As the national debate over immigration continues to rage, white nationalist leaders have also been weighing in.
As the national debate over immigration continues to rage, white nationalist leaders have also been weighing in.
Racist “alt-right” leader Richard Spencer won’t be taking his ill-received speaking tour to the University of Michigan before the summer.
As William Fears, IV, attended Richard Spencer’s poorly received speaking engagement at the University of Florida in October, he was wanted elsewhere.
A white nationalist and alt-right frontman will be allowed to speak at Michigan State University in March after the school and the racist settled a lawsuit over the on-campus appearance.
In an appearance on “crying Nazi” Christopher Cantwell’s radio show Radical Agenda on Sunday, Andrew Anglin reiterated his troubling, long-standing recruitment strategy: indoctrinating kids.
When Donald Trump came down his golden escalator in 2015 to announce his bid for the presidency, it wasn’t long until the nation’s racist and conspiratorial fringe followed, creeping out of the shadows to form the largest and most visceral display of radical right-wing extremism the nation had seen in decades.
A series of scandals in the Nationalist Front — and a long-running and well-documented hypocritical streak on the part of leadership in the neo-Confederate League of the South (LOS) — has revealed a willingness on the part of president Michael Hill to look the other way when both allies and his own troops fail to meet his supposed moral standards.
The booker for racist “alt-right” front man Richard Spencer is suing the University of Cincinnati over the proposed cost of security for a speaking event on the southern Ohio campus.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. — A fully-packed, specially-chartered city bus made its way to the Charlottesville Circuit Courthouse yesterday afternoon. Its passengers weren't just city residents but victims of the murderous car ramming that occurred during the August 12, far-right, "Unite the Right" rally and their family members.
Led by an 18-year-old Texas man, the far right splinter group born from the fallout over Charlottesville connects flyer-plastering activists online around the country.