Two men who joined in white nationalist violence at last summer’s Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia were convicted this week in separate jury trials of assaulting a black counter-protester.
Two men who joined in white nationalist violence at last summer’s Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia were convicted this week in separate jury trials of assaulting a black counter-protester.
On Saturday April 21, the final rally in a series of pro-gun demonstrations organized by the National Coalition of Constitutional Patriotic Americans (NCCPA) took place in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
April 21 is a day remembered for a number of momentous events— the anniversaries of the founding of Rome, the premier of “Walker, Texas Ranger” and the death of Prince — but thankfully the pathetic neo-Nazi rally in Newnan, Georgia will have no place in our collective consciousness.
Barricades are going up in Newnan, Georgia, as Andy Knowles' nerves spike even higher. Knowles, who owns a motorcycle shop in the city of 33,000 about 40 miles north of Atlanta, is preparing for the worst when the neo-Nazi group the National Socialist Movement pushes through town on Saturday and is surely met by police and counter-protestors.
Attempts by the racist “alt-right” to recover from the stumbling block of August 2017’s disastrous Unite the Right rally have been dashed by several recent upheavals.
On March 12, 2018, hard-right Canadian YouTuber Lauren Southern was refused entrance to the United Kingdom reportedly afte distributing flyers in Luton, U.K., stating “Allah is a gay God” and “Allah is trans” — which Southern called a “social experiment.”
The neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement (NSM) may have agreed not to return to Charlottesville, Virginia, with weapons, but that’s certainly not stopping its members from planning a string of racist rallies elsewhere, including one on April 21 in Newnan, Georgia.
As a light rain fell from an overcast sky, aging neo-Nazi and racist David Duke stood in an electric blue blazer checking his phone while holding a sign saying “Support our Monument” in central Alabama.
Stormfront founder and former Klansman Don Black announced on Tuesday that the white supremacist movement’s first major hate forum is temporarily restricting access to “sustaining members” — users who donate at least five dollars a month — and will be archiving and shuttering its main server on April 6 due to a “financial crisis.”
The collapse of the Traditionalist Worker Party (TWP) earlier this month, following the arrest of chairman Matthew Heimbach for the battery of his wife and father-in-law, turned the white supremacist movement’s months-long optics debate on its head.