Anti-immigration activists confront a pro-migrant freedom ride — joined by some of America's leading neo-Nazi groups.
Anti-immigration activists confront a pro-migrant freedom ride — joined by some of America's leading neo-Nazi groups.
A wave of violence engulfs transgender people across the U.S., whose murder rate may outpace that of all other hate killings.
After a year of reverses, the future of the radical right may lie in those profiled here, who are still peopling the fringe.
'Cultural Marxism,' a conspiracy theory with an anti-Semitic twist, is being pushed by much of the American right.
The Washington Times has always been conservative and error-prone. Now, it's helping to popularize extremist ideas and neo-Confederate sympathy.
An array of right-wing foundations and think tanks support efforts to make bigoted and discredited ideas respectable.
The Year in Hate, 2002: hate takes a hit as deaths, defections, arrests and internal splits roil America's embattled white supremacist movement.
In Cochise County, Ariz., anti-immigrant militant Roger Barnett has threatened Latinos at gunpoint, yet has never been prosecuted for his actions. In Tucson, armed nativist Roy Warden was caught on videotape threatening to blow a child's brains out, but the prosecutor did not request that Warden serve any jail time.
Environmental radicals and animal rights activists say it's "ludicrous" for the FBI to call them the No. 1 domestic terror threat. But their rhetoric and increasingly extreme criminal actions are making the "eco-terror" label stick.
The organized anti-immigration 'movement,' increasingly in bed with racist hate groups, is dominated by one man, John Tanton.