The question when photographing any fringe groups, but especially those that preach #hate, is whether you are amplifying a message that would otherwise be lost in the wind, and encouraging an advocate who, left alone, might slink off. But President Donald Trump’s notorious defense of the white supremacists at Charlottesville—“I think there is blame on both sides”—wiped that nuance clean away. Under #Trump, the question has become how many Americans sympathize in private with the messages a few hundred carry into the streets. An ABC News poll after #Charlottesville found 9 percent of Americans, or 22 million people, found it “acceptable” to hold neo-Nazis views. A like number said they support the “alt-right,” as supremacists call their effort to mainstream their agenda. “They are totally cognizant of optics, as they would call it,” says photographer @markpetersonpixs, who spent the year after Charlottesville documenting white supremacist gatherings. “I have friends I respect who say, ‘You’re just giving them attention they don’t deserve,” Peterson says. “I don’t know how to answer that. I really don’t. I hope the pictures I’m taking show a problem. And I don’t know if my pictures show a solution to that problem. But they show a problem, and I think that’s important, as a journalist, to look at.” In these photographs: Mr. and Mrs. McDonald pose with a #Confederate flag in their hotel room while attending the American Freedom Party and Council of Conservative Citizens conference in Nashville in June; clothes in a closet at the conference; the National Socialist Movement holds a lighting ceremony after a rally in Newnan, Ga., on April 21; #WhiteNationalist Richard Spencer holds a news conference at the University of Florida in Gainesville in October. Read more, and see more images, on TIME.com. Photographs by @markpetersonpixs—@reduxpictures

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月11日 23時04分


The question when photographing any fringe groups, but especially those that preach #hate, is whether you are amplifying a message that would otherwise be lost in the wind, and encouraging an advocate who, left alone, might slink off. But President Donald Trump’s notorious defense of the white supremacists at Charlottesville—“I think there is blame on both sides”—wiped that nuance clean away. Under #Trump, the question has become how many Americans sympathize in private with the messages a few hundred carry into the streets. An ABC News poll after #Charlottesville found 9 percent of Americans, or 22 million people, found it “acceptable” to hold neo-Nazis views. A like number said they support the “alt-right,” as supremacists call their effort to mainstream their agenda. “They are totally cognizant of optics, as they would call it,” says photographer @markpetersonpixs, who spent the year after Charlottesville documenting white supremacist gatherings. “I have friends I respect who say, ‘You’re just giving them attention they don’t deserve,” Peterson says. “I don’t know how to answer that. I really don’t. I hope the pictures I’m taking show a problem. And I don’t know if my pictures show a solution to that problem. But they show a problem, and I think that’s important, as a journalist, to look at.” In these photographs: Mr. and Mrs. McDonald pose with a #Confederate flag in their hotel room while attending the American Freedom Party and Council of Conservative Citizens conference in Nashville in June; clothes in a closet at the conference; the National Socialist Movement holds a lighting ceremony after a rally in Newnan, Ga., on April 21; #WhiteNationalist Richard Spencer holds a news conference at the University of Florida in Gainesville in October. Read more, and see more images, on TIME.com. Photographs by @markpetersonpixs@reduxpictures


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