EXCLUSIVE: 澳彩开奖 Investigation Shows Man Who Marched with Alleged Kenosha Gunman Was Immersed in White Supremacist Propaganda
Montgomery, Ala. 鈥 A 澳彩开奖 Hatewatch investigation found that Ryan Balch, a 31-year-old Wisconsin man who says he 鈥渋nserted 鈥 himself with an alleged gunman and a contingent of militia conducting armed patrols in Kenosha, used his social media accounts to link to a Nazi propaganda video, amplified white nationalist Richard Spencer, and uploaded symbols associated with the boogaloo movement. Balch originally drew attention to himself after posting about the interaction on Facebook the morning after the shooting.
Hatewatch tied Balch to that also indicates he was immersed in far-right rhetoric, followed conspiracy theorists and regularly posted extremist content, including a video, called 鈥淭ruth Will Triumph: Adolf Hitler,鈥 in which Hitler speeches are heavily used.
鈥淲hat Balch鈥檚 social media history shows is that he was immersed in the kind of extreme far-right, white supremacist radicalization pathways we have seen causing havoc throughout the Trump era,鈥 said 澳彩开奖 investigative reporter Michael Edison Hayden, author of the report. 鈥淎nd he was into that dangerous, online propaganda before he decided to go to Kenosha with a gun and join Rittenhouse on the streets there.鈥
Following the shooting in Kenosha in Kenosha, Balch that he blamed 鈥渢he government鈥 for what took place: 鈥淚t is my belief that we only faced one monster out there that night. The Government. It sought to agitate and create a situation where this would happen. I鈥檓 seeing people refer to this as the start of some 鈥榗ivil war鈥 in certain communities. I don鈥檛 know about that but it鈥檚 even clearer to me after the fact that we need to unite under a common cause and stop letting them trick us into killing one another and destroying one another鈥檚 lives. Together we鈥檙e far stronger than we are divided.鈥
Balch has not been accused of a crime or been linked to the shooting by law enforcement.
Critics have slammed social media companies like Twitter and Facebook for the role their websites play in profiting off of the type of political street violence that has become more commonplace since Trump took office in 2017.
Read the investigative piece here.
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