The Year in Hate, 2002: hate takes a hit as deaths, defections, arrests and internal splits roil America's embattled white supremacist movement.
The Year in Hate, 2002: hate takes a hit as deaths, defections, arrests and internal splits roil America's embattled white supremacist movement.
The Southern Legal Resource Center (SLRC), a North Carolina legal group, calls itself the leading advocate for 'Confederate Americans.' Its exaggerations and dismal record suggests otherwise.
The near-universal repudiation of Sen. Trent Lott — after statements amounting to an endorsement of institutionalized segregation in December 2002 — belies the spread of radical right ideology into the American mainstream.
A war over the historical meaning of slavery, the Civil War and segregation has broken out across the American South.
An African American "born-again Confederate," H.K. Edgerton is marching across the south, raising money for neo-Confederate organizations.
Moderate members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans defeated the candidacy of an infamous white supremacist lawyer in August. But extremists managed to take over most of the 106-year-old "heritage" organization anyway.
Pat Buchanan's presidential bid in 2000 dashed the Reform Party, once a significant third political force, into pieces. Now, white supremacists, Christian "Patriots" and other right-wing extremists are scrambling to pick up the fragments.
The unexpected death of National Alliance leader William Pierce shifted the neo-Nazi landscape, but the appointment of Erich Gliebe as Pierce's successor means the organization lives on.
Rhetoric of 'pro-South,' neo-Confederate hate groups grows harsher.
Neo-Confederate Wayne D. Carlson dabbles in neo-Nazi literature.