alt-center
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From alt- + center, modelled on alt-right and alt-left.
Noun
[edit]- (slang, politics, derogatory) Abbreviated form of alternative center, modeled on alt-right, alt-left; a set of centrist ideologies, especially ones which delegitimise political dissent and/or depend on (e.g. racial) conspiracy theories, whose presence is mainly confined to the Internet.
- Coordinate terms: alt-left, alt-right, alt-light, radical centrism
- 2016 December 16, Sam Kriss, “The Rise of the Alt-Center”, in Slate:
- If Trump’s devoted hype squad of pustulent, oleaginous neo-Nazis can now be euphemized as the “alt-right,” the Eichenwalds and Jefferys of the world might have turned themselves into something similar: an alt-center, pushing its own failed political doctrine with all the same vehemence, idiocy, and spleen.
- 2017 March 22, Baynard Woods, “The Kids Are Alt-Right”, in Salt Lake City Weekly:
- Now there's been a spate of stories talking about the "alt-left" and even the "alt-center."
- 2017 May 18, Adam H. Johnson, “Stop using the term 'populist' for right-wing demagogues”, in Los Angeles Times:
- Instead, pundits dismiss the idea of elites as such by trafficking in this silly, alt-center notion that the left and right are chasing equally fictitious boogeymen.