Journey to the Extreme: How Ordinary people from around the world become extremists

Online extremism is an ugly symptom of the internet age. The internet has become the perfect environment for recruiting and indoctrinating new people into extreme and radical groups, and spreading their hateful rhetoric across the globe. Many terrorist attacks have been found to be fueled by radical content found online. Why and how do extremism and extremist groups work on the internet? I profiled three different movements and groups that have been functional online: ISIL, the White Supremacy/Alt-right movement, and Japanese online nationalists (netto-uyoku). I looked at their online behavior, their history, their demographics, and more to find connection and patterns within how they use the internet.

Click here for the web story

Click here for the whole paper (if you want more of a detailed understanding of each group)

UD Lacrosse Players Sponsors of Literacy

In this piece I dive into and explore what it further means to be a sponsor of literacy both for your school and your program/sports team you are apart of. I connect Deborah Brandt’s piece about sponsors of literacy to UD Lacrosse players here at the university. I identify what it means to be a lacrosse player here and what we embody through our everyday lives as striving to be the best men we can be. I also explore other teams and what their sponsors of literacy can be seen as, as well as lacrosse players as a whole in our society. Here is the link to my medium post. https://medium.com/@rideaubr/student-athlete-ud-all-lacrosse-players-portray-many-literary-sponsor-by-brook-rideau-28f21ba2869f?sk=0aff84039e1b5a076723be2a7f4ac851

Wing Chun & the West

In this article I am acknowledging Bruce Lee’s influence on Black popular culture through Chinese martial arts & Culture as well as Western film by exploring his journey in becoming the symbol of liberation for ethnic pride and justice that he personifies so dynamically on film. I highlight key moments in his career that distinguish his perspective as well as the philosophies that design his morale. Also, by balancing his actions with historic features of the African American experience I unify them to demonstrate their reciprocity. https://medium.com/p/6a46529a390e

Favorite Quotes from ENGL 367

Each experience of writing was like standing naked and revealing my imperfection, my “otherness.” And each new assignment was another chance to make myself over in language, reshape myself, make myself “better” in my rapidly changing image of a student in a college composition class.

Barbara Mellix, “Outside In”

“Women are held to unattainable and insurmountable standards by society. In order to be taken seriously, they have to be the best. Unfortunately, even if they are the most qualified person in their field, as Rebecca Solnit explains in “Men Explain Things to Me,” women are still belittled and not taken seriously.”

Kate P., “Male Mediocracy”

Favorite Passages

“earning some money so that you could stay in this place (Antigua) where the sun always shines and where the climate is deliciously hot and dry for the four to ten days you are going to be staying there; and since you are on your holiday, since you are the tourist, the thought of what it might be like for someone who had to live day in, day out in a place that suffers constantly from drought, and so has to watch carefully every drop of fresh water used”

Jamaica Kincaid, “A Small Place”

“As we step further and further into our adulthood and closer to the practices that elicit opportunity we are understanding that unfortunately the structures that rule the ‘real world’ remain unchanged, they just transpire on a more discrete level. Older generations might mark us as oversensitive yet we see it as a fight that we did not choose to take part in. Within the generation that is currently blossoming are various new identities and ideals that are unconcerned about the feuds and tensions of the past, it is frustrating to have to continue cleaning up when we do not feel associated with these evils.”

Anthony, “The Big Uneasy”

Favorites

“I grew up in an immediate family of my two brothers and I, and an extended family of majority male cousins, both older and younger than me. I have always been spoken to by family and friends as the “little girl” of the family, even now that I am 21 years old. While I understand that some family members speak to me in this way because I am one of the only girls, I’ve noticed how this can carry over into how they converse with me on educated and opinionated topics. ” -Amanda C. Not So Little.

“I do agree that students need to hear and absorb and deal with ideas that aren’t similar to their own. It’s one of the ways to truly gain intelligence. How can you learn if you stay in a bubble of what you believe if you can’t understand the things you don’t believe? But, I also agree that the students, who pay insurmountable funds to attend college, should have some sort of say in what their campus does. And if they fight back on certain things that they don’t like, does that truly mean they are weak and ignorant—closing their eyes and ears to all things scary?” -Jennifer R. Scared Safe.

Favorite Posts

“There is beauty in this change, the grace and balance found in asymmetry. In two creatures from different species of vastly different size using three legs to move through life: her lack, my excess, this pairing of three.”

Lambeth, Laurie Clements. 2016. 

What I took from The Achievement of Desire: Personal Reflections on Learning “Basics” was that there is a space in which some children might stumble upon, especially those of working class/minority families, where they must decide, at a relatively young age, what is most important to them considering what they know they are capable of and most importantly what their environment is like.

Anthony’s post on “Abstracting from immediate experience” September 19th,.

Favorites

The profound mistake of Reverend Wright’s sermons is not that he spoke about racism in our society. It’s that he spoke as if our society was static; as if no progress has been made; as if this country – a country that has made it possible for one of his own members to run for the highest office in the land and build a coalition of white and black; Latino and Asian, rich and poor, young and old — is still irrevocably bound to a tragic past. But what we know — what we have seen – is that America can change. That is true genius of this nation. What we have already achieved gives us hope – the audacity to hope – for what we can and must achieve tomorrow.

Barack Obama, “A More Perfect Union”

If a woman is confident, she is “vain.” If she is assertive, she is “bossy.” If she is a working woman, she is “selfish.” If she is a stay-at-home mother, she is “lazy.” Women are held to unattainable and insurmountable standards by society. In order to be taken seriously, they have to be the best. Unfortunately, even if they are the most qualified person in their field, as Rebecca Solnit explains in “Men Explain Things to Me,” women are still belittled and not taken seriously. 

Kate P., “Male Mediocracy”

Favorites

My favorite quote comes from Solnit’s piece.

Men explain things to me, still. And no man has ever apologized for explaining, wrongly, things that I know and they don’t. Not yet, but according to the actuarial tables, I may have another forty-something years to live, more or less, so it could happen. Though I’m not holding my breath.

Rebecca Solnit, “Men Explain Things to Me”

I found myself thinking a lot about Jennifer’s comment on my response to Solnit.

 Like how do women get criticized for calling men out after women been called animals, evil beings, and a curse upon men for thousands of years? Women are called “feminazis” or “sexist against men” because they say “I hate men” one. And I hate that there has to be such a silly divide over gender, but it’s such a divide that has followed us through history because men decided it should be that way from the beginning.

Jennifer R. Comment on “Male Mediocracy,” 03 October 2019

Favs <3

“Much of his social life revolved around trading them, and he learned about exchange, fairness, trust, the importance of processes as opposed to results, what it means to get cheated, taken advantage of, even robbed. Baseball cards were the medium of his economic life too. Nowhere better to learn the power and arbitrariness of money, the absolute divorce between use value and exchange value, notions of long- and short-term investment, the possibility of personal values that are independent of market values.” – M.P

There is benefit in addressing the fact that borders exist. We cannot run from situations that bring up these contact zones in fear of an igniting a controversy. “Retreating to our respective corners” would be doing the country a disservice.  While we cannot silence our differences, we also cannot allow controversy to evoke hatred. Obama notes that it was not the Reverend’s remarks that made the campaign take a “divisive turn” but our reaction to the remarks. – A.G

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