The alt-right community serves as a gateway into the white nationalist movement. However, more research is needed on how the alt-right's virulent misogyny interfaces with white nationalist masculinity premised on patriarchal protection of white femininity. This study addresses this question through a qualitative analysis of a white nationalist forum, Stormfront.org, and finds two masculine strategies vying for site dominance. These two gender strategies draw on different movement ideologies, white nationalist or alt-right. Users battle over the prime adversary used to construct movement identity and mobilize against. I argue forum conflict reveals that defining a central adversary is necessary for a masculine social movement to achieve a collective "movement masculinity" through a unification of goals and strategies. These findings contribute to research on masculinity and social movements by showcasing that not only is there diversity in extreme-right masculinity but that there is significant contestation over different masculine strategies.

Two major types of fronts are cold fronts and warm fronts.


Cold fronts often come with thunderstorms or other types of extreme weather. They usually move from west to east. Cold fronts move faster than warm fronts because cold air is denser, meaning there are more molecules of material in cold air than in warm air.


Strong, powerful cold fronts often take over warm air that might be nearly motionless in the atmosphere. Cold, dense air squeezes its way through the warmer, less-dense air, and lifts the warm air. Because air is lifted instead of being pressed down, the movement of a cold front through a warm front is usually called a low-pressure system. Low-pressure systems often cause severe rainfall or thunderstorms.


Warm fronts usually show up on the tail end of precipitation and fog. As they overtake cold air masses, warm fronts move slowly, usually from north to south. Because warm fronts aren't as dense or powerful as cold fronts, they bring more moderate and long-lasting weather patterns. Warm fronts are often associated with high-pressure systems, where warm air is pressed close to the ground. High-pressure systems usually indicate calm, clear weather.


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Derek Black's "awakening" is the subject of Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Eli Saslow's new book, Rising Out Of Hatred. Saslow also interviewed Black's father and other leaders in the white nationalist movement.

White nationalism, I think, effectively identifies a movement of people who are actively pursuing an end cause of separating races into different homelands. White supremacy, unfortunately, is something that's much more endemic, and much more structured into what the country is.

Saslow: I think a lot of white nationalists saw President Obama's election as a huge opportunity for their movement. Because what white nationalists have done, with dangerous effect, is play to this factually incorrect sense of grievance that exists, unfortunately, in large parts of white America.

There have been proposals to tow icebergs to the Atlantic and cool sea surface temperatures, or to pump deep water to the surface. The problem with this is both the size scale and the movement of the hurricane, not to mention the track uncertainty and ecological implications.

Few things in waterfowling build more anticipation than an approaching cold front. These weather events greatly influence the movements of ducks and geese in the fall and winter, but because of variations in timing and intensity, cold fronts can affect waterfowl in different ways.

Other weather patterns may also stimulate significant duck and goose movements during hunting season. Heavy rain can create backwater opportunities that puddle ducks will quickly exploit, and deep snow can cover grainfields where geese have been feeding, forcing them to travel elsewhere to find food.

Sidney Gauthreaux is a professor emeritus at Clemson University. His area of expertise is radar ornithology, or the study of bird movements with radar. "At a Doppler radar station, you can easily gauge the speed of the target on the radar," he says. "Because waterfowl are such fast fliers, they're readily distinguishable on radar." Gauthreaux's studies have shown him many weather scenarios in which waterfowl are likely to move.

"In midwinter, you see big waterfowl migrations if you have a long period of cold weather," Gauthreaux says. "But what's interesting is that as soon as the conditions stabilize and thaw, birds that flew south may travel back north. And as you enter late winter, especially in the South, we often see big waterfowl movements to the north after long periods of warm weather."

"It doesn't take much to move early- season migrants," Humburg says. "In the Mississippi Flyway, you can expect cold fronts during the first half of September to be responsible for blue-winged teal movements, as well as the initial shoveler and pintail movements. Gadwalls and wigeon move sometime around mid-October, and during the last week in October to the first week in November, expect to see initial mallard movements and some diver movement. But the late migrations require a cold front that freezes things tight up north as well as snow cover. Those conditions will often put an end to the hunting in the northern Midwest, with snow cover being the exclamation point on the end of the season. If it's just cold but there is no snow, many waterfowl may delay their movement because they can still reach their food."

Milder cold fronts can cause behavior changes in waterfowl on the wintering areas, even if they don't stimulate mass movements. "Temperature affects food choices," Humburg says. "When the temperature falls, ducks shift from seeds and moist-soil foods to lsquo;hot foods' such as corn. But if the weather moderates after a front, the birds may shift right back. I've had some great hunting in the late season over natural, moist-soil wetlands. Any time you have a temperature change there may be a diet shift."

"Generally, most waterfowl arrive just behind a front," Gauthreaux says. "Powerful fronts are huge wedges of cold air, and they tend to travel fast. Waterfowl are fast fliers so it is possible for them to jump ahead of a front, but the conditions aren't really favorable for them to do that because they would be flying into the wind. We see much larger movements behind a front because the flying conditions are more favorable."

So what are the weather conditions that must fall into place to create waterfowling's "perfect storm"? It depends on the region where you are hunting, the time of year, the species hunted, and even the terrain-in short, too many factors to nail down in one answer. A grand passage of waterfowl is almost always triggered by a major blizzard or some other record-setting weather event-the kind that only occurs every decade or so. In the years in between, waterfowlers are left with predicting duck and goose movements according to more typical forecasts.

Why the uncharacteristic movements? The answer lay in some of the weather data collected during that period. The birds left their Tennessee breeding grounds while it was raining and arrived along the Gulf, where it was also raining. As such, rainfall was not the reason the birds flew south. The difference apparently was that a powerful weather front was 250-500 miles away and approaching. This horrific storm would spawn 84 tornadoes and take the lives of 35 people.

Researchers have long realized that these sound waves, called infrasound, travel long distances and are created by tornadoes and other natural events, such as ocean waves breaking on the beach and even volcanic eruptions. Although it has been proven that animals can detect infrasound, if the golden-winged warblers did indeed leave their breeding grounds because they picked up the low-frequency sound generated by a powerful storm, this would be the first documented case where infrasound waves influenced bird movements in the path of a storm.

1488 is a combination of two popular white supremacist numeric symbols. The first symbol is 14, which is shorthand for the "14 Words" slogan: "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children." The second is 88, which stands for "Heil Hitler" (H being the 8th letter of the alphabet). Together, the numbers form a general endorsement of white supremacy and its beliefs. As such, they are ubiquitous within the white supremacist movement - as graffiti, in graphics and tattoos, even in screen names and e-mail addresses, such as aryanprincess1488@hate.net. Some white supremacists will even price racist merchandise, such as t-shirts or compact discs, for $14.88.

The power of a major cold front to drastically influence deer movement is undeniable. Weather can move deer for miles and pin them down for 36 hours or more. By understanding how a major Fall storm increase hunger pains, depletes energy reserves and elevates stress levels, you can learn to hunt deer at the highest of levels.

The major storm of December 5, 2017 won't go down in history like some of the giant late Fall blizzards of the past. However, to anyone who follows weather related whitetail influences, they will recognize that this storm had it all! Over 30 degree temperature drops, 40mph winds and awesome thunderstorms on the front side of snow flurries, created the perfect storm for significantly affecting whitetail movements. Learning exactly what a deer had to endure during the 36 hours of the storm, can help you make hunting decisions during any time of the season, for the rest of your lives.

*The video above discusses some of the factors that I rely on, when using the weather to accurately predict deer movement. I also discuss these factors in depth along with several examples, in my Annual Rut Forecast.

How much power do cold front carry for influencing deer movements all season long? So powerful that unless there are significant weather factors at play, any moon phase predictions simply work very little or not at all. Weather is by far the #1 influencer for forecasting your own hunting success. When you combine missed feeding opportunities, stress and cold temps, there is nothing else that can turn whitetail activities completely on or completely off. If you have avoided hunted during the morning hours during the late season, have prioritized the evening sit and have set the table with an adequate supply of late season forages, don't forget to take advantage of the last remaining major cold fronts of the season. The December 5th storm was an outstanding weather event for influencing whitetail movements and if you follow the logic of the 36 hours whitetail experience, you can apply that knowledge to an entire year of whitetail observations, let alone the entire season. be457b7860

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