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.
Roof hears from victims’ families; Idaho bill would charge women with murder for abortions; Sessions’ real KKK-fighting past; and more.
Banking on the hopes that American minorities will feel alienated if President Trump handles the subject of race the way he did during his campaign, with divisive language and an attention to white nationalism, black separatism is finding a renewed sense of energy.
Mark Krikorian, the longtime head of the anti-immigrant think thank Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) took to Twitter to mock U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a freedom rider who marched with Martin Luther King Jr. from Selma to Montgomery over 51 years ago.
Notorious Internet troll Chuck Johnson, who was banned from Twitter for requesting donations to “take out” a Black Lives Matter activist and was once called “the most hated man on the internet,” is recommending candidates to serve in President-elect Trump's administration.
The entire racist radical right may be working to rebrand under the “Alt-Right” banner, a meme-crazed digital wing of the white nationalist movement known for online harassment campaigns. But they haven’t managed to get over the infighting and hypocrisy that has riddled the movement for decades.
Bomb threats leave Jewish communities rattled; Sheriff’s wall-building plan hyped; School vouchers’ racist history; and more.
Dylann Roof -- baptized into the world of hate through the Internet -- was sentenced on Tuesday to be executed for his murderous gun rampage that killed nine people in 2015 at a historic African-American church in Charleston.
Sessions haunted by 1985 voter fraud case; Jewish centers around nation get bomb threats; Google search launched Roof; and more.
Federal prosecutors in Oregon are attempting to block a self-described antigovernment “Patriot” blogger from continuing to publish names of individuals he contends were FBI informants during last year’s standoff at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.
How "Alt-Right" trolls terrorize their victims; Spencer’s anti-Semitism out in the open; Fischer decries single-use bathrooms; and more.