Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin says she wanted to take Jesus to a White House dinner with Donald Trump, but settled instead for ultra-conservative rockers Kid Rock and Ted Nugent.
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin says she wanted to take Jesus to a White House dinner with Donald Trump, but settled instead for ultra-conservative rockers Kid Rock and Ted Nugent.
After an 11th-hour injunction required Auburn University to uphold a contract allowing Richard Spencer to speak at the school’s Foy Hall on April 18, protesters and supporters descended on the small, college town, resulting in several small scuffles and altercations. When the dust settled, three had been arrested for misdemeanor violence, one of whom the neo-Confederate League of the South (LOS) is claiming as a member.
Why militia groups are still surging in number; Trump invites Ted Nugent to the White House; Sullivan keeps plugging debunked race theories; and more.
On April 20, the anti-immigrant hate group Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) began to dive into its vault and upload to YouTube episodes of its 51-episode series “Borderline.” The show ran on NET, a satellite TV station put together by archconservative and anti-gay bigot Paul Weyrich. So far FAIR has decided to upload just two episodes of the series.
The renaissance of intellectual racism; DREAM student deportation shocks immigrants; How Trump administration puts Islam on trial; and more.
It took a week of contentious back-and-forth with Auburn University and a last-minute federal judge ruling in his favor, but white nationalist Richard Spencer finally had his chance to speak.
An Oklahoma sheriff’s deputy was fatally shot Tuesday by a suspect who authorities say has a lengthy criminal record and ties to the Aryan Brotherhood, a white supremacist gang operating in and out of the state’s prison system.
Kori Ali Muhammad, 39, who also goes by Kori MacSun McWallace, was taken into custody after allegedly shooting four people in Fresno, California killing three of them
Ben Zuckerman, the president of the board of the anti-immigrant Californians for Population Stabilization (CAPS) co-edited a book with well-known white nationalist Michael Hart. The book, Extraterrestrials: Where Are They?, examines the plausibility of aliens existing and was first published in 1982 and again in 1995, but a 2015 email exchange obtained by the Southern Poverty Law Center indicates that Zuckerman cared little about Hart’s openly racist beliefs.
Hate crimes’ devastating effects on its victims can be lasting; Global far-right alliance is forming; Alex Jones insists he’s still the real deal, not a fake; and more.