Again, this obsession with genitalia. It's abnormal.
And...you know, Antifa doesn't exist..right?
U R Stupid. In fact, you're a moron.
Genitalia? WTF are you babbling about?
Since you obviously lack genitalia, I can see why you'd be confused.
You're truly a complete idiot of epic proportions.
In other words, a typical leftist.
Yes, Antifa exists.
It is a
left-wing, anti-fascist political movement (short for "anti-fascist"), primarily active in the United States and parts of Europe. It is
highly decentralized, consisting of autonomous local groups, networks, and individuals rather than a single hierarchical organization with central leadership, membership rolls, bank accounts, or a unified chain of command.
Key Characteristics
- Ideology and goals: Opposes fascism, racism, white supremacy, and far-right ideologies. Tactics range from non-violent ones (protests, flyers, mutual aid, doxing opponents) to direct action that can include property damage, physical confrontations, and violence against perceived fascists or police.
- History: Roots trace back to 1930s European anti-fascist resistance (e.g., against Nazis and Mussolini). In the U.S., it gained visibility in the 1980s opposing racist skinheads/neo-Nazis, with groups like Rose City Antifa (Portland, founded 2007) as early examples. It rose to prominence post-2016/2017 amid clashes with far-right groups (e.g., Charlottesville).
- Structure: No national leaders or formal structure. FBI Director Christopher Wray (under Trump) described it as "more of an ideology than an organization," while noting investigations into violent anarchist extremists motivated by it.
Political Context
- Critics (often on the right) highlight its role in riots, assaults on journalists/police, and suppression of speech, leading to calls (and in 2025, an executive designation by President Trump) to treat it as a domestic terrorist threat.
- Supporters frame it as necessary defense against rising authoritarianism or fascism. Law enforcement focuses on actions (violence, etc.) rather than ideology alone.
In short: It is real as a movement/ideology with real-world effects and participants—not a centralized "group" like a corporation or political party, but a label used by people who self-identify and coordinate loosely. Denials that it "doesn't exist" usually refer to the lack of formal structure, but individuals, groups, and events explicitly tied to it are documented across sources.