On the eve of the 45th anniversary of the “Bloody Sunday” march that galvanized support for the Voting Rights Act, a congressional delegation led by U.S. Rep. John Lewis laid a wreath at the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery to honor the men and women who sacrificed their lives during the civil rights movement.
Around the country, a conspiracy theory about the government constructing secret concentration camps is taking on new life
The gathering held on Jekyll Island, Ga., last year to bring together disparate elements of the radical right in response to alleged government tyranny was not the first of its kind.
An Oregon-based racist prison and street gang has produced an incredible amount of criminal violence. And the beat goes on
Spokesmen for public agencies are accustomed to difficult people, but a conspiracy theory zealot pushed Steve Snyder’s patience to the limit when he was a spokesman at Denver International Airport (DIA). Perhaps Snyder was weary of responding to rumors that DIA’s six runways form a swastika, or that there was an underground chamber built to hold a concentration camp, when he received an E-mail in 2003 from Greg Ericson of the “Free Press International” website.