• AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    187 months ago

    They didn’t realize that most of the metal scene has connection with the punk scene, and the punk scene is full of anarchists and anti-fascists. It’s weird how much success they had with the country music scene.

    • @samus12345
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      217 months ago

      Who would have thought that country music, which originated in the South, would be so receptive to white nationalism??

      • @Glytch
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        107 months ago

        Pre-9/11 and Toby Keith a lot of country music was anti-establishment and anti-fascist.

        • @Aqarius
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          57 months ago

          Some, but for every Phil Ochs there was a Marty Robbins.

      • @JokklMaster
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        57 months ago

        I was gonna say, I don’t think metal has a higher rate of nazis. You look at country and you basically have to accept they’re all MAGAts (another reason to just avoid country). I think most people in metal are pretty progressive, that’s why they’re in metal. Honestly Dero Goi is a great example: he jumped down a conservative rabbit hole and left metal.

        If anything, it’s just that the nazis are always a vocal minority and when they’re into metal it’s some confirmation bias for close minded people who don’t like metal.

        • @Gabu
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          7 months ago

          No, the issue is that metal has a lot of iconography which outright attracts Nazis and the like (e.g. heavy use of crosses, mentions of war and sometimes glorification of ancestry, viking culture, classically western icons like medieval knights and the Crusades, etc).

          We have to push really hard against their co-opting of our symbols if we don’t want “Skinheads: Metalic Boogaloo” to become a thing.