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alt-right andrea hardie anti-Semitism antifeminism antifeminist women ironic nazis judgybitch literal nazis racism

Andrea “JudgyBitch” Hardie dons Nazi t-shirt in an attempt to prove who the hell knows what

Hey, look at meeee!

Apparently our old friend Andrea “JudgyBitch” Hardie — oft-banned antifeminist Twitter “activist” and alt-right hanger-on — was once again feeling a bit ignored by the internet, so she bought herself a Nazi t-shirt and made a lovely video.

Despite the video’s deliberately provocative title (“Hello Fourth Reich!”), this is one of the duller “provocative” videos you’re likely to encounter on the YouTubes — at least until Hardie puts on her swastika t-shirt roughly three-quarters of the way in.

Hardie begins the video wearing a different t-shirt entirely — one adorned with the Rising Sun flag of Imperial Japan. Over the course of the first half of the video she offers a rambling, ignorant and often nonsensical take on the issue of populism — or at least the oversimplified and completely ahistorical caricature of populism she’s got bouncing around in her head.

Her main point, insofar as she has one, seems to be that anyone who’s critical of the current outbreak of “populism” is “sneering at the idea that common, ordinary, everyday people are the best people to identify what the problems in their own lives are.”

Well, no. Demagogues like Donald Trump and Marine Le Pen may claim the label of populism, but they are in fact racist right-wing autocrats who really aren’t much interested in democracy at all. “Populism” has, historically, always had a dark nativist streak to it, suffused with anti-Semitism and what historian Richard Hofstadter called the “paranoid style” of politics.

But let’s not linger too long on the history of actual populism, because we haven’t even gotten to the real point of the video, which is that Nazi t-shirt.

Hardie starts the t-shirt portion of the video by pretending to be shocked that the Rising Sun t-shirt she’s wearing isn’t likely to elicit the same outrage as a t-shirt festooned with a swastika — even though the Japanese military forces flying that flag did all sorts of truly horrible shit over the course of many years, from the Rape of Nanking to Pearl Harbor.

But those who wear Rising Sun t-shirts in public aren’t generally going to get accused of supporting any of these terrible things. To most people, Hardie declares, the Rising Sun is nothing more than a “fun meme,” and it turns out that’s just fine with her.

“What i want to know,” she asks, “why is this shirt ok, why is the Rising Sun ok, but” — she dons her Nazi t-shirt — “this shirt is not?”

This is a question that could actually lead to an interesting discussion. Why is the Rising Sun, at least here in North America, seen by most though definitely not all people as a rather innocent cultural symbol — much as the Confederate flag was back in the day when it flew unprotested from every southern state capital and adorned the top of the Dukes of Hazzard’s beloved creek-jumping car? Will perceptions of the Rising Sun change, much as they have for the Confederate flag?

But instead Hardie offers a rambling rant even more incoherent than the rant on populism in the first chunk of her video.

After informing us that the Nazis “were socialists; hey Bernie Sanders, hi” she indignantly asks why it’s considered “not ok” for people to wear Nazi shirts, so much so that YouTube probably “won’t let me monetize this video because of this shirt.”

Maybe because most people rightly connect Nazi symbolism with the Nazis and their hateful history? Maybe because virtually everyone who adorns themselves with Nazi symbols is either an actual Nazi or some other related kind of hateful shit? (Or perhaps the ghost of Sid Vicious.)

But Hardie has another theory, albeit one that makes no fucking sense whatsoever: Apparently people get mad about swastikas because they want to demonize true populists who stand up for the people! By “weaponizing the swastika” these evil liberal lefty anti-populists try to make ordinary people look bad!

I’m not even going to try to transcribe this portion of Hardie’s rant; I’m afraid it might damage my brain. Just watch. The video below should start at the beginning of her, er, explanation, a little more than 15 minutes in. Watch for the next two minutes or so, if you can manage it. Feel free to stop when she starts talking about Pepe the frog. Or if your head literally explodes.

https://youtu.be/A3Qi8VKb_dI?t=15m17s

Shortly after her Pepe digression, Hardie informs her viewers that

everyone, at the end of the day, is a stupid violent brute. Everyone. Violence is the only truth.

Huh. That sounds an awful lot like something a Nazi would say.

The only question to her is who controls this violence — evil leftists who actually hate the people, or

the common ordinary people who think, you know what, some of us is dumb assholes and, you know what, those are the first ones we’re gonna shoot. The people have a unique way of taking care of business. 

That’s human history. That’s all of human history.

Er, there are are forms of government that don’t involve whatever group is in power just going out and shooting everyone they don’t like.

And all the swastikas in the world aren’t going to change that.

No. They’re going to make that sort of thing more likely. That’s why most people FUCKING HATE NAZIS. That’s why people tend to get mad when idiots put on Nazi shirts and make videos defending other idiots who put on Nazi shirts.

If you need to clear your head a little after watching that video, this might help.

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joekster- (betas bearded)
joekster- (betas bearded)
7 years ago

@PI: thanks for the troll-slaying.

opposablethumbs
opposablethumbs
7 years ago

@joekster, Birmingham has a higher-than-national-average proportion of Muslim population – others here will have more info than I do, but I think it’s somewhat under 22%. I suppose to these idiots about a fifth looks like a scary-scary majority.
The national figure is about 5%

Hambeast, disorderly she-tornado and breaker of windows
Hambeast, disorderly she-tornado and breaker of windows
7 years ago

I just had two teeth on my upper left side ground down for crowns (no root canal, though.) I’m sitting here with two temporary crowns as we speak. I’ve had my permanent bridge on my upper right for about two weeks and I love it so much because I was dealing with one dead, broken tooth AND a crown I lost about a year and a half ago. That entailed two extractions, bone grafts and a temp bridge for two weeks.

I think, at this point, my teeth are 50/50 restorations to real tooth. But, I’m on my way to being able to eat normally again. *blows noisemaker and throws confetti*

Yes, I too have been bad about going to the dentist. But, I’ve had some bad dentists. The thing is, it’s hard to tell your dentist is bad until you find a good one.

Alan Robertshaw
Alan Robertshaw
7 years ago

@ hambeast

The thing is, it’s hard to tell your dentist is bad until you find a good one.

If you ask about anaesthetic and they offer you a swig from their hip flask that’s probably the time to leg it.

Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
7 years ago

@Alan

I’ll keep that in mind. (Especially as someone below drinking age in this nation…)

Alan Robertshaw
Alan Robertshaw
7 years ago

@ troubelle

the Children Act 1908 made provision for parents to give alcohol to a very young child, where it could be considered an anaesthetic in cases of acute injury.

If it’s not an emergency though you’ll have to wait until you’re 5.

Petra Pumpkineater
Petra Pumpkineater
7 years ago

“If it’s not an emergency though you’ll have to wait until you’re 5.”

And to some Brits, an “emergency” includes a baby that hasn’t gone to sleep on schedule.

Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
7 years ago

@Alan

Laws are quite different here in the States…Plus, I’m genetically susceptible to alcoholism anyway. I’ll stick with grape juice.

Petra Pumpkineater
Petra Pumpkineater
7 years ago

Violence is the only truth.

Huh. That sounds an awful lot like something a Nazi would say.

Nazis like Mao Tse Tung? “All things grow out of the barrel of a gun”

Petra Pumpkineater
Petra Pumpkineater
7 years ago

Why is the Rising Sun, at least here in North America, seen by most though definitely not all people as a rather innocent cultural symbol — much as the Confederate flag was back in the day when it flew unprotested from every southern state capital and adorned the top of the Dukes of Hazzard’s beloved creek-jumping car? Will perceptions of the Rising Sun change, much as they have for the Confederate flag?

The Rising Sun symbol had a history that didn’t involve aggression. The Confederate flag was made as an instrument of treason and rebellion to preserve slavery. The Swastika was imported from India and inverted by the Nazis to form a symbol of racial suppremacy and a right to aggression.

What I find more mysterious is the termination of the so-called Nazi salute which in fact was the American salute for most of history, until we came to associate it with Nazis. (The Volkswagen Beetle, for some reason, escaped being so associated).

Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
7 years ago

@Petra

I’m going to continue to request that you play something else. Don’t Starve is always good.

Swedish Sexual Bread
Swedish Sexual Bread
7 years ago

@Troubelle
My own preference lies more in the Space Engineers, Minecraft, From the Depths area, so basically sandbox games where constructing the wierdest of designs is possible. Then again, ymmv. I’d also strongly recommend Cook, Serve, Delicious if you want to play a relatively relaxing game to eat time.

Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
Troubelle: Moonbeam Malcontent + Bard of the New Movement
7 years ago

@SSBread

I’ll keep that in mind. Don’t Starve lets you go where you want, but your creations are more limited…though it’s certainly its own experience to wander around in.

Just don’t let Charlie get you.

Gussie Jives
Gussie Jives
7 years ago

A little late given the way the thread has evolved (I have a wire on my bottom teeth and the Oral-B Superfloss really helps get beneath it), but I wanted to thank everyone for their thoughts on the Antifa movement. I think Alan summed up my thoughts on it best with violence being a morally neutral element in any struggle (although I would say there’s a dimension of scale to the equation; killing somebody–even somebody awful–when non-lethal force can work just as well is an immoral act in my eyes). What matters is why it’s being deployed.

I’m not sure how many Mammotheers recognize my avatar, but in addition to Kansas being a guilty pleasure of mine, I always found John Brown to be a captivating figure himself. I found a quote from Malcolm X in my Twitter feed from a longer speech he gave which echoes MLK’s “White Moderate” notion in relation to John Brown (from an OAAU Rally in 1964):

We’ve got to seek some new methods, a reappraisal of the situation, some new methods for attacking it or solving it, and a new direction, and new allies. We need allies who are going to help us achieve a victory, not allies who are going to tell us to be nonviolent. If a white man wants to be your ally, what does he think of John Brown? You know what John Brown did? He went to war. He was a white man who went to war against white people to help free slaves. He wasn’t nonviolent. White people call John Brown a nut. Go read the history, go read what all of them say about John Brown. They’re trying to make it look like he was a nut, a fanatic. They made a movie on it, I saw a movie on the screen one night. Why, I would be afraid to get near John Brown if I go by what other white folks say about him.

But they depict him in this image because he was willing to shed blood to free the slaves. And any white man who is ready and willing to shed blood for your freedom—in the sight of other whites, he’s nuts. As long as he wants to come up with some nonviolent action, they go for that, if he’s liberal, a nonviolent liberal, a love-everybody liberal. But when it comes time for making the same kind of contribution for your and my freedom that was necessary for them to make for their own freedom, they back out of the situation. So, when you want to know good white folks in history where black people are concerned, go read the history of John Brown. That was what I call a white liberal. But those other kind, they are questionable.

So if we need white allies in this country, we don’t need those kind who compromise. We don’t need those kind who encourage us to be polite, responsible, you know. We don’t need those kind who give us that kind of advice. We don’t need those kind who tell us how to be patient. No, if we want some white allies, we need the kind that John Brown was, or we don’t need you. And the only way to get those kind is to turn in a new direction.

There’s some important words in that speech that I think a lot of the “resistance” needs to pay attention to. Even if one has moral qualms about being violent, the civil rights activists of the past at least put their own safety on the line for their cause, and when they weren’t demonstrating, they were organizing for hours on end, doing a lot of very important but tedious work.

Alan Robertshaw
Alan Robertshaw
7 years ago
EJ (Marxist Jazz Weasel)

That’s a great quote, Gussie Jives, thank you.

Petra Pumpkineater
Petra Pumpkineater
7 years ago

I think that X was absolutely right about John Brown. But I think he was wrong about his own time. It was MLK, not Malcolm X, that won the day. And we lost the election in the DNC during the moment of silence for the Dallas police, when the BLM chant started up. Because that came off to a lot of people as BLM taking credit. I tried to persuade folks that that was a Trump plant that started that cry, though it might have been a Putin plant. Whatever it was, it was devastating.

I was disgusted with the lies told against John Brown and Sherman in the recent show “Hell on Wheels.” John Brown wasn’t going around murdering slavery supporters during Bleeding Kansas. He was picking out the ringleaders that were murdering Kansas abolitionists. The Civil War had already started, and he was the only Unionist that knew that.

Alan Robertshaw
Alan Robertshaw
7 years ago

@ gussie (or possibly dalillama as this is a folk query)

Pardon my ignorance but is that John Brown anything to do with the “John Brown’s Body…” song?

Petra Pumpkineater
Petra Pumpkineater
7 years ago

Pardon my ignorance but is that John Brown anything to do with the “John Brown’s Body…” song?

The very one! JB was the hero compared to Jesus in the two different main marching songs of the Union Army.

Petra Pumpkineater
Petra Pumpkineater
7 years ago

I wanted to thank everyone for their thoughts on the Antifa movement. I think Alan summed up my thoughts on it best with violence being a morally neutral element in any struggle (although I would say there’s a dimension of scale to the equation; killing somebody–even somebody awful–when non-lethal force can work just as well is an immoral act in my eyes). What matters is why it’s being deployed.

I absolutely disagree. How it’s deployed is at least as important as why. Maybe more. John Brown didn’t make sport of his killings, didn’t kill people at random. Didn’t have his soldiers rape.

It was actually Mohammed, in the Koran, who first distinguished as two separate absolutes: that the war’s cause must be just, but that the manner of fighting must also follow certain restrictions. (I am not Muslim and do not agree with how Mohammed answered these two separate questions, but he deserves his place in humanitarian history for articulating the questions).

If AntiFa was doing anything other than preventing people from expressing ideas, they would not be a toxic fart in the elevator. But that’s all they do, so that’s all they are.

Get AntiFa out at standing rock, busting up equipment before the oil flows. Get them doing direct shit like Greenpeace, where they actually take on the bastards and equipment that’s destroying the earth. If I had a billion dollars, I’d get Greenpeace attack subs and helicopters. But AntiFa is just violence for the sake of silencing people who they end up giving more attention to.

Alan Robertshaw
Alan Robertshaw
7 years ago

@ petra

JB was the hero compared to Jesus in the two different main marching songs of the Union Army.

Cheers. I’ve now got rather a rousting version blasting out.

Petra Pumpkineater
Petra Pumpkineater
7 years ago

But Hardie has another theory, albeit one that makes no fucking sense whatsoever: Apparently people get mad about swastikas because they want to demonize true populists who stand up for the people!

Yeah, that’s unreal. Fascism was not populism; it was elitist to the core. Naziism put on a show of populism, but the first mass murder was NOT by popular demand — the people recoiled in horror from the murder of their children. Forced the Nazis to take that underground.

@Alan — do share! This is my favorite: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6WignKYFI8

eataTREE
eataTREE
7 years ago

I know I’m late to the party, but I’d just like to raise my hand as someone who doesn’t find the Rising Sun to be an innocent cultural symbol. Imperialism isn’t the same as fascism, but they’re relatives.

Alan Robertshaw
Alan Robertshaw
7 years ago

@ petra

It was actually Mohammed, in the Koran, who first distinguished as two separate absolutes: that the war’s cause must be just, but that the manner of fighting must also follow certain restrictions.

I’m not sure that’s correct. The concept of ‘just war’ is first recorded in the Indian epic ‘Mahabarata'(sp?) and that dates from the pre christian era. And there were various codes of conduct throughout the classical period.

Abu Bakr though was one of the first people (that we know of) to set out a list of rules for the conduct of warfare.

Funnily enough just having a discussion about this on Varalys’ blog; but this is personal and professional interest of mine anyway.

Gussie Jives
Gussie Jives
7 years ago

@Petra

If AntiFa was doing anything other than preventing people from expressing ideas, they would not be a toxic fart in the elevator. But that’s all they do, so that’s all they are.

Get AntiFa out at standing rock, busting up equipment before the oil flows. Get them doing direct shit like Greenpeace, where they actually take on the bastards and equipment that’s destroying the earth. If I had a billion dollars, I’d get Greenpeace attack subs and helicopters. But AntiFa is just violence for the sake of silencing people who they end up giving more attention to.

Well, I’d assume the rank and file of Antifa have other causes they’re a part of (the ones that aren’t the Black Bloc style agitators who just show up to make trouble). But in this troubling time where these people feel emboldened, they need to have bodies standing in their way to make them feel outnumbered and unwelcome. Before all this Trump/Brexit nonsense, these people were looked at with disdain the prevailing society to the point they kept these abhorrent ideas to themselves; obviously, they feel they can let their freak flags fly, so it’s important to check that in some manner. A decade ago, I might have agreed with this sentiment, but I’ve seen it metastasize to the point of putting an orange Julius in the White House, so I take nothing for granted anymore.

Great discussion though! That’s why I like this place 😀