'These groups are real and cannot be ignored': Vigilance key to fighting hate, says former white supremacist - Action News
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ManitobaPoint of View

'These groups are real and cannot be ignored': Vigilance key to fighting hate, says former white supremacist

Could Patrik Mathews have been discovered earlier? How safe is our military from extremists trying to infiltrate?Those are the questions governments, law enforcement, academics and security experts have to answer says Tony McAleer, who was himself once a white supremacist.

'To solve the problem of hate, we have to understand it,' says Tony McAleer

Tony McAleer, a former skinhead and white supremacist, said the new hateful conduct policy is a good first step, but he is disappointed it doesn't include more stringent screening processes for recruits and reservists. (Submitted by Tony McAleer)

Could Patrik Mathews have been discovered earlier?

How safe is our military from extremists trying to infiltrate?

How does this happen and what can be done?

These are the $1 million questions asked by governments, law enforcement, academics and security experts alike.

To solve the problem of hate, we have to understand it.

I was once an adherent to the very same beliefs that Mathews, a former Manitoba military reservist allegedly linkedto a neo-Nazi group, is accused of espousing.

Patrik Mathews, seen in this 2015 photo, is an alleged white supremacist group member and former Manitoba reservist. He was indicted by a U.S. grand jury in January on firearm and alien-related charges. (Courtney Rutherford/CBC)

At the age of 20, I believed I would be dead or in jail by the age of 30 as a white revolutionary,glorifying the murderous exploits of a terror cell in the Pacific Northwest called "The Order" led by, ironically, Robert Mathews.

These groups are real and cannot be ignored.

The violence and terror of The Order are romanticized by those who find purpose and significance in moving from zero to hero by embracing grandiose fantasies of joining a heroic struggle, to save the white race from extinction.

In my opinion, it isn't the ideology that draws people in, but what these groups offerpurpose, community, belonging and identity.

Tony McAleer on the cure for hate

5 years ago
Duration 2:36
An ex self-described 'neo nazi' offers advice on how to find and reform white supremacists.

Young people who are deficient in these areas are vulnerable to a whole host of bad actors seeking to exploit them.

How do young people become vulnerable?

The challenge is that the events and trauma that create the vulnerabilities to make this noxious ideology seductive and allow for a rationalization for violence also make lousy predictors.

I don't blame anything in my childhood for what I did.

I walked in on my father with another woman when I was 10, and was subsequently beaten at Catholic school afterwards, because of my failing grades.

But so were many other kids,and they didn't wind up in neo-Nazi groups like I did.

I don't ever blame anything in my childhood for what I did because everything I did I chose to do and I have to take responsibility for that.

But looking at my childhood helps to understand the lens through which I made those choices.

Shift from blame to understanding

To find a solution to this problem, we need to shift the examination from blame to understanding.

Through the lens of understanding, interventions are possible.

While their ideas and actions may be monstrous, these people aren't monsters.

A common tactic amongthese groups is toencouragemembersto join the military for weapons training which I myself had done in the late 1980s.

The military should assume that there are violent extremists in their midst.

In my opinion,the military should follow a tougher screening process if they aren't already. They should make it more akin to that of police departments, etc.

But we shouldn't expect 100 per cent success.

I believe vigilance is key here. The military should assume that there are violent extremists in their midst, and always will be.

'While their actions may be monstrous, these people aren't monsters,' says McAleer. (Donna Carreiro/CBC)

There is no magic predictor that can reveal everyone who is a threat to our society and its values.

And the problem of identifying extremists won't be solved by an algorithm or predictive analytics.

The closest we can getis to identify people who may be vulnerable.

But in doing so, we identify who will likely require help. And we need to give it to them.

This is a whole-of-society problem that requires a whole-of-society solution.

We must become better at understanding it if we are to solve this problem.


This column is part of CBC's Opinion section. For more information about this section, please read this editor's blog and our FAQ.