
major airport or interstate, a population of less than 10,000 and an
abundance of idyllic mountain scenery. Mining has long been the major
industry here, though Pikeville also attracts tourism: mid-April
draws over 100,000 visitors to the annual Hillbilly
Days festival,
a celebration of Appalachian culture and music.
In
the week after the festival ended, however, Pikeville’s atmosphere
had taken a distinct turn. Neo-Nazis were coming to town the same day
as Trump’s appearance in Harrisburg.
The
Nationalist Front – an alliance of far-right white nationalist
organizations – was planning a rally in front of Pikeville’s
courthouse. “Take a stand for white working families,” read an
invitation that circulated online.
“This
begins a process of building and expanding our roots within white
working class communities to become the community advocates that our
people need and deserve,” wrote Matthew Heimbach on the Daily
Stormer, a neo-Nazi website.
Pike
County – chronically impoverished, overwhelmingly white – is seen
as a fertile setting for spreading their ideology. The city of
Pikeville itself has actually experienced some growth in the past few
years, but the greater area is struggling. Pike County’s
unemployment rate is one of the highest in the nation: 10%, more than
twice that of the US as a whole.
Trump
successfully tapped into this desperation with his pro-labor,
anti-immigrant rhetoric and successfully won more than 80% of votes
cast. Citing this figure, Heimbach hoped to develop existing
pro-Trump sentiments into full-blown national socialism.
“We’re
doing this because we care about the people of Pike County,” said
Jeff Schoep, head of the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement, in a
video promoting the rally. “We’ve seen factories shut down, we’ve
seen people losing their jobs, we’ve seen families getting
desperate and reaching out for drugs or other things that they
shouldn’t be doing. We want to give people hope again. Something
worth fighting for.”
That
something happened to be a white ethno-state, and many Pikeville
residents were not interested.
The
city approved a permit for the Nationalist Front to gather downtown,
citing the constitutional right of free speech and assembly, though
Donovan Blackburn, the city manager, also issued a statement
promoting peace, respect and diversity.
Students
at the University of Pikeville planned a counter-protest, but the
event was quickly canceled due to safety concerns: university
officials feared that a conflict between the Nationalist Front and
members of the antifascist movement – or antifa – could escalate
into violence.
Developed
in Europe over the past few decades, antifascists represent the
left’s own united front: a conflux of anarchists, communists,
social democrats and others, dedicated to stamping out fascism by any
means necessary, including violence –which they see as a justified
response to the inherent violence of fascism. They often employ
“black bloc” tactics, where individuals wear masks and all-black
clothing to avoid police identification.
Antifascist
groups have never been as prominent in the US as they have been in
countries such as Greece, where masked individuals recently smashed
the windows of
the Golden Dawn’s headquarters. But in the wake of Trump’s
election and the ensuing spate of hate crimes, they have swiftly
mobilized. A masked man famously punched white nationalist Richard
Spencer in
Washington DC on Inauguration Day; two weeks later, antifascists lit
fires on UC Berkeley’s
campus in protest of rightwing ideologue Milo Yiannopoulos.
“We
live in a historical moment where there’s unprecedented wealth
inequality, and the average person is struggling to get by,” said
Sidney (not his real name), an Appalachian antifascist who has been
keeping a close watch on white nationalist activity in his area.
“When governments, as they characteristically do, fail to step in,
people look to other institutions for an answer. Fascism is having a
resurgence because we’re in that moment. It’s not a problem
that’s going to be solved by leaving it alone. That’s like
leaving an infection alone.”
A
27-year-old native of West Virginia, Sidney comes from a coal mining
family. He splits his time between installing drywall and organizing
with Redneck Revolt.
“Pikeville
really caught my attention,” said Sidney. “The Traditionalist
Worker party’s been making real efforts to organize in Appalachia.
I’m not a Kentuckian, but I’m a working-class Appalachian, and it
really sticks in my craw.”
To
dissuade antifascists, who often wear masks during demonstrations,
the Pikeville city commission passed an emergency ordinance that
prohibited the wearing of masks or hoods in downtown Pikeville.
Anyone above the age of 16 wearing a mask or hood would be subject to
50 days in jail and a $250 fine.
Antifascist
demonstrators would have to show their faces, which could be
potentially dangerous: neo-Nazi groups have been known to use facial
recognition software and other tactics to identify
counter-protesters, acquire personal information and subject those
identified to further harassment.
“At
Redneck Revolt, we tend not to cover our faces anyway,” said
Sidney. “We want to make inroads with the community, and it’s
easier if they knew who you are.”
But
Sidney had a greater concern: Kentucky is another open-carry state
and Heimbach had encouraged members of the Nationalist Front to come
armed, ahead of “possible leftist attacks”. At least, however, he
would have his own firearm: his Smith and Wesson semi-automatic
pistol, which he decided to carry concealed.
A
couple locals had expressed to Sidney that they wished they would all
go home – both neo-Nazis and antifascists.
“I
can’t blame them for feeling like that,” said Sidney. “They’ve
got this huge ideological fight on their doorstep that they didn’t
ask for.”
Regardless,
some time after noon, a large group of antifascist protesters –
some armed, some wearing bulletproof vests – headed to the
courthouse, ready to face the Nationalist Front.
Instead,
they saw only about 10 white nationalists, waiting in a little area
that had been fenced off by police. They were members of the League
of the South, a group that promotes a renewed attempt at secession
from the US. The two major Nationalist Front delegations, the
Traditionalist Workers party and the National Socialist Movement,
were missing.
Rumor
soon spread that they were lost.
“Given
that they’re not from this region, and they don’t represent the
people here, it’s not terribly surprising,” said Sidney.
Back
in Harrisburg, a group of six young white nationalist men wearing a
uniform of white polo shirts approached Neely’s cookout site; they
looked like missionaries, clean-shaven with neatly combed hair.
Max
Neely approached them and asked, cautiously, whether they were
interested in socialism.
No,
they responded. They identified themselves as members of Identity
Evropa, a white nationalist group that endorses racial segregation
and only admits applicants of “European, non-Semitic heritage”.
They had initially supported Trump as a presidential candidate, but
were now in Harrisburg to protest him; they were disappointed that he
had not yet created a white ethno-state.
Neely
wanted to keep them away from the cookout. On another day, in a
different setting, some of his associates might have come ready for a
fight. But today was meant to be family-friendly, and many of the
picnic attendees were young black activists from a local high school.
They could handle themselves, Neely knew, but the task of arguing for
the legitimacy of your existence against those who deny your humanity
is an arduous one.
So
while his Redneck Revolt friends kept a careful watch from across the
street, Neely let the Identity Evropa members talk more about their
ideology – about how the US was a nation meant for white people,
how white culture was under attack. Neely debated them as politely as
he could, hoping his quiet listening could diffuse the situation.
They thanked him for being so calm and civil.
“It’s
easy to be calm when you’re a white man,” said Neely. “It’s
easy when it’s not your life or your family’s lives at stake.”
They
could not see the back of his shirt, which depicted a hooded figure
dangling from a tree, and the words HANG YOUR LOCAL KLANSMAN.
The
encounter ended rather decisively: three local teenage girls had
chased off the white nationalists.
By
mid-afternoon, the cookout was in full swing. Nearby residents filled
plates with barbecued chicken and strawberries. A neighborhood man
looked at the pamphlets that Neely had laid out. “Piece Now, Peace
Later: An Anarchist Introduction to Firearms”, read one title.
“Y’all
trying to overthrow the government?” he asked.
“It’s
more about community defense,” answered Travis, one of the Redneck
Revolt members.
“I
just wanted to warn you,” the man continued. “West Philadelphia,
1985. Look what happened to them.”
He
was talking about the left’s own Ruby Ridge moment: in May 1985, a
Philadelphia police helicopter dropped
a bomb on
to the row house that had served as a headquarters for Move, an armed
black liberation group. There were 11 casualties, including the
group’s founder, John Africa, as well as five children. The
resulting fire destroyed 65 houses. A special commission later
appointed by the mayor to investigate the incident concluded that the
bombing had been “unconscionable”.
When
Neely and other white members of Redneck Revolt claim allyship with
movements like Black Lives Matter, they are compelled to acknowledge
their whiteness – in particular, their ability to carry weapons
with impunity.
When
Oath Keepers began to patrol rooftops during the 2014 protests in
Ferguson, Missouri, their intention was
to protect protesters from the police – but many activists were
alarmed and intimidated by the appearance of heavily armed white men.
When Redneck Revolt members show up at black-led protest events, they
are generally invited.
“They
are our security,” said Katherine Lugaro, an organizer with This
Stops Today,
Harrisburg’s local iteration of Black Lives Matter. “They’re a
wall between us and anyone hateful. They put themselves on the line.”
Back
in Pikeville, a full hour after the rally was scheduled to begin, a
caravan rolled into the parking lot down the street. Matthew Heimbach
and the rest of the neo-Nazis had arrived. Close to 100 people,
dressed in head-to-toe black and carrying Nazi insignia, marched up
to the courthouse building. Many in the front were visibly armed;
others carried wooden shields decorated with swastikas and Norse
runes. Someone had brought a shield featuring Pepe
the Frog and
the words “Pepe Ãœber Alles”. They sieg-heiled to Heimbach.
They
were outnumbered by protesters two-to-one.
Then
came a few hours of scheduled neo-Nazi speeches. This turned into a
few hours of shouting, as the antifascists attempted to drown out the
sound system with drums and jeers. “From the midwest to the south,”
they chanted, “punch a Nazi in the mouth.”
A
handful of Pikeville residents lingered on the other side of the
police barricade, listening to the Nationalist Front speeches. But
most locals present had trickled in along with the protesters,
eventually making up a third of the crowd, and had joined in with the
jeering.
“They
were absolutely the most strident antifascist voices there,” said
Sidney. “I’m assuming most of these folks were apolitical, or
maybe conservative, but they were drawing a line in the sand.”
No
injuries, no shots fired; the Nationalist Front finished their
speeches and returned to their caravan. A heavy police presence had
kept the two groups separated and prevented any opportunity for
confrontation. It was over.
In
Harrisburg, night fell. Max Neely and his band of companions
eventually regrouped at a local bar. They drank beers and talked
about hockey. After a while, they gathered in a private side room to
debrief.
They
sat around an ashtray and chain-smoked cigarettes and carefully took
turns recalling the events of the day. Late in the evening, Keystone
Progress had led a protest march down the street near the cookout,
though after police refused to let them pass through a blocked area
the march fizzled.
“Liberals,”
Chris Siennick muttered. A general disdain for liberals is, perhaps,
the most notable commonality between the far left and far right.
But
there were other items on the agenda. A Trump protester had been
arrested earlier in the day, accused of having an altercation with a
police horse; the group wanted to provide jail support. There was an
immigration rights event in two days. And what did they want to do
for the Central Pennsylvania pride festival?
Incidentally,
the room was draped with American flags.
Cecilia
Saixue Watt is writer based in New York. Her Twitter
account is @ceciliasaixue.
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