this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2023
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Background and Related Work
What is a "tankie?"
The first cluster of sources (along with source 43) is the same as earlier in Section 1 (I have yet to interrogate all of them; TODO, though I suspect the overall thrust of the sources will accurately characterize the history and etymology of the term "tankie"). Source 104 has also already been briefly examined and leans heavily on Zenz, Radio Free Asia, and South China Morning Post in the sources that were examined from it. The remaining sources (72, 10, and 44) are:
The article from Made In China Journal is from someone who appears to be a Maoist.
Consulting an author with opposing ideology (Maoism) to the ideology in question ("tankie"; more specifically here though, perhaps "Dengist"/"supporter of Reform and Opening Up") is, charitably, an exercise in dialectical materialism of a sort, I suppose. Nevertheless, Marxist-Leninists do broadly support China's policies, with varying degrees of enthusiasm or restraint, and Maoists broadly don't. So that does at least offer some categorical boundaries for the authors to work with in forming cohorts around different far-left ideologies.
The article from The Diplomat, however, is a far less nuanced take:
There was no massacre of students in Tiananmen Square. There was certainly fighting in the streets --away from where the students in the square were-- and the CPC itself even lists the dead from this fighting at 241, a far cry from the "around 1,000 student protesters" given, both in terms of the number and in terms of who died.
Regardless, here, tankie is "young western supporters of communist authoritarian regimes." This definition is, at best, orthogonal to the previous ones proffered. The article has some other choice bits:
The sources and claims either stand up to scrutiny or they don't. That holds for all inquiry.
Again with citing those with opposing ideologies from the ideology in question. Though I suppose this does dovetail nicely with citing a Maoist.
Not a particularly objectionable definition to me, though also incredibly broad. From the introduction up until now, the paper has struggled to pin down what, precisely, constitutes a "tankie." I'll give the authors some slack, in that ideologies are fluid and dynamic things that, to some extent, certainly seem to intentionally defy neat categorization. And we can of course also recognize the nature of Contradiction more broadly and take a charitable overview of the authors' frequent citation of an ideology's opponents in coming to define it. No ideological framework can be entirely free of contradiction, after all. But that slack can also be used to hang oneself in later analysis. Specifically, I can think of two scenarios where that might happen:
At this point, I'm strongly suspicious of the second option having occurred at least, especially given the quality and ideological leanings of the sources cited so far.
Studies on Extremist Online Communities
Sources in question...
All three share a common author, Ryan Scrivens. If I were concerned with an unfair bias against right-wing extremism, I might dig into the networks of authors involved to root out that bias. And yet that doesn't occur here. More to the point though, all three of these sources are focused on right-wing extremism. This undercuts their assertion in the next sentences:
Apart from being unsupported by the sources cited in the prior sentence, the sentences themselves are uncited. The citation given next:
also does not support a "both-sides" reading of left-wing and right-wing extremism, as the "overlap" in question is between stages of a pipeline within an ideological gradient, not between thoroughly contradictory ideological gradients.
If we have evidence of broad diversity across these two wings, and the strongest examples we have of left-wing and right-wing extremism being similar to each other is both sides saying "ISIS bad" and fighting against them, then perhaps that lends credence to the alternative answer: that the similarities either are not strong, or do not even exist.
Nothing particularly objectionable here. Social media is important for all political leanings, left and right, extreme and moderate.
So... the only study that could be found works against the notion that the right-wing and left-wing extremists are comparable.
This entire segment is, in itself, adequate explanation for the complaints of the next section: that there is "imbalance in research on online extremism." There is imbalance because left-wing and right-wing extremists are not, in fact, isomorphic. There are differences that matter, and those differences inform where researchers spend their limited time, budget, and energy.