The
Southern Poverty Law Center today is releasing information about how hate
groups are using Internet sites like YouTube to spread their hate.
Hate groups used to walk down city streets or stand on
courthouse steps passing out pamphlets, but now they can post a video and reach the
world.
The SPLC says some of the videos have been viewed tens of thousands
of times.

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Hate Groups and YouTube
Al Tompkins interviews Brentin Mock, who wrote about hate groups using sites like YouTube to spread their messages.
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You can listen to a podcast interview I did with the author
of the story, Brentin Mock.
I am intentionally not linking to the video that Mock
mentioned in his report, but you can easily look them up by using the search box
on YouTube.com. Once you look one of them up, you will find many others listed
as related videos. The SPLC says:
One of the most popular videos, "Branik
White Power," is a poor-quality depiction of skinheads gone wild, set to
roaring hate rock. The high-speed montage depicts Nazi skins dancing violently
in the "mosh pit" near the stage, throwing punches, waving "SS" flags, and
showing off white-power tattoos. Since it was posted by YouTube user "bulldog88" in May 2006, it has been downloaded more than 40,000 times.
Some of the most noxious videos are more
reserved in their approach, such as "The Real David Duke," which has the former
Klan leader pontificating on race relations for nine minutes and which has been
viewed more than 10,000 times since it was posted last October. Another example
is "David Irving on the Holocaust," a five-and-a-half-minute excerpt of a
speech by the notorious Holocaust denier in Britain that's been downloaded over 4,000 times
during the same time period.
The Irving video was posted to YouTube
last October by "Hadden88"("88" is neo-Nazi code for "Heil Hitler"), who has
compiled his own YouTube "channel" of 79 videos, most of them anti-Semitic
mini-"documentaries" and speeches by hate peddlers like Irving, National
Alliance founder William Pierce, and Adolf Hitler.
Other popular YouTube racist videos
include a series of six "White Nationalist News" clips, the earliest episode
dated last Sept. 8, some of which have been viewed more than 3,000 times; "Ku
Klux Klan -- A Secret History," posted in September, and its accompaniment "Ku
Klux Klan 4-Ever," posted in December, each viewed over 11,000 times; "Nazi
KKK," posted in October and viewed 15,000 times; "Russian skinheads. We are
here," posted in December and viewed over 45,000 times; and "Skinhead" posted
in November and viewed 132,000 times.
In his interview with me, Mock points out that
YouTube, for example, does try to remove such hate videos, but with a flood of
new videos being posted every day, it is impossible to keep up with them all.
The Future of Roller Rinks
The
number of roller rinks nationwide has declined in the last 25 years.
The
San Diego Union-Tribune says:
The
number of roller rinks nationwide has taken a tumble since the early 1980s. [...]
Many closures nationwide stem from
operators hitting retirement age and fielding lucrative offers to sell prime
land, [Joe] Champa [president of Indianapolis-based Roller Skating Association International] said. The rising popularity of in-line skating, video games, the
Internet and other diversions are also factors.
There is some hope
that a surge of interest in roller hockey and even roller derby will breathe
new life into rinks that have not seen glory days since the disco years.
Over
the years,
I have seen some stories mention that parents are less likely these
days to drop their kids off to a public skate session at a rink because
of safety concerns. While school functions and parties are nice income
for
rinks, the public skate sessions are their real bread and butter.
I am seeing stories of rinks closing around the country. Here's a story from The (Longview) Daily News about one in Washington. The story contains this passage:
Roughly 1,100 new skating rinks opened across the United States between the late 1970s and
1983, bringing the total number of rinks to 2,300, according to officials at Roller Skating Association
International, a trade association representing skating rink owners and
operators.
And the story
adds:
Rollerskating's popularity plunged everywhere in
the early 1980s, resulting in the closure of many rinks across the country,
said Joe Champa. [...]
By the mid-1980s, the number of skating rinks had fallen from
2,300 nationwide to 1,200, Champa said Friday. Business slowly began to
increase again and then plunged briefly after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
But for the last three years, rink operators in most parts of the
country are experiencing double-digit increases in revenues, Champa said.
Today,
900 roller rinks are members of the skating association, and Champa estimates
there are an additional 300 to 400 smaller rinks in the United States that aren't members.
Al's Morning Multimedia
Al's
Morning Meeting reader Rod Peterson, news Director at WHO-TV in Des Moines, Iowa, gave
me a heads up about the station's presidential election site that is now up and fully running.
With nearly half of the country making
plans to vote in the primary before the end of February, you had better get
moving with your online election coverage as WHO did. The site includes a plog (political weblog),
which is parked on Blogger. There
are some fun flashback videos from previous elections, which I think is a
nice way to use the digital assets you have stored in your archive. Maybe more
useful is a
constantly updated list of which candidates are in Iowa and where they are.
KCCI-TV in
Des Moines also has a 2008 page up and running.
Surprisingly, the TV stations are way ahead of newspapers in rolling out big political coverage online this early.
Costly Overseas Vacations
If you are planning an overseas trip this summer, you better
check the cost. It
is getting more expensive by the day as the dollar slides against the Euro.
SODs
The
New York Times
published an interesting piece on start-over dads,
people such as Paul McCartney, Kenny Rogers, Julio Iglesias and much
more ordinary folks who father babies even when they are nearing
retirement age.
The story says:
"It's such a new phenomenon that there's a dearth of studies about
it," said Andrew J. Cherlin, a professor of sociology at Johns Hopkins [University] and the
author of books about the American family. "We've never had men living so long
and having new families. I know many men who become fathers at age 40, 45 or 50
because they met their wives in midlife and decided to have children. Graying
at the temples is not new among fathers. But a head of white hair is."
There are growing indications that SODhood may entail risks for
children. In recent years studies have suggested that older fathers are more
likely to have children with autism, schizophrenia, dwarfism and other serious
problems.
You Need One of These
Quik
Pod is a monopod that attaches to your camera and allows you to take a
picture above a crowd and in awkward places, like underneath stuff. You journos
who are being asked to take a lot more pictures and videos should ask for one
of these. Learn more here.
We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.
Editor's
Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story
excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as
original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly
from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided
whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends upon the
accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and
inaccuracies found will be corrected.
Now let's see if I understand what you said about...