Let's party like its 1933: Inside the alt-right world of Richard Spencer
Richard Bertrand Spencer had just told his guests how inspired he was by their presence when the rising sound of fury outside the dining rooms double doors reached his ears. He knew what it meant.
Spencer stepped into the open hallway and, there, beneath the wooden second-floor railing at Maggianos Little Italy in Northwest Washington, more than 30 protesters were marching up the stairway toward him. Several held posters No to Racism and Fascism and blew whistles. No Nazis! No KKK! No fascist USA! they shouted, their voices intensifying as he came into view.
Ten feet from the top of the stairs, a Maggianos employee a black man in a light-blue button-down and red tie spread his arms wide, blocking the mob from reaching the 100 or so white nationalists who had gathered at the restaurant Friday for a private dinner. Spencer walked behind him and looked down at the activists. Then the man who had coined the term alt-right grinned and waved.
For years, Spencer and his followers worked in obscure corners of the Internet to promote pride in white identity and the creation of an ethno-state that would banish minorities. Then came the presidential campaign of Donald Trump, whose attacks on undocumented immigrants, Muslims and political correctness deeply resonated with them.
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