Anonymous ID: 646ae5 Feb. 15, 2023, 11:25 a.m. No.18353074   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3111

>>18353052

>but that's how they do it.

 

Neo-Nazi militant group grooms teenagers

 

Secret efforts to groom and recruit teenagers by a neo-Nazi militant group have been exposed by covert recordings.

 

They capture senior members of The Base interviewing young applicants and discussing how to radicalise them.

 

The FBI has described the group as seeking to unite white supremacists around the world and incite a race war.

 

The recordings were passed to US civil rights organisation, the Southern Poverty Law Center, before some were shared with BBC One's Panorama.

 

Rinaldo Nazzaro, founder of The Base, is a 47-year-old American. Earlier this year the BBC revealed he was directing the organisation from his upmarket flat in St. Petersburg, Russia.

 

The interviews, which took place via conference call on an encrypted app, followed a pattern - prospective members were asked by Nazzaro about their personal history, ethnicity, radicalisation journey and experience with weapons, before a panel of senior members posed their own questions.

 

Secret efforts to groom and recruit teenagers by a neo-Nazi militant group have been exposed by covert recordings.

 

They capture senior members of The Base interviewing young applicants and discussing how to radicalise them.

 

The FBI has described the group as seeking to unite white supremacists around the world and incite a race war.

 

The recordings were passed to US civil rights organisation, the Southern Poverty Law Center, before some were shared with BBC One's Panorama.

 

Rinaldo Nazzaro, founder of The Base, is a 47-year-old American. Earlier this year the BBC revealed he was directing the organisation from his upmarket flat in St. Petersburg, Russia.

 

The interviews, which took place via conference call on an encrypted app, followed a pattern - prospective members were asked by Nazzaro about their personal history, ethnicity, radicalisation journey and experience with weapons, before a panel of senior members posed their own questions.

 

The would-be recruits were quizzed on what books they had read, including Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf, and were encouraged to familiarise themselves with the group's white supremacist ideology, which predicts and seeks to accelerate racial warfare, requiring followers to prepare for conflict and social breakdown.

 

During the calls, Nazzaro can be heard welcoming members of other extremist groups.

 

The young applicants, who hide behind aliases and display varying degrees of ideological awareness, describe their radicalisation by online videos and propaganda.

 

When interviewees left the calls, senior members discussed their potential before arranging to vet them in person at a later date.

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-53128169