Otra generación de activistas en contra de los inmigrantes se une al movimiento nativista virulento y en crecimiento
Last Sept. 20, the eyes of America turned to Jena, La., where more than 20,000 people had gathered to protest what they saw as racism in the disparate criminal treatment accorded black and white students at a local high school.
Another generation of anti-immigrant activists joins the increasingly virulent nativist movement
Quotes from Ted Smith, Michael Savage, Neal Boortz...
The vicious talk at the white supremacist "Rally Against Black Gang Terrorism" in Kalamazoo, Mich., last Aug. 4 didn't come as much of a surprise to anyone. After all, the speakers included some of the most hard-line racists in America.
The leader of the Nation of Yahweh, tied to the murders of 14 people, has died. But the black supremacist group he started is showing strong signs of new life.
Russian-speaking Christian fundamentalists, mostly immigrants from the former Soviet Union, have formed a ferocious anti-gay movement in the western U.S.
Another fringe black separatist group has come into the crosshairs of law enforcement. Like many others, the Abannaki Indigenous Nation propounds a bizarre ideology that's a mix of pseudo-scientific ideas about white people and groundless theories about being immune to U.S. laws.