Abstract
This paper responds to Horgan and Shayler's (2026) critique of the "salad bar extremism" metaphor and associated concepts. While sympathetic to the authors' main concerns (epistemological confusion, ontological indeterminacy, and empirical scarcity), this reply contends that each is overstated. While composite extremist worldviews have always existed and traditional radical ideologies remain dominant, we nonetheless argue that hybrid extremism is a genuinely intensifying phenomenon captured by gradually more accurate concepts, rooted in deep societal shifts, and produced by well-documented causal mechanisms.Key Takeaways
- The commentary challenges the argument that 'salad bar' or hybrid extremism is merely a measurement artefact. Baele (2026) contends that while ideological cross-pollination has always existed, there is genuine evidence of both an intensification and a qualitative change in what hybridity looks like, pointing to figures like Ethan Miller or Solomon Henderson whose 'manifestos' blend Islamophobic, anti-Semitic, anti-capitalist, and anti-tech ideations that cannot be amalgamated with historical ideologues.
- Official data reveal a striking shift in referral patterns. In the UK Prevent programme, the 'mixed, unstable or unclear' category rose from 11% of referrals in 2016/17 to 51% in 2019/20, and by March 2025 the 'no ideology' category dominated with nearly 5,000 referrals. Meanwhile, US data show radicalized young people with no formal group ties jumped 311% over ten years, and internet-driven radicalization for under-30s rose 413% between 2010 and 2020.
- Baele (2026) situates hybrid extremism within broader societal evolutions rather than treating it as an isolated puzzle. He links rising ideological idiosyncrasy to 'liquid modernity,' addictive social media affordances, expansive state surveillance that hinders organized extremism, and a growing pool of (mostly young, male) individuals primarily attracted to violence itself, only later attaching a thin ideological gloss to their grievances.






