Hatewatch monitors and exposes the activities of the American radical right.
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Members of the racist group, League of the South, gathered to meet and make their views known publicly, but heavy rain kept them indoors and away from the limelight.
Prior to last year’s League of the South (LOS) National Conference, Hatewatch profiled leaders of the neo-Confederate LOS, including president Michael Hill, chief of staff Michael Tubbs and various other affiliates and supporters of the organization, including chief of security/intel John Mark “Tiny” Malone.
Human rights activists in North Idaho have confronted the Aryan Nations, the stigma of Ruby Ridge, Phineas Priest bank bombers and assorted other white supremacists. They’ve seen racist flyers, billboards, parades and cross-burnings.
Now, they’re dealing with racist robocalls and vile, antisemitic podcasts.
After five people were gunned down in their own newsroom, the normally feisty editorial page of the Capital-Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland, went silent Friday.
As League of the South founder Michael Hill pushes the organization in a more militant direction, he’s getting a little star power in his leadership.
The First Freedom, a stalwart publication of the neo-Confederate movement, appears to be nearing its demise.
Far right celebrates newsroom attack; Religious right has Roe in its sights; White supremacists’ campus propaganda soaring; and more.
Well before any motive or suspect was announced in Thursday’s mass shooting at a Maryland newspaper, racist "alt-right" figure Milo Yiannopoulos was already playing defense about comments he recently made saying he was looking forward to vigilantes “gunning journalists down on sight.”
A Texas man awaiting execution in a notorious hate crime is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to save him.
Judge halts family separations at border; Far-right voices froth about a civil war; Heimbach says he’s done with politics for good; and more.
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