By Joy Pullmann
Monday, May 07, 2018
Amazon has decided to pull the Alliance Defending Freedom
from its Amazon Smile program, in which shoppers can send a portion of their
Amazon purchases to charities. Because the Southern Poverty Law Center has
labeled ADF a hate group, Amazon yanked its opportunity to receive donations on
an equal playing field with other Amazon Smile participants, which include
highly political leftist organizations Planned Parenthood, the American Civil
Liberties Union, Media Matters, and Oxfam-America.
ADF is a nonprofit, First Amendment-focused legal
organization that has successfully argued in front of the Supreme Court seven
times in the past seven years. It is not some Klu Klux Klan revival, and to
suggest so is both false and deeply offensive. Yet slandering good-faith people
is SPLC’s raison d’etre. Why? Because
that’s how it rakes in millions of dollars a year, show its latest tax filings,
to fund its astronomical $432,723,955 endowment and management’s
$200,000-$350,000 annual salaries (plus perks!).
Numerous media outlets and watchdog organizations have
documented this reality, and over several decades. The Atlantic and Politico
have covered, albeit in friendly fashion, the organization’s decision to group
with neo-Nazis, black power groups, and Klu Klux Klan chapters people and
organizations like Sen. Rand Paul, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben
Carson, ADF, the Family Research Council, the Center for Immigration Studies,
and Muslim reformer Maajid Nawaz. Publications that have exposed SPLC’s hate-profiteering
include Tablet magazine; a newspaper local to SPLC’s
headquarters, the Montgomery Advertiser; Philanthropy magazine, Harper’s
magazine, Megan McArdle at Bloomberg; The
Weekly Standard; City Journal; National Review; and The Washington Free Beacon.
Simply put, SPLC is not a legitimate arbiter of public
discourse. It poisons public discourse for profit. Its business model is to
target groups and people, sometimes with baseless smears, to gin up fear and
anger so people send SPLC gobs of cash it largely doesn’t use to benefit the oppressed. Neither Amazon nor major
media outlets — such as CNN, The Los
Angeles Times, The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, the Associated
Press, CBS, and PBS — should amplify or give any credence to SPLC’s highly
partisan, highly personal, self-interested fear-mongering.
Here are a few reasons why. (The Federalist senior
contributor Stella Morabito offers
more here.)
1. SPLC’s Attacks
Are Purposefully Personal
“The SPLC’s hate group and extremist labels are
effective. Groups slapped with them have lost funding, been targeted by
activists and generally been banished from mainstream legitimacy,” Politico’s chummy writeup notes. “…in
America, even fighting racism can be very good business.”
SPLC’s “extremist” and “hate group” labels are not
impartial designations that help citizens, media, and public leaders make
better decisions about either local concerns or broader politics. At best, they
are self-interested marketing. At worst, they are designed to execute partisan
vendettas, to wield financial and political power against legitimate opponents
in public discourse.
“Sometimes the press will describe us as monitoring hate
crimes and so on…. I want to say plainly that
our aim in life is to destroy these groups, to completely
destroy them,” SPLC Senior Fellow Mark Potok said at a 2007 conference.
Of course the ideas and methods of the KKK and other
violent and bigoted groups that appear on SPLC’s listings are morally wrong and
should be rejected. But since SPLC spends the vast majority of its funds on its
own salaries and savings instead of tangible efforts to protect and serve
victims of bigotry, it seems pretty clear that it uses the relatively few
cranks and purveyors of reprehensible racism it can find in America to serve
itself — both financially and ideologically — rather than the public good.
2. The Southern
Poverty Law Center Is a Scam
“They’ve never spent more than 31 percent of the money
they were bringing in on programs, and sometimes they spent as little as 18
percent. Most nonprofits spend about 75 percent on programs,” noted Montgomery Advertiser Managing Editor
Jim Tharpe in a talk for Harvard University’s Nieman Foundation for Journalism.
That’s because SPLC is basically a very effective scam
organization that uses images of white-bedsheeted people and, now, Donald Trump
policies, to scare donors into sending them piles of money. Trump-mongering has
been very good for business. The organization’s latest IRS form, from 2017,
shows that “Gifts, grants, contributions, membership fees” to SPLC almost
tripled, from $50,297,653 in 2015 — already a huge amount — to $132,044,179 in
2016, of course the year Trump ran and won the presidency. Investigative reporters
and actual anti-hate-crimes groups say SPLC is largely a shell organization
that uses masterful marketing techniques to rake in big-time profits for its
staff, especially founder Morris Dees.
“Over the years, numerous investigators have pointed out
that most of the scary KKK and Nazi and militia groups that the SPLC insists
are lurking under our beds are actually ghost entities, with no employees, no
address, hardly any followers, and little or no footprint,” Philanthropy noted. “…Its 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. And the single biggest effort
undertaken by the SPLC? Fundraising. On the organization’s 2015 IRS 990 form it
declared $10 million of direct fundraising expenses, far more than it has ever
spent on legal services.”
Last year, a Washington Free Beacon investigation showed
SPLC keeps millions in offshore accounts, which charity experts labeled “a
huge red flag” and “completely unacceptable.”
3. The Southern
Poverty Law Center Is Deeply Biased
While listing among largely isolated and rare racist
groups several constructive, nonviolent organizations that lean conservative
such as ADF and the Ruth Institute, a small pro-family organization headed by a
genial PhD who has taught at Yale University, SPLC’s hate list does not include
violent leftist organizations such as Antifa.
SPLC says this is because ” as a general matter,
prejudice on the basis of factors such as race is more prevalent on the far
right than it is on the far left.” That’s not the case for anti-Semitism. Even
if one assumes we should ignore political labels and focus on actions and
ideology, as Megan McArdle notes, “the center offers bizarrely shifting
rationales that suggest that the staff started with the target they wanted to
deem hateful, and worked backward to the analysis.”
That is likely why its designated “haters” are those the
organization deems most likely to stir up contributions from its mostly liberal
donors, not groups and people who genuinely deserve calling out according to
objective criteria.
“The SPLC blacklist list contains practicing Muslims like
Maajid Nawaz, ex-Muslims like Ayaan Hirsi Ali, foreign-policy think-tankers
like Frank Gaffney and Daniel Pipes, and right-wing firebrands like David
Horowitz—none of whom could be reasonably described as anti-Muslim bigots,”
finds Tablet magazine. “…[T]he
Southern Poverty Law Center is now aggressively defending the kind of violent
supremacists [Islamists] it had once sought to prosecute, and attacking types
like Nawaz it had once defended against violence.”
SPLC is entitled to its own opinions, but it is not
entitled to respect for them or a pretense that they are fair, neutral,
unbiased, or free of self-serving motivations.
4. The Southern
Poverty Law Center Exploits Hate
SPLC “act[s] like they have hegemony over how to conduct
a civil rights debate in this country, which I find a strange posture coming
from a group of white men,” says Loretta Ross, program director for the Center
for Democratic Renewal, an Atlanta, Georgia-based white supremacy monitoring group.
That is likely because SPLC’s concern for civil rights appears to be a facade
to facilitate donor and victim exploitation.
In its expose, Harper’s
says former SPLC lawyer Gloria Browne, who resigned to protest its behavior,
“told reporters that the Center’s programs were calculated to cash in on ‘black
pain and white guilt.'” They are not targeted to need or effective social
solutions. Harper’s continues:
Horrifying as such incidents are,
hate groups commit almost no violence. More than 95 percent of all ‘hate
crimes,’ including most of the incidents SPLC letters cite (bombings, church
burnings, school shootings), are perpetrated by ‘lone wolves.’ Even Timothy
McVeigh, subject of one of the most extensive investigations in the FBI’s
history-and one of the most extensive direct-mail campaigns in the SPLC’s-was
never credibly linked to any militia organization.
Of course, however, “news of a declining Klan does not
make for inclining donations to Morris Dees,” so SPLC sensationalizes the
incidents of racial and anti-LGBT violence in the United States, which data
shows is still the most
racially tolerant country in the world. While of course this doesn’t mean
any incidents of bigotry are alright, SPLC’s profits depend on
mischaracterizing and and exploiting them in ways that damage social cohesion
and do not benefit actual victims.
Even when it does spend a tiny percentage of its war
chest on litigation, “the SPLC would pursue essentially meaningless but
headline-grabbing cases, exploiting its uncollectible verdicts through
sensational fundraising appeals that generated massive donations,” reports City Journal. “One disgruntled former
SPLC attorney complained that ‘[Dees] was on the Klan kick because it was such
an easy target—easy to beat in court, easy to raise big money on.’”
Because the SPLC depends on racism, violence, and
division for its revenue and legitimacy, they have reason to want more of these
terrible things, or at least the appearance of more. Their vested interest is
not in solving and reducing these social blights, but in maximizing and
perpetuating them. All the more reason polite society should starve their
fire-stoking of the oxygen of attention.
5. The SPLC
Foments Hatred, Fear, and Violence
The SPLC is infamous for offering a pretext for violence.
When eminent social scientist Charles Murray, whose work has done more to lift
U.S. minorities out of poverty than perhaps any other single living person,
visited Middlebury College for a talk, because SPLC has falsely smeared him as
a “white supremacist,” students rioted. They attacked Murray and a Middlebury
professor as security escorted them out, blocking and rocking their car and
yanking the professor’s hair so hard it caused a neck injury that required her
to wear a brace afterward.
Murray remains on the “hate list” and SPLC’s website
includes no statement about the incident.
In 2012, a young man guided by the SPLC “hate map”
entered the Family Research Council’s headquarters in Washington DC with a gun
and shot the security guard, who managed to disarm the shooter. Police later
determined the young man intended to kill people at the office because the SPLC
had labeled FRC an extremist organization. While condemning the violence, SPLC
continues to designate FRC a “hate” group and defend that designation.
After it designated Muslim reformer Nawaz an “extremist”
in 2016, the British Quilliam Foundation leader told The Atlantic: “They put a
target on my head. The kind of work that I do, if you tell the wrong kind of
Muslims that I’m an extremist, then that means I’m an target. They don’t have
to deal with any of this. I don’t have any protection. I don’t have any state
protection. These people are putting me on what I believe is a hit list.” Given
the FRC shooting four years earlier and the real dangers of opposing radical
Islamism, that’s not a specious claim.
City Journal
further reports that SPLC speaks highly of convicted domestic terrorist Bill
Ayers, whose organization Weather Underground fomented riots and bombed
government offices and banks:
The SPLC’s education project,
‘Teaching Tolerance,’ and its companion website, tolerance.org, market Ayers’s
books and describe him as ‘a highly respected figure in the field of
multicultural education.’ Failing to mention that Ayers dedicated the Weather
Underground’s 1974 revolutionary manifesto, Prairie Fire, to Robert F.
Kennedy’s assassin, Sirhan Sirhan, the SPLC lauds Ayers for his ‘rich vision of
teaching that interweaves passion, responsibility and self-reflection.’
Whatever credibility SPLC earned fighting some anti-KKK
cases in the 1970s is long gone. It has squandered its moral authority many
times over. Its proclamations exploit people to serve its bottom line, and
should receive no furtherance from media or organizations like Amazon.
Treating SPLC as a good-faith arbiter of public discourse
grants speech police power to an organization whose business model is to make
money from poisoning public discourse. Those who care about free speech and
justice will grant no such power to folks who, like SPLC, exploit these noble
and necessary ideas for their own selfish, cynical, socially destructive ends.
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