Facebook bans 'boogaloo' accounts and violence-linked pages



Facebook not only restricts the spread of "boogaloo" groups on its platform — it throws out many of them. After a violent network breaking the policy of the company's dangerous people and organisations, the social media-giant has banned accounts and pages of the pro-civil war group.

As part of the "strategic network disruption," Facebook primarily deleted 220 accounts, 106 groups, 28 pages and 95 Instagram accounts, while hosting related material maintained on accounts outside the network was provided by 400 additional group and 100 pages.

The company said it always deleted boogaloo content, including 800 posts over the past two months, that explicitly advocated violence. The reach of groups and pages by excluding recommendations was also limited.


Since then, however, it has decided that much of the movement is violent. It "actively supports" violence against civilians, officials of the government and police, said Facebook, and several actual attacks have occurred in the last months.

The prohibition may be more moving than usual. Many boogalo supporters are effectively classified as hate groups. They are. Although there are clearly violent boogalooists, they also have a relatively different basis, including some non-violent government critics.