Any bets on whether the "subject" of the "article" was completely fabricated?
In an interview, Solomon said his allegiance rested with the Boogaloo movement and that he had neglected to remove the armed militia sticker. Like many Boogaloos (huh?), Solomon also said he now recants his past support for President Donald Trump. Now, Solomon views himself as an "anarcho-capitalist."
Both Solomon and experts who have tracked the movement add that it was initially miscast as an offshoot of far-right white power extremism.[/i]
"Our whole thing is, we believe in freedom and absolute liberty for everyone regardless of race, creed, sex, gender, whatever; we don't care," Solomon said[/b]. (Sounds a lot like our founding fathers...)
J.J. MacNab, a fellow at the George Washington University Program on Extremism, said the confusion can distract from the movement's true beliefs and plans, particularly "accelerationism," which holds that the political order can be dismantled through increased civil disorder.
"Just because they're not white supremacists doesn't mean that they aren't antigovernment extremists wanting to take down cops and the rest of the government," MacNab said. "What they want to do is to kill cops, to kill politicians, to start chaos so that their anarcho-capitalist world can emerge. It's accelerationism. It's just not white supremacist accelerationism." (straw man alert anybody?)
Bold and commontary added by me. You can tell the person who wrote the piece was just given a script of buzz words...