When nazis organize as though borders don't actually matter:
Members of Canada's biggest white nationalist group trained this spring with U.S. counterparts south of the border and met with the founder of a global movement of fascist fight clubs, a CBC visual investigation has found.
One expert called it a "very significant" signal of closer co-ordination between white supremacist groups on both sides of the border.
A Telegram post with blurred faces shows Second Sons Canada members posing with an individual CBC identified as Robert Rundo, an American neo-Nazi who founded the "active club" movement. Other posts show them training and meeting with active club groups in Texas and South Carolina in late March.
"It's very significant that we're seeing Canadians travel across the border," said Steven Rai, senior research manager at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a U.K.-based think-tank dedicated to studying authoritarianism, hate and extremism.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/active-club-canada-us-fascist-9.7199601
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Canadian, U.S. fascist fight clubs joining forces south of the border, CBC investigation finds | CBC News
Members of Canada's largest white nationalist group, Second Sons Canada, have met to train and network with a number of "active clubs" from the United States, and also met with active club movement founder Robert Rundo, who is currently on supervised release for violent offences.
