Looking forward to the year 2000, the signs are troubling. Terror from the radical right is up, and every indication is that this trend will continue.
Looking forward to the year 2000, the signs are troubling. Terror from the radical right is up, and every indication is that this trend will continue.
For many people employed as country clerks, court recorders and other government jobs, the fear of threat and attacks by an antigovernment common-law zealot never ends.
Fugitive bombing suspect Eric Robert Rudolph has been added to the FBI's 'Ten Most Wanted List' and a $1 million award has been offered for his arrest, while the search continues.
Mountaineer Militia 'general' Floyd Ray Looker has been sentenced to 18 years in federal prison in connection with an anti-FBI plot.
Three militiamen from Michigan face federal trial for a wide-ranging antigovernment conspiracy.
Arrests of five Skinheads in the murder of a Sikh temple caretaker have sparked a debate on hate crime laws in Canada.
A group of Midwestern white supremacists allegedly plotted to bomb every state capitol building in the country and blow up the Southern Poverty Law Center.
A new tactic by the Ku Klux Klan has its leaders happy while newspaper publishers are enraged.
Although the threat of terrorism is growing, only a fraction of cities earmarked to prepare for a possible terrorist attacks have actually begun training.
Websites are popping up that are geared towards white supremacist women and families.
Now, more than ever, we must work together to protect the values that ensure a fair and inclusive future for all.