Boogaloo Boys: Difference between revisions

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|headquarters = None
|headquarters = None
|commanders = None
|commanders = None
|goals = Overthrow the US government<br>Start the Second American Civil War
|goals = Overthrow the US government<br>Start the Second American Civil War (all failed)
|crimes = [[Terrorism]]<br>[[Murder]]<br>Attempted [[Murder]]<br>Incitement to violence<br>Illegal weapons possession<br>Hijacking<br>[[Xenophobia]]<br>[[Propaganda]]<br>Attempted [[Kidnapping]]<br>[[Misogyny]]|type of villain=Hate Group}}
|crimes = [[Terrorism]]<br>[[Murder]]<br>Attempted [[Murder]]<br>Incitement to violence<br>Illegal weapons possession<br>Hijacking<br>[[Xenophobia]]<br>[[Propaganda]]<br>Attempted [[Kidnapping]]<br>[[Misogyny]]|type of villain=Hate Group}}
{{Quote|The way we know the boogaloo movement is as a far-right movement because they draw a line directly from [[David Koresh|Waco]] and [[Ruby Ridge standoff|Ruby Ridge]]. They hold up things like the [[Timothy McVeigh|McVeigh]] [[The Oklahoma City Bombing|bombing]] of the Oklahoma federal building and the armed response to Ruby Ridge as heroic moments in American history.|Alex Newhouse, a CTEC researcher who studied the Boogaloo movement.}}
{{Quote|The way we know the boogaloo movement is as a far-right movement because they draw a line directly from [[David Koresh|Waco]] and [[Ruby Ridge standoff|Ruby Ridge]]. They hold up things like the [[Timothy McVeigh|McVeigh]] [[The Oklahoma City Bombing|bombing]] of the Oklahoma federal building and the armed response to Ruby Ridge as heroic moments in American history.|Alex Newhouse, a CTEC researcher who studied the Boogaloo movement.}}