Pepe the Frog will get his day in court.
Pepe the Frog will get his day in court.
As first reported by One People’s Project, a recent “Back the Blue” rally sponsored by the anti-Muslim hate group ACT for America drew an activist who has associated with white nationalists. This is just the latest example of the anti-Muslim group attracting these types of figures to its events.
“We have got a flash rally coming up,” Michael Hill, president of the racist neo-Confederate hate group League of the South, announced last week on the white nationalist podcast Stormfront Action.
A 24-year-old man is charged with homicide in the early Sunday morning stabbing death of Dulane Cameron Jr. of Monaca, Pennsylvania. The suspect, Joden C. Rocco, also has a social media presence that suggests he was steeped in the racist “alt-right.”
Turning to his wife and family, Maryland Ku Klux Klan leader Richard Wilson Preston touched his heart and mouthed “I love you.”
Colton Gene Fears has reached a plea deal with Florida prosecutors on the charges of accessory to attempted murder for his role in a shooting that followed a speech by white nationalist Richard Spencer last year.
The far-right group Patriot Prayer, embraced by Proud Boys and a Washington III% militia group, held a noisy, mostly violence-free “Liberty or Death” rally in Seattle over the weekend.
To look at the pitiful showing of Jason Kessler’s Unite the Right 2 outing last weekend, the casual observer might wonder if the racist “alt-right” was routed. But to mistake Kessler as a one-man bellwether for the strength of white supremacist ideas is to misapprehend — and underestimate — the movement to which he belongs.
Racist “alt-right” former golden boy Richard Spencer is continuing to unravel.
The Unite the Right rally in August 2017 looked to be a coming-out party of sorts for the racist "alt-right" as well as a turning point for the white supremacist and white nationalist movement in the country.