By Adrien
>Seybert Court TV
> One of the
>nation's leading anti-hate crusaders is banking that
>increased awareness is the best defense to the
>proliferation of hate and bias crimes. The New
>York-based Anti-Defamation League last week launched
>its Law
>Enforcement Agency Resource Network as a
>"one-stop shopping" center for hate crime
>information. The Web site is designed to help law
>enforcement officials better recognize and crack down
>on such crimes. "In the battle against haters,
>extremists and those who seek to erode our democratic
>values and threaten our security, we are committed to
>providing law enforcement agencies with resources and
>tools to augment their ongoing efforts," Abraham
>H. Foxman, the ADL's national director, said last
>week. He told a June 18 press conference that
>"the lessons of history" — from the
>Holocaust to Oklahoma City show that the "best
>defense against extremists is offense." The site,
>he added, provides "a living document" that
>can reach a large number of people. The effort
>appears to have garnered positive reaction from the
>law enforcement community. Former New York City Police
>Commission Bill Bratton predicted the new Web page
>would be a "significant addition" to efforts
>already underway nationwide. ADL has also developed
>specialized curricula to train law enforcement to
>better understand and recognize hate, bias and
>extremist crimes. The Web site features a calendar
>of upcoming extremist events by state, a chronology of
>hate crime activity, links to federal and state
>agencies and groups, a map of state hate crime laws,
>pending legislation and an archive of ADL reports on
>hate crimes. Users can get the ADL's latest hate
>group tally and access a database of hate symbols.
>From the Odin Rune sported by Neo-Nazis to the skull
>and crossbones logo representing the Aryan Nations
>Resistance, the site features symbols divided into six
>categories — general racist, Neo-Nazi, skin head
>groups, prison tattoos, numbers and acronyms — and
>explains their origins, affiliation and other
>interesting information. For example, current and
>former inmates sporting spider web tattoos on or under
>their arms indicate that they might have considered
>themselves racists at one time. In some areas, such
>tattoos are badges of honor for killing minorities,
>according to the Web site. White supremacists and
>members of extremist Christian groups may use the
>acronym RAHOWA when talking about a Racial Holy War.
> Also featured on the site is Extremism in
>America: A Guide, which provides a rundown of the
>hate world's movers and shakers. The section features
>bios and photos of some of the world's most notorious
>hate mongers. It gives users the opportunity to
>download a photo of a young David Duke clad in Nazi
>regalia, learn more about Carl Story or Vincent
>Bertollini, former Silicon Valley entrepreneurs who
>now lead the Christian Ideology movement in Idaho.
> Another feature entitled Feminism Perverted
>explores womens' groups which specialize in hate and
>advocate traditional roles. Most of them seem to
>promote hate ideas but not the use of violence to
>advance their agenda. Woman for Aryan Unity, for
>example, urges members to support their racist
>husbands by concentrating on homemaking and educating
>their children about their views and to take up arms
>in support of their cause as a last resort. The group
>Her Race, calls for a boycott of Sesame Street for its
>promotion of tolerance, according to the ADL's site.
> More Caught on the Web |
>