Extremism WDET, ethnic media partner on sharpening state's focus on hate and paramilitary groups in state. WDET's Mikel Elicessor Robert Sklar Editor I JN's Arthur Horwitz "When people of responsibility and power in government and the media incite others to express their displeasure through violence, slander and intimidation, they have to be called out." - Arthur Horwitz, JN publisher ADL's Betsy Kellman 10 April 8 • 2010 n the wake of a heightening threat from right-wing extremists, WDET- FM, the Detroit public radio station owned and operated by Wayne State University, is piloting a thought-provok- ing, issue-oriented collaboration with four of Metro Detroit's most-read inde- pendent ethnic newspapers: the Jewish News, the Arab-American News, the Michigan Chronicle and Latino. The five media entities have devel- oped a partnership to spotlight the growth of radical right-wing move- ments in Michigan and nationwide. The partnership's centerpiece is an enlighten- ing essay by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), a Montgomery, Ala.-based nonprofit civil rights organization and one of America's research authorities in the areas of hate groups, discrimination and exploitation. "The explosive growth of three distinct groups — the Tea Party Movement, the Patriot Movement with the militias as their paramilitary arms, and the nativ- ist anti-immigration movement — has been under way for the past year:' says Mikel Ellcessor, WDET's general man- ager. "While these distinct movements have their own animus, there is a well- documented and rising level of extreme rhetoric coming from all three groups. This rhetoric has contributed to an envi- ronment that is fostering violence from the extreme right and multiple instances of domestic terrorism. "This editorial project is designed to raise awareness of this issue and to chal- lenge the people of Michigan to ask hard questions of their politicians and the media;' he added. "Because of Michigan's unique relationship with the militia movement, we encourage every citizen to understand the ways extreme rhetoric laced with violent imagery has perme- ated our society" On March 27-30, the FBI arrested nine members of Hutaree, a right-wing extrem- ist group of alleged Christian fanatics hop- ing to incite an uprising against the U.S. government that would lead to the biblical "end of times:' according to the U.S. Justice Department. The raids were in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana. Michigan Militias Rejuvenated Montgomery, Ala. A fter more than a decade out of the spotlight, militias have come roaring back to life across the country. Michigan, once again, is a hotbed of militia activity. As citizen militias formed around the U.S. during the 1990s, few states were closer to the heart of the antigovernment extremist movement than the Great Lake State. Intense fears of a federal government trampling civil liberties, disarming citi- zens and imposing martial law turned the state into a hotbed of militia activity. Citizens armed themselves, joined the movement and prepared for the worst. It was a phenomenon that would rage in the U.S. until 1995, when the Oklahoma City bombing took the lives of 168 men, women and children. This stunning act of mass murder — along with beefed-up federal investigations — helped to extinguish interest in the movement, but not before Michigan received another major round of news media attention. That came after reports surfaced that the bombing conspira- tors had attended militia meetings in Michigan. The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) recently documented 34 mili- tia groups in this state — a staggering number when one considers that a year earlier the SPLC found only 42 militias in the entire country. As of 2009, there were 127 militias in the United States — an increase of more than 200 percent. This nationwide growth has been fueled by anger over the changing racial demographics of the country, the soar- ing public debt, the troubled economy and an array of initiatives by President Barack Obama that have been branded as "socialist" or even "fascist" by his politi- cal opponents. A key difference between the militia movement today and in the 1990s is that the federal government is now headed by a black man. That fact, coupled with high lev- els of non-white immigration, has helped infuse much of the movement with a strong element of racial animus, which was not the primary motivation in the past. The resurgence of these groups remarkably parallels the origins of the movement in the 1990s. The modern militia movement was partly shaped at a meeting of radical leaders in Estes Park, Colo., in 1992. At this gathering, known as the "Rocky Mountain Rendezvous:' a cross section of extremist leaders put aside doctrinal differences to focus on a common enemy: the federal government which, in their minds, overtaxed, wrong- fully imprisoned and even murdered its citizens. Today's militias have eerily similar roots, right down to a summit that helped midwife a shared ideology. In May