Speechroom, birdlore and wordstock: white nationalists push for a new language to drive out the impure old.
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Speechroom, birdlore and wordstock: white nationalists push for a new language to drive out the impure old.
The radical right started the year on a roll, with allies in the White House. But then came Charlottesville, and the movement was knocked back on its heels. Still, Trump's rhetoric and the country's changing demographics continue to buoy the movement.
Some see the monument as “the largest shrine to white supremacy in the history of the world.”
Far-right groups favor street-level action, as the so-called "alt-right" bickers over tactics.
It took blood in the streets for the tech industry to finally face its domestic extremism problem. Will this newfound commitment last?
A fractured but energized movement tried to pull itself together — but ended up exposing even deeper rifts.
The U.S. government, media organizations, and political scholars often characterize the “War on Terror” as a clash of civilizations or a battle against radical Islam.
There were two dynamics that determined the fate of America’s radical right in 2017: the election of President Trump and the fallout from the Charlottesville, Virginia, deadly white nationalist rally.
In Trump’s America, there’s an upside down of the way it was.