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Related: About this forumNeo-Nazi memes and the conspiracy to kill Cristina Fernndez de Kirchner
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Our level of distrust in democratic institutions, the media, and society in general is well documented and it follows certain global trends that have given rise to dangerous fringe organisations, particularly right-wingers, more broadly grouped by having been pushed toward the edges of the system.
AGUSTINO FONTEVECCHIA
Acouple of fresh polls indicate a troubling tendency regarding the assassination attempt against Cristina Fernández de Kirchner: approximately half of the population believes it didnt happen. Whether Fernando Andrés Sabag Montiel, aka Tedi aka Nando, intended to take out the vice-president and leader of the pan-Peronist Frente de Todos coalition at a moment of extreme political division that she sought to use in her favour, or whether he was part of an orchestrated distracting manoeuvre to change the game, the final outcome is the same. At this point there is no concrete evidence explaining why he did it (even though there are several very interesting lines we will be discussing) and the socio-political ecosystem has entered a new phase that is potentially more dangerous and in which some will benefit and others suffer.
According to an interesting study put together by political consultancy firm Trespuntozero conducted during the two successive days after the attempted murder, 53.6 percent of respondents believe it was a situation created so that Cristina Fernández de Kirchner can play the role of the victim. Only 30.8 percent believe it was a real attack on her life. Even among those who voted for the Frente de Todos, 24.4 percent believe it was made up.' These are shocking figures that tell us more about ourselves as a society than about what actually happened. Our level of distrust in democratic institutions, the media, and society in general is well documented and it follows certain global trends that have given rise to dangerous fringe organisations, particularly right-wingers, more broadly grouped by having been pushed toward the edges of the system.
Whether he was part of a plot or not, Sabag Montiel fits the description perfectly. In a brilliant piece by journalist Juan Ruocco titled Memes and assassination published in his blog, he explains how Sabag Montiels digital persona matches that of radicalised agents believing neo-Nazi conspiracy theories. Following in the line of philosopher Dan Dennetts dangerous memes, Ruocco accepts that memes are cultural replicators that spread like viruses that shape our conscious community, with only the most advantageous or fittest of them surviv[ing]. (The term was originally coined by evolutionary scientist and writer Richard Dawkins in his book titled The Selfish Gene published in 1976). While we generally associate memes with funny pictures shared online, Ruocco uses the concept of a memeplex or collection interrelated cultural phenomena and hones in on a specific fascist set of memes that can lead into violent action.
Sabag Montiel had one of the most widely used crypto-Nazi symbols tattooed on his elbow, the black sun, which was used by the most high-profile participants in recent mass shootings, Brenton Tarrant (Christchurch shooting in New Zealand, 51 killed), Anders Brievik (Utoya massacre in Norway, 77 killed), Patrick Crusius (El Paso shooting in USA, 23 killed), and Payton Gendron (Buffalo shooting in USA, 10 killed). They have become the heroes of these movements and all of them used the same methodology according to Ruocco, mass shooting, manifesto, neo-Nazi memes. The overarching idea that connects their beliefs is that we are experiencing decadence in Western values as a consequence of a racial contamination, whether its by the Jews, African Americans or other immigrants. A racial war must be fought in order to rid the West of The Lefts cultural control, which can include Marxism and feminism, among other ideologies.
More:
https://www.batimes.com.ar/news/opinion-and-analysis/neo-nazi-memes-and-the-conspiracy-to-kill-cristina-fernandez-de-kirchner.phtml