Rhetoric of 'pro-South,' neo-Confederate hate groups grows harsher.
Rhetoric of 'pro-South,' neo-Confederate hate groups grows harsher.
Neo-Confederate Wayne D. Carlson dabbles in neo-Nazi literature.
In 2001, the number of hate groups rose by 12% as the Sept. 11 attacks revealed the Nazi features of contemporary extremism.
Neo-confederate extremists begin a takeover of the Sons of Confederate Veterans group.
The racist neo-Confederate hate group League of the South has begun a decline in both popularity and membership.
Ten years after federal officials began compiling them, national hate crime statistics are plagued with inaccuracy due to shoddiness in voluntary reporting and other errors.
Around the country, the far right reacts to the events of Sept. 11, 2001 with anti-Semitic hatred, threats and conspiracy theories.
A timeline documents how the web of associations between European and American right-wing extremists has thickened from World War II to the present.
The American Friends of the British National Party draws together U.S. hate groups while funding British racism.
In an atmosphere of 'fear and despair,' extra-parliamentary and electoral fascism is making a comeback across Europe.