ITT: No one (with the possible exception of the deceased American Spartan) knows what the alt-right is.
And no, I'm not a member or a devotee. The alt-right is a wave to be ridden, and it'll crash sooner rather than later.
The alt-right is a right-wing movement of ideologies that are an alternative to mainstream American conservatism.[1] It has "more in common with European far-right movements than American ones"[2] and is unified by nationalism,[3] opposition to multiculturalism and immigration, rejection of egalitarianism,[2][4] and support for Donald Trump.[2][5][6] The alt-right encompasses neoreaction, racialism, identitarianism, archeofuturism,[7] white nationalism, Southern-secessionism,[2] and other right-wing beliefs. The term was introduced by Richard Spencer’s AlternativeRight.com in 2010, gained prominence in 2015 after being identified by critics, and became more popular in 2016 after being mentioned on television.[2][5][8] The alt-right is younger than mainstream conservatism.[2][5][6]
Some in the alt-right describe it as a big tent or collection of belief systems.[7][14] The alt-right encompasses neo-reactionaries, white nationalists, nativists, and many other political positions. Commonalities shared across the otherwise loosely defined alt-right include anti-Jewish and anti-Zionist views, disdain for mainstream politics, and strong support for Donald Trump.[6][15][16] This support is largely based on the heavy value the alt-right places on strength and authority.[6][17] Adherents view mainstream conservatives with ridicule and have also been credited for originating and using the term "cuckservative",[2][18] a neologistic epithet described by some as racist.[19] In addition, sources like Newsday and the Cornell Review note the alt-right’s strong opposition to both legal and illegal immigration and their hardline stance on the European migrant crisis.[6][20] In addition, the alt-right has a strong focus on identity.[21] Members of the alt-right use social media and the internet to organize and share their beliefs,[21][22] particularly on image boards like /pol/. The alt-right rejects terms like racist and bigot as meaningless and displays a contempt for political correctness.[18][20]
Alternative Right refers to two publications, a website created by Richard Spencer and Colin Buchan Liddell which was hosted at AlternativeRight.com[1] and funded by NPI America,[2] and the "New Alternative Right" webzine which is edited by Liddell and Andy Nowicki.
The magazine addressed the need for an "alternative" to mainstream right-wing ideas that embraced ideas current in the European New Right and other post-war right wing writing.[3] Its nationalist stance attracted criticism from left-wing groups such as the Anti-Defamation League[4] and it has been accused by The Atlantic of being a "white supremacist" site.[5]
In 2012, Alternative Right published an article entitled "Is Black Genocide Right?" The article stated that the black race "has contributed almost nothing to the pool of civilization" and asked "whether Black Genocide is something worth considering"; after drawing widespread criticism, the article was deleted from the site.[8]
Care to expand on the definition?
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