Statements by old-line hate groups and more 'mainstream' organizations often show similar ideologies despite the groups' other differences.
Statements by old-line hate groups and more 'mainstream' organizations often show similar ideologies despite the groups' other differences.
Mainstream neo-Confederate organizations generally share goals of preserving 'Southern' culture, but many in these groups share cross-membership with racist organizations such as the white supremacist League of the South.
Like other extremists, neo-Confederates are questioning the Constitutional amendment that gave blacks citizenship — but the courts have consistently rejected their arguments.
A Louisiana 'Empress,' head of the obscure common-law group Washitaw de Dugdahmoundyah, faces charges of tax evasion and mail and wire fraud.
Reviewing the 1990s, a decade virtually unprecedented in the history of the American radical right.
Bernard von NotHaus' NORFED group and several others try to bring in fortunes by selling antigovernment theories and products to gullible Patriots.
The antigovernment Patriot movement is revealed most fully in its publications.
A federal judge, angered at the financial scams of the Montana Freemen, sentences the group's leaders to long terms.
Leaders of the antigovernment Republic of Texas group planned to purchase a building to become their 'capital.'
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.