That's it!
That's it!
oooOOoo. we've got a logo now, cool.
@saltywizard Yes and no. The Antifa symbols I've seen so far are borrowed from the 1930s, and may carry their own baggage. The black & red flag in a circle was the symbol of German Antifascistiche Aktion, who were actual Stalinists. Another German group of the time, Iron Front, opposed ALL political extremism -- including those German Stalinists. So I prefer their symbol, which is also the much simpler three downward arrows. It is still used by today's German SDP.
neat
@justincrozer Yeahh! simply anti-fascist people are meant!

@Stricki @connynasch @[email protected] @justincrozer anti-dead vision =/= anti-war vision.
At least not as long as people call it "peace" if a government slaughters its people, because there's no other nation involved.
And not as long people want to appease warmongers by demanding that the defender stops defending.
This 'pacifism' is abetment to murder.
Antifa means to stop fascists from killing.
@justincrozer Correct. The term arose in anti-fascist movements in Italy and Germany of the 1930s, as a convenient and universal shorthand for all who opposed fascism.
That said, those earliest Antifa movements were expressly Communist, and sometimes still are. But groups like Iron Front (the three arrows you may have seen) opposed ALL extremists, of all stripes, including German Antifa (Antifascistiche Aktion), a militant arm of the KPD, who were actual Stalinists.
'Antifa' is a big spectrum.

Attached: 1 image That's it! #Antifa #Antifascism #Fascism
@Ilka4You oh wow. cool.
Can we use that too? Thanks a lot 😅 🖤
There is a difference here.
For ANTIFAs hate normally does not mean Concentration Camps for your enemies. 🤷
@autonomysolidarity
The word "ANTIFA" is the enemy's word. I refuse to use it. I am ANTIFASCIST.
I once heard a right-wing commentator tell his audience the word antifa meant Anti-Family.
I notice newspaper and media use the word antifa instead of antifascist.
I will NEVER use the word "antifa". I will ALWAYS force them to use the word Antifascist.
Are we really this lazy? The word is ANTIFASCIST.
@clintruin
What?
First time I hear/read s.o. stating "Antifa" as an enemy's word 😅
Maybe the word is used different, where you come from?
In Germany (and as I know also in some other European countries) "Antifa" is a self-designation. Here it has a long history:
It was used already by the "Antifaschistische Aktion" around 1930 as an abbreviation of their own name.
Latest since the 1980s "antifa" became a commom self-designation and/or part of the name of (mainly autonomous) antifascist groups.
Antifa is also a common abbreviation of the term Antifaschismus, but more it is used as term for groups or the movement.
So members of the Antifa are all antifascists, but not all antifascists are member of the Antifa 😉
So in Germany it's not at all an enemy's word (but of course right wingers are trying to defame and criminalize Antifa here, too).
@an_believable
I can't speak to German usage or German antifascists. Obviously that is an enormous topic.
I can speak to North American usage. In North America, as I've stated, the word is being used to confuse and distract. This is why I feel the word has taken on negative connotations, in English, in North America.
As stated above, if a fascist can use the word to to tell millions of Americans the word means anti-family...see what I'm saying?
@clintruin The purpose is prevent US from using it, by trying to 'brand' it in terms they get to choose. But they didn't create it, and it was originally ours, and we don't have to let them do that.
If you give in here, there's no end to it. You have to hold the line somewhere. Why not where the lie already exists? Their claims are false; we don't have to agree to them.
@Ilka4You @an_believable
So let's make it simple:
(For the English-speaking in the States and Canada)
Only use the word Antifascist. Do not use the made up word Antifa.
@clintruin No, our side really did coin it, in the 1930s. It was always exactly what it looks like -- an abbreviation of 'anti-fascist'. The advantage, besides being shorter and easier to say, is that it's the same in all Western languages, though exact pronunciation varies.
That said, I agree that it's much harder for our opponents to fight 'anti-fascists', so there's advantage in using that.