In this episode of Fighting Matters, Steve Kwan is joined by Hannah Gais, a senior research analyst at the Southern Poverty Law Center who has tracked white nationalist and neo-Nazi movements since 2016 and also trains jiu-jitsu. They get into how active clubs and far-right groups use combat sports gyms as recruitment grounds, why most practitioners don't see it happening, and what coaches and gym owners can actually do about it.
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π Links Mentioned:
- Southern Poverty Law Center β https://splcenter.org
- Hannah Gais on Bluesky β https://bsky.app/profile/hannahgais.bsky.social
- Louis Theroux Manosphere documentary β https://www.netflix.com/ca/title/81920687
- Global Project Against Hate and Extremism β https://globalextremism.org
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π₯ Featuring:
- Steve Kwan β https://bjjmentalmodels.com
- Hannah Gais β https://splcenter.org
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π§ Topics Discussed:
- How active clubs use gyms to recruit without revealing their intentions
- The entryism playbook: how fringe movements infiltrate institutions
- Warning signs that someone is testing the waters at your gym
- Shifting the Overton window through sports and social media
- Jake Shields, the Manosphere, and BJJ's far-right influencer problem
- Where gym owners should draw the line
- How people leave the movement, and what coaches can do to help
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π Chapters:
00:00 β Introducing Hannah Gais
00:54 β Hannah's work at the SPLC
04:18 β How big is the problem, really?
07:01 β Why the movement has gone mainstream
15:16 β The Overton window and how they shift it
17:45 β Jake Shields and the sane-washing of extremists
20:27 β Warning signs at your gym
24:50 β Immigration as an entry point
31:32 β What white nationalism actually means
39:32 β Entryism: how they build from within
43:05 β What gym owners should watch for
47:57 β Hiding your power level
53:31 β BJJ's far-right influencer problem
55:35 β Where to draw the line
01:00:21 β How people leave the movement
01:03:54 β Hannah's links and the Manosphere documentary