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'''Outsider agitators''' is a term that has been used to discount political unrest as being driven by outsiders, rather than by internal discontent. The term was popularized during the early stages of the [[Civil Rights Movement]] in the United States, when Southern authorities discounted African-American protests as being driven by Northern white radicals, rather than being legitimate expressions of grievances.<ref name="Milstein2015">{{cite book|author=Cindy Milstein|title=Taking Sides: Revolutionary Solidarity and the Poverty of Liberalism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uhbSCgAAQBAJ&pg=PT113|date=21 October 2015|publisher=AK Press|isbn=978-1-84935-232-1|pages=113–}}</ref><ref name="Tischauser1998">{{cite book|author=Leslie Vincent Tischauser|title=Black/white Relations in American History: An Annotated Bibliography|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7k0cmLCH_mgC&pg=PA93|year=1998|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=978-0-8108-3389-0|pages=93–}}</ref> It has been argued that the term has both anti-Semitic and anti-black roots.<ref>[https://itsgoingdown.org/the-anti-black-and-anti-semitic-history-of-outside-agitators-an-interview-with-spencer-sunshine/ The Anti-Black And Anti-Semitic History Of “Outside Agitators”]Spencer Sunshine, ''It's Going Down'', 2 June 2020</ref>
The term gained further prominence during the [[George Floyd protests]], with local officials in Minneapolis claiming that most
==See also==
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