• 'Essentially a Fraud'

    From Jane Fonda Socialist Report@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 30 04:24:00 2021
    XPost: la.general, talk.politics.mideast, alt.journalism.newspapers
    XPost: atl.general

    The Southern Poverty Law Center has less to do with justice than
    with fundraising

    It had to happen sometime. The Southern Poverty Law Center has
    made so many vile, unjustified, hysterical, and hateful
    accusations over the years, it was bound to pay a price. When it
    did, the bill due was $3.375 million. Such was the amount the
    SPLC agreed to pay the British Muslim Maajid Nawaz and his think
    tank, the Quilliam Foundation, after smearing them in a “Field
    Guide to Anti-Muslim Extremists.” Nawaz, a former Islamist
    radical turned whistleblower who calls for the modernization of
    Islam in columns for the Daily Beast and on London talk radio,
    had threatened to sue the SPLC for defamation — traditionally
    and properly a difficult case to make in U.S. courts. Yet the
    SPLC caved spectacularly.

    The amusing but uncharacteristically groveling tone of the
    SPLC’s apology suggests fear of Nawaz’s lawyers: “We have taken
    the time to do more research,” stated the SPLC (doing research —
    what a novel idea!), noting that Nawaz has made “valuable and
    important contributions to public discourse,” adding that he is
    “most certainly not” an anti-Muslim extremist, and concluding,
    “We would like to extend our sincerest apologies to Mr. Nawaz,
    Quilliam, and our readers for the error.” The settlement further
    stipulated that the SPLC’s president, Richard Cohen, would film
    a video apology, prominently display it on the outfit’s website,
    and distribute the apology to every email address and mailing
    address on the SPLC mailing list. Whether Cohen was further
    required to come over to Nawaz’s house every week and iron his
    laundry could not be learned.

    The Nawaz settlement was the most damaging episode yet in what
    has become an increasingly dire situation for the SPLC’s
    floundering image. Image, painstakingly built since its founding
    in 1971, is its chief asset. Image is what keeps the dollars
    flowing in. The Right has long been calling attention to the
    SPLC’s questionable tactics, but these days even Politico, The
    Atlantic, and PBS are running skeptical pieces about the saints
    of the South. Politico wondered whether the SPLC was
    “overstepping its bounds” and quoted an anti-terrorism expert,
    J. M. Berger, who pointed out that “the problem partly stems
    from the fact that the [SPLC] wears two hats, as both an
    activist group and a source of information.” David A. Graham of
    The Atlantic wrote that the “Field Guide” was “more like an
    attempt to police the discourse on Islam than a true inventory
    of anti-Muslim extremists, of whom there is no shortage, and
    opened SPLC up to charges that it had strayed from its civil-
    rights mission.” PBS interviewer Bob Garfield suggested to its
    president that the SPLC is increasingly seen “not as fighting
    the good fight but as being opportunists exploiting our
    political miseries” and that this was tantamount to killing “the
    goose that lays the golden egg.” In 2015 the FBI dropped the
    SPLC from its list of resources about hate groups.

    Lately the SPLC has taken on an increasingly desperate, self-
    parodying tone, denouncing such mainstream figures as the
    psychologist, author, and PJ Media columnist Helen Smith and the
    American Enterprise Institute scholar Christina Hoff Sommers,
    calling them “anti-feminist female voices” and adding them to
    its double-secret-probation list under the catch-all term “male
    supremacy.” Former Vanderbilt professor Carol Swain, who is
    black, wrote in the Wall Street Journal that the group had
    “smeared” her after she questioned the SPLC’s “misguided focus.”
    Mark Potok, then the SPLC’s national spokesman, de­nounced her
    as “an apologist for white supremacists” in a story published on
    the front page of Swain’s local news­paper, the Tennessean.

    To sum up recent events: The SPLC has been crazily denouncing
    highly respected writers who are Muslim, black, and female for
    being anti-Muslim, anti-black, and misogynist. All of these
    contrived charges are in the service of the SPLC’s core mission,
    which is to separate progressives from their dollars.

    Founded in 1971, the Alabama-based SPLC, dubbed “essentially a
    fraud” by Ken Silverstein in a blog post for Harper’s back in
    2010, discovered some time ago that it could line its coffers by
    positioning itself as a scourge of racists. Silverstein reported
    that in 1987, after the SPLC sued the United Klans of America,
    which had almost no assets to begin with, over the lynching
    murder of Michael Donald, the son of Beulah Mae Donald, the
    grieving mother realized $52,000 from the court case — but the
    SPLC used the matter in fundraising appeals (including one that
    exploited a photograph of Donald’s corpse) that raked in some $9
    million in donations. Today the SPLC typically hauls in (as it
    did in 2015) $50 million. In its 2016 annual report it listed
    its net endowment assets at an eye-popping $319 million. It’s
    now quaint to recall that, when Silverstein called the SPLC the
    wealthiest civil-rights group in America, it had a mere $120
    million in assets. That was in 2000. President Richard Cohen and co-founder–cum–chief trial counsel Morris Dees each raked in
    well over $350,000 in compen­sation in 2015.

    News that has anything to do with the South or with race has
    proven to be a bonanza for the SPLC; after the events in
    Charlottesville last summer, the SPLC swiftly took action to
    capitalize. It placed a digital picture of Heather Heyer, the
    young Charlottesville resi­dent who was killed when a white
    supremacist drove into a crowd, on its “Wall of Tolerance” and
    blasted out press releases about it. What is the Wall of
    Tolerance? It’s a gimmick to make donors feel important, neon-
    style virtue-signaling in the pixels that light up a giant video
    screen that continuously scrolls the names of 500,000 people who
    have taken a pledge to be tolerant. After Charlottesville, Apple
    CEO Tim Cook pledged $1 million to the group and put an SPLC
    donation button in the company’s iTunes store. JPMorgan Chase
    promised $500,000.

    The SPLC’s publicity machine turns such events into gold,
    creating the impression that we’re forever a week away from a
    neo-Nazi takeover or a rebirth of the KKK. As both the Nazis and
    the white-bedsheet fans have done the SPLC the disservice of
    fading into tiny remnants of themselves, the SPLC is forced to
    find new monsters, designating the likes of Rand Paul, Ayaan
    Hirsi Ali, and Ben Carson as extremists.

    Some on the left are well aware of what the SPLC is up to. As
    Alexander Cockburn put it in The Nation, Dees is “king of the
    hate business.” Karl Zinsmeister of Philanthropy Roundtable
    notes that the SPLC’s “two largest expenses are propaganda
    operations: creating its annual lists of ‘haters’ and
    ‘extremists,’ and running a big effort that pushes ‘tolerance
    education’ through more than 400,000 public-school teachers.” In
    2015 the SPLC said it had spent $10 million on direct
    fundraising, which is a lot more than it has ever spent on
    outside legal services. The group has never spent more than 31
    percent of its donations on programs, Zinsmeister pointed out,
    and at times has spent as little as 18 percent.

    Earlier than others, the SPLC grasped the importance of the verb
    “hate.”

    An easy way to ratchet up hatred, and the passion that makes
    people open their checkbooks, is to accuse others of hate. Hate
    sometimes proves tricky to control, however. In 2010, the
    Southern Poverty Law Center put the Family Research Council
    (FRC) — a conserva­tive Christian group — on the “hate map” that
    appears on its website. A gunman guided by the map later walked
    into the FRC building, his goal to “kill as many as possible and
    smear the Chick-fil-A sandwiches in victims’ faces.” The gunman
    who shot Republican House majority whip Steve Scalise and three
    others in an attack on Republicans last year was an SPLC fan. To
    the SPLC, the learned social scientist Charles Murray is a
    “white nationalist” who peddles “racist pseudoscience.”
    Professors and protesters at Middlebury College opposed Murray’s
    appearance there in a letter that cited the SPLC as its (sole)
    source, and when Murray appeared there to give a lecture, the
    protesters shouted him down and manhandled a woman professor who
    was appearing at the same event.

    The SPLC has become a kind of Weimar Republic of hate inflation.
    Its list of “hate groups” looks increasingly like a way of
    attacking ordinary conservatives. It tagged the Alliance
    Defending Freedom as an “anti-LGBT hate group.” The Alliance
    Defending Freedom is simply one of the multitudes of legal-
    activist groups trying dutifully to win its arguments in the
    appropriate courtrooms. The ADF was targeted by the SPLC because
    it defended the proprietor of Masterpiece Cakeshop on religious-
    liberty grounds, arguing that the cake maker could not be forced
    to spell out sentiments about gay marriage with which he did not
    agree. If the ADF is a hate group, then I guess so is the seven-
    member majority of the U.S. Supreme Court that gave Masterpiece
    a victory in the case.

    In October 2014, the SPLC labeled the great neurosurgeon Ben
    Carson an “extremist.” Because this designation made the SPLC
    look silly and risked the group’s coveted public perception as
    nonpartisan, it backed down. Sort of: “We’ve reviewed our
    profile and have concluded that it did not meet our standards,
    so we have taken it down and apologize to Dr. Carson.” Then, in
    the same statement, the SPLC resumed hammering Carson as an
    extremist for saying things such as “Marriage is between a man
    and a woman” and for being one of innumerable talking heads on
    cable news to make facile comparisons between the U.S. and Nazi
    Germany. We’ll take it as a given that there are far too many
    Nazi analogies being made these days, but if the SPLC is serious
    about policing those it’ll take note of the many talking heads
    on the left who are making them.

    Dees, who earned a spot in (I’m not making this up) the Direct
    Marketing Association’s Hall of Fame for his service to the
    cause of pitching birthday cakes, cookbooks, tractor-seat
    cushions, and other junk-mail items, is “more than a little
    Trumpian himself,” according to Politico. “I learned everything
    I know about hustling from the Baptist Church,” Dees once said,
    according to a 2000 piece that Silverstein wrote for Harper’s.
    “Spending Sundays on those hard benches listening to the
    preacher pitch salvation — why, it was like getting a Ph.D. in
    selling.” Dees’s onetime business partner Millard Fuller told
    Silverstein, “Morris and I . . . shared the overriding purpose
    of making a pile of money. We were not particular about how we
    did it; we just wanted to be independently rich.”

    Dees once told his donors that he would stop fundraising when
    the SPLC endowment reached $55 million. When the SPLC blew by
    that milestone, he upped it to $100 million. Today it continues
    to build its huge endowment while its six-story, multi-million-
    dollar headquarters is “the most architecturally striking
    structure in downtown Mont­gomery,” according to Politico.

    Stephen Bright, a lawyer and longtime director of the Southern
    Center for Human Rights who actually defends the indigent in
    death-penalty cases, wrote in 2007 that “Morris Dees is a con
    man and fraud. . . . He has taken advantage of naïve, well-
    meaning people — some of moderate or low incomes — who believe
    his pitches and give to his $175-million operation.” He added
    that because Dees “spends so much on fund raising, his operation
    spends $30 million a year to accomplish less than what many
    other organizations accomplish on shoestring budgets.”

    The SPLC can no longer be fairly termed a nonpartisan watchdog
    group. It has become a hate group itself. Actual political
    violence is of no interest to it unless it can be deployed in
    service of the SPLC’s thinly veiled campaign to damage the
    Right. Bafflement ensued when, in 2012, National Review’s
    Charles C. W. Cooke called up the SPLC to ask whether the outfit
    was adding Occupy Wall Street to the list of hate groups it
    tracks after three anarchists linked to the movement were caught
    plotting to blow up a bridge in Cleveland (all three later
    pleaded guilty). An SPLC flack explained that his group “only
    tracks those who commit violence or who seek to destroy whole
    systems in the name of an ideology.” Since this was exactly what
    the Occupy fanatics were up to, Cooke was puzzled. “They were
    anarchists,” the spokesman told Cooke. Yeah. So?

    Well, the spokesman added sheepishly, “We’re not really set up
    to cover the extreme Left.”

    https://www.nationalreview.com/magazine/2018/09/10/southern- poverty-law-center-essentially-a-fraud/
     

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