Subject: Re: The bullets follow the bullhorn
Y'all are much more violent than we are, stats prove it. You can claim you're as violent as Islamic Jihadists on your home turf - MAGA be proud!


Executive Summary

*Right-wing extremist terror incidents in the U.S. have been increasing since the mid-2000s, but the past six years have seen their sharpest rise
yet. There were just seven right-wing terror incidents in the period 2005-2007, but by 2017-2019 there were 27, which increased to 40 in
2020-2022.
*The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) Center on Extremism (COE) has documented 67 domestic terror incidents by right-wing extremists in the United
States from 2017 to 2022. These include successful terrorist attacks, failed terrorist attacks and foiled terrorist plots.
*White supremacists were responsible for more attacks than any other type of right-wing extremist in the past six years (30 of 67, or 45%), but
anti-government extremists, anti-abortion extremists and other types of right-wing extremists have also plotted and carried out attacks.
*Right-wing terror attacks during this period also resulted in more deaths (58) from such attacks than any of the previous six-year periods since
the time of the Oklahoma City bombing. All but five of those deaths occurred in white supremacist attacks—primarily mass shootings directed
against minority targets.
*Most incidents (72%) involved only a single perpetrator, whether an arsonist targeting an abortion clinic or a white supremacist shooter targeting
a synagogue. Single perpetrators were also far more likely to successfully carry out attacks; plots with multiple perpetrators were usually
stopped by law enforcement. Most incidents were not committed by organized extremist groups.
*Firearms were the most popular weapon chosen for attacks (27 of 67 incidents, or 40%, not counting two additional incidents where firearms were
one of two weapon types). Incendiary devices (featured in 25% of incidents) were also popular, followed by explosive devices (18%).
*Right-wing terrorists considered a wide array of targets. Government targets were most frequently chosen by perpetrators (in 18 of 67, or 27% of
incidents), closely followed by targets based on actual or perceived religion (17 of 67, or 25%), which consisted of Muslims and Jews. Abortion-
related targets and targets based on race (primarily Black people) were also common, at nine and eight, respectively (13% and 12%).

https://www.adl.org/resources/...

. Across both datasets, we find that radical acts perpetrated by individuals associated with left-wing causes are less likely to be violent. In the United States, we find no difference between the level of violence perpetrated by right-wing and Islamist extremists. However, differences in violence emerge on the global level, with Islamist extremists being more likely than right-wing extremists to engage in more violent act

https://www.start.umd.edu/publ...