How Richard Spencer’s home town weathered a neo-Nazi ‘troll storm’
How Richard Spencer’s home town weathered a neo-Nazi ‘troll storm’
Posted by John P. Bradford // February 6, 2017
The residents of Whitefish, a small Montana ski town, provoked an onslaught of antisemitic harassment for standing up to the alt-right racist in their midst
On a bitterly cold afternoon, the residents of a Montana ski town waited to see if armed neo-Nazis would show up to march through their streets.
Whitefish, a tiny town of 7,000 people, is an enclave of Clinton supporters in a largely conservative state. But on the mountain above town, near the ski resort, there is a picturesque mansion where Americas most famous white supremacist sometimes lives.
Richard Spencer, 38, is a well-groomed, well-educated advocate for the creation of a white ethno-state in North America. In November, he had been captured on camera shouting Hail Trump! Hail victory! while others gave the Nazi salute.
Residents of Whitefish, where Spencer had lived part-time, had tried to take a more peaceful approach to confronting the extremist in their midst: they had issued a town proclamation denouncing Spencer and his racist beliefs. What Whitefish got in response was a hailstorm of antisemitic harassment and threats from Spencers neo-Nazi allies that generated headlines across the world.
Neo-Nazis urge armed march to harass Montana Jews, the Times of Israel reported in late December.
Whitefish, a resort town, had found itself on the frontlines of a battle against rising racist extremism that is playing out across the US and Europe.
Residents are facing questions that other, larger communities might soon confront. They said they knew it was important to take a stand against hatred especially as neo-Nazi extremists seemed to be edging closer towards the political mainstream. They also they knew their attackers craved conflict and attention, and that feeding the controversy meant the trolls were winning.
It was a vicious cycle that no one in town quite knew how to escape.
With Spencer, some Whitefish residents said, they faced a particular challenge. What was the best way to confront a fringe extremist to block his rise without simply giving him a new opportunity to paint himself as the victim?
The first wave of abuse started in mid-December. A story from ABC Fox Montana reporting that Whitefish was being torn apart by a white nationalists notoriety hit 4chan, the infamous online forum, said Will Randall, the co-chair of Love Lives Here, a local group founded to oppose neo-Nazis. The Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi website, encouraged supporters to tell people affiliated with the story they were sickened by their Jew agenda to attack and harm the mother of someone whom they disagree with.
ABC Fox Montana had reported that business filings listed a mountain resort home where Spencers mother, Sherry, lives as the main address for Spencers blandly named white nationalist organization, the National Policy Institute.
The story quoted a local realtor, who is Jewish, slamming Sherry Spencer for profiting off the people of the local community while having facilitated Richards work spreading hate.
Sherry hit back, andblamed Love Lives Here, which had publicly opposed her sons racism, for causing financial harm to many innocent parties.
The Daily Stormer posted the photographs and contact information for the realtor, and for Jewish residents affiliated with Love Lives Here including a female rabbi and the realtors child. The site cautioned trolls to follow the law and not threaten or engage in violence.
Later posts were accompanied by a graphic of the locals faces hovering over the image of the door to a concentration camp, along with antisemitic slurs and frequent references to the Holocaust.
One of the targets of the harassment, Randall said, had received a photo of a gun barrel with the message: She needs a visit from the Montana Mangler.
In the days that followed, Whitefish businesses deemed sympathetic to Jews were also bombarded with negative online reviews, harassing phone calls and threatening messages, owners said. Your time is up, you leftist faggot. Hitler Claus is coming to town.
The waves of antisemitic abuse stunned and appalled the tiny resort town an outpost best known for skiing and hiking trips to Glacier national park.