The passage of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for 2012, signed into law on Dec. 31, has ignited a firestorm of Internet criticism.
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The passage of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for 2012, signed into law on Dec. 31, has ignited a firestorm of Internet criticism.
The Internet hacking collective known as Anonymous has declared “Operation Blitzkrieg” against neo-Nazi and other hate group websites this year, inflicting unprecedented damage on many of the sites and releasing an avalanche of personal information about supporters.
Is Agenda 21, a United Nations non-binding plan for global sustainability signed by President George H.W. Bush in 1992, a “comprehensive plan” for “global political control”? Is it a “destructive and insidious” scheme being pushed “covertly” in U.S. towns that would entail “socialist/communist redistribution of wealth”?
Four years after marrying the leader of the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement Joanna Schoep is getting divorced and has a few things to say about her husband.
The anti same-sex-marriage National Organization for Marriage prides itself on keeping criticisms of homosexuality civil and factual. But does it really?
What follows is a state-by-state tally of the 185 groups that the SPLC lists as nativist extremist groups active in 2011.
Online but ‘off the grid,’ Glenn Beck’s new Internet TV show offers a lesson in surviving post-apocalyptic America.
The Southern Poverty Law Center identified 1274 anti-government “Patriot” groups that were active in 2011.
The so-called “manosphere” is peopled with hundreds of websites, blogs and forums dedicated to savaging feminists in particular and women, very typically American women, in general.
Patricia Sadowski, née Taylor, could never have foreseen that some 30 years after their divorce, her ex-husband would murder a guard at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum before being shot himself. But some hints came early.