I highly doubt there were any good nazi protesters there however unless I'm wrong there were only around a hundred of that group protesting based on some of the articles I read after the protest. However the volience was squarely on both sides once again based on articles I read. The nazi people planned on riling people up and you have some of the counter protesters who wanted to fight as well.
Trump may be doing exactly what you say he's doing, I don't know. That said you still had idiots duking it out in the streets and the news helping fan the flames. Personally the best thing to do about it should have been to not counter protest and let the few idiots realize that no one cares about them anymore. All the resistance and media coverage gave them news coverage they didn't deserve and probably helps their propaganda.
There were around a hundred at the rally the night before. At the protest the next day you had 500+ Nazis, White Supremacists, White Nationalists, etc.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.theatlantic.com/amp/article/536775/
And this is what I mean about how one side had regular people on it and another only had extremists:
I followed this event extensively. 500 is probably a fair estimate although I don't know if it included some of the random militia guys that wouldn't say who they are or what they were there for, but they stayed in close proximity to the hate groups. Almost like "security" although plenty of the Nazi and hate groups were well-armed as well with tricked out AR-15s and multiple side-arms.
I think if you included the militia guys and other hangers-on you were without a doubt in excess of 500 as that was hate groups alone. I'd say 500-750 total. David Duke, Spencer and others have been very proud and have said it was the largest meeting of white identity groups in decades.
Again, my point remains that saying there was violence on both sides is a vast oversimplification. You had antifa, church groups, local residents, several politicians/political groups, etc on one-side and it seems only antifa and a few locals engaged in violence or came for violence.
On the other side the 500-750 all came prepared for violence and none of them were good people. That's why it is an oversimplification. One side was pure hate and all members ready or looking for violence. On the other side you had various groups, but only one subset (antifa) came to fight and riot.
I don't think the church groups and peaceful activists should be lumped in with antifa. If you've ever attended any type of anti-racism rally or counter protest to hate groups I think you'd understand what I mean. There are rarely few peaceful "innocents" there to back the racist groups whereas the other side frequently has numerous innocent groups and people counter protesting.
I've attended stuff like this before in downtown Birmingham and while nothing like the scale of this last weekend the composition of each side is similar.
If there is an article or picture showing some of the good or peaceful hate groups and/or with innocent people on their side I'm open to looking at it. I just literally haven't seen anything like that.
Fact remains, these Nazis knew what would happen and went there hoping for violence. They always do. Antifa's no different in their lust for violence and confrontation, but the bulk of the counter protesters weren't antifa. 100% of the "alt-right" protesters were Nazis, racists, and members of hate groups hoping to start a race war.
Trump wants people to think antifa was 100% of the other side and that both sides were equally guilty. It's not true at all.