Active Clubs: Neo-Nazi ‘Fight Clubs’ growing in popularity in the US and Canada

Rebranding Neo-Nazis
The Active Clubs
The Great 'Whiter' North
Atomwaffen
Hiding in plain sight
Day X
Another January 6 in the making?
The New Alt-Right?
'Who the Proud Boys wanted to be'
The acceptable look of hate
Hiding in Romania
Fashion, Fitness, Fighting, Fascism
A real-life Project Mayhem?
Fashionable facade
Boys will be boys...
The Great Replacement
'White unity'
Lone wolves working as a pack
The heads of a hydra
Keeping it on the down low
Before it's too late...
Rebranding Neo-Nazis

The first rule of the Fight Club is that you don’t talk about it. However, experts, journalists, and law enforcement agencies alike are focusing more and more on the new, trendy kids of white supremacy.

The Active Clubs

In an exclusive exposé, Vice News put Kristoffer Nippak into the spotlight. This 25-year-old Ontario man is at the center of a vast network of decentralized neo-Nazi cells posing as fitness groups known as the Active Clubs.

Image: jelmerassink / unsplash

The Great 'Whiter' North

Nippak, despite his age, has a long history of involvement in the Canadian neo-Nazi scene.

Image: t_carnegie / Unsplash

Atomwaffen

Nippak was a founding member of the Canadian offshoot of Atomwaffen, an online hate group linked to several murders and designated in Canada as a terrorist organization.

Hiding in plain sight

Some experts believe that Active Clubs could be a militia taking the disguise of being a sports club network.

Image: victorfreitas / Unsplash

Day X

“There's lots of evidence suggesting that this is actually a shadow militia that is training and preparing for a Day X scenario”, argued Alexander Ritzmann, senior advisor of the Counter-Extremism Project, when he spoke to Vice News.

Another January 6 in the making?

Ritzmann is unsure what Day X exactly is. He speculates it could be a scenario not unlike the January 6 Capitol Assault in the United States, or even worse.

The New Alt-Right?

Rolling Stone Magazine explains that Active Clubs are filling the void left by decimated far-right groups such as the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers.

'Who the Proud Boys wanted to be'

“They are who the Proud Boys wanted to be”, said Jon Lewis, an expert on extremism from the George Washington University to Rolling Stone.

The acceptable look of hate

Active Clubs combine training in mixed martial arts, especially kickboxing, with white supremacy, they have been described as giving the neo-Nazi movement a more slick, palatable appearance.

Image: prateekkatyal / Unsplash

Hiding in Romania

According to NPR, Active Clubs began in December 2020, founded by self-professed Fascist Robert Rundo. Rundo was arrested in the spring of 2023 in Romania and extradited to California to face charges on rioting.

Image: tina_96 / Unsplash

Fashion, Fitness, Fighting, Fascism

Bellingcat researcher Michael Colborne told NPR that Rundo imported the model of far-right European hooliganism to North America, following the F’s: Fashion, Fitness, and Fighting.

A real-life Project Mayhem?

Indeed, a lot of the aesthetics of Active Clubs seem to be inspired by the 1999 David Fincher movie 'Fight Club', about an underground club of men frustrated with modern society that evolves into terrorism.

Fashionable facade

Overall, Active Clubs focus on localized recruitment, and make sure to cultivate an image that makes it harder to link them to illicit activities.

Image: yunmai / Unsplash

Boys will be boys...

The Anti-Defamation League explains that Active Clubs claim to focus on nationalism, male camaraderie, spiritual warrior culture, and an alternative to woke left-wing culture to hide their more extreme views.

Image: stywo / Unsplash

The Great Replacement

Among other things, Active Clubs promote The Great Replacement Theory, a racist theory that non-white groups are seeking to systematically substitute the white population.

'White unity'

Active Clubs also promote the idea of “white unity” in the face of an upcoming racial war. Indeed, their focus on combat sports is seen as a preparation for such “inevitable” conflict.

Lone wolves working as a pack

According to a report by the Counter-Extremism Project cited by Rolling Stone, Active Clubs cooperate and connect among each other but remain operationally independent.

Image: chugummies / Unsplash

The heads of a hydra

This means that if one leader is arrested, such as Rundo, or if one club is shut down, it has minimal effect on the rest of the network.

Keeping it on the down low

It’s hard to say how many members are in the ranks of Active Clubs in the United States and Canada, or how deep they have managed to infiltrate into entities such as law enforcement agencies.

Image: mattpopovich / Unsplash

Before it's too late...

Hopefully, just like the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers before them, Active Clubs will be brought to light before they can do more damage.

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