Content warning: This article contains graphic language, including antisemitic and racist rhetoric and descriptions of antisemitic violence. Reader discretion is advised.
Hatewatch monitors and exposes the activities of the American radical right.
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Content warning: This article contains graphic language, including antisemitic and racist rhetoric and descriptions of antisemitic violence. Reader discretion is advised.
A man who made social media threats to kill Jews and school children has been released from custody in Montana pending trial in November, while his case is drawing attraction from at least one long-time racist.
Just two days before the Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC) was scheduled to hold its annual gathering at the Guesthouse Inn in Nashville, Tenn., the conference was cancelled.
It’s difficult these days to find supporters of so-called “reparative” or “conversion” therapy, a practice that is claimed to change gay people to straight. After all, the practice has been widely discredited and is opposed by all leading professional medical and psychological associations in the country.
An examination of the growing extremism over public lands; What you need to know about Republicans and birthright citizenship; Bomb-carrying man leads to abortion clinic evacuation; and more.
This coming weekend, the white nationalist group Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC) will hold its national conference in Nashville, Tenn. The event comes just a few months after the horrific shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., where nine African Americans were shot to death.
When he set out to build a radiation gun concealed in a van to kill Muslims he deemed “medical waste,” Glendon Scott Crawford had lofty visions of what his weapon would be. “Hiroshima on a light switch,” the Klansman said, before spending years using straw buyers, code names and throwaway “burner” phones to get the necessary hardware.
A white supremacist who gained national attention for trying to take over a town in North Dakota two years ago is back at it. Now, Craig Cobb says he has his eye on another town – and he wants to name it after Donald Trump.
Confederate flag rally turns ugly; The roots of Donald Trump’s nativist immigration plan; Anti-Muslim organizer threatens bloodshed; Larry Klayman warns of a coming revolt; and more.
Militia group snared in plot to steal drugs from bogus cartel; Jindal’s defense of Confederate statues comes out of thin air; Court nixes Arpaio’s stereotype; and more.