entremet
Member
Ilbe users are the kind of people who refer to Korean women as kimchi bitches. They call Chinese people cockroaches and homosexual men gay bastards. Theyre the trolls who binge-ate pizza to taunt a father on a hunger strike after he lost his child in a ferry accident that killed 325 high school students and teachers or the ones who defaced memorial posters for the victims.
Theyre known for a deep-seated misogyny and a hatred of immigrants and sexual minorities, and theyre waging an online war on the political left a group they call, simply, commies.
But this isnt the white supremacist alt-right of the U.S. its a loose group of mostly digitally savvy, ultra-right-wing South Korean men. They congregate in an anonymous, 4chan-esque web forum where they can rant without social repercussions. And like in the U.S., their influence has grown rapidly in just a few short years.
Welcome to the site Ilbe Storehouse, better known as just Ilbe, the hub for South Koreas new far-right movement. It has risen to prominence in the backdrop of South Koreas turbulent recent history deep political divides, a youth unemployment crisis and backlash against liberal social values.
Sound familiar?
The [alt-right] movement is still predominantly internet-based. Yes, weve seen most noticeably in Charlottesville, Virginia the increased real-world footprint, but the internet is still their main platform, George Hawley, author of Making Sense of the Alt-Right and an assistant professor of political science at the University of Alabama, said by phone. Most of the people who consume this material and support these ideas are still anonymous and online, as opposed to joining political organizations.
In the rest of the article it talks about what has driven these attitudes.
https://mic.com/articles/184477/ins...-a-powerful-new-alt-right-movement#.LX5xw1LOD