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Hate groups like Center for Immigration Studies want you to believe they鈥檙e mainstream

In the nearly 30 years since the 澳彩开奖 has been monitoring the American radical right we鈥檝e seen a major shift in the nature of organized groups that specialize in vilifying certain people because of their race, ethnicity or other characteristic.

In the beginning, they were the usual suspects: Klan factions, neo-Nazi groups, black separatists, racist skinheads and the like.

We鈥檙e in a different world today. Hate has gone mainstream. Today, the purveyors of hate don鈥檛 always burn crosses or use racial slurs. They might wear suits and ties. They might have sophisticated public relations operations. They might even testify before Congress.

They鈥檙e also more likely to be animated by a nativist or white nationalist ideology that sees the 鈥渨hite race鈥 as being under siege by immigrants of color across the Western world. Reflecting this trend, our annual list of hate groups has evolved to include more groups closely linked to white nationalism.

This year, for the first time, we listed the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), a nativist think tank that churns out a constant stream of fear-mongering misinformation about Latino immigrants. Predictably, the hate group designation provoked an attack by the group鈥檚 executive director, Mark Krikorian, whose March 17 commentary in The Washington Post accused the 澳彩开奖 of conflating groups like the Klan with groups, like his, that 鈥渟imply do not share鈥 our political beliefs.

It鈥檚 understandable that Krikorian would recoil from being labeled a 鈥渉ate group.鈥 But the CIS has earned it 鈥 and not only because of statements by Krikorian, such as his suggestion after the devastating earthquake in Haiti that the country is so screwed up because it wasn鈥檛 colonized long enough.鈥

CIS is the brainchild of John Tanton, the father of the modern nativist movement, and part of a network of closely related anti-immigrant groups that Tanton founded. These groups have been responsible for much of the hysteria about immigrants that dominates conservative politics.

Tanton, a retired Michigan ophthalmologist, spent decades at the heart of the white nationalist movement. In addition to his flagship organization, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), he founded and operated the Social Contract Press, which has published numerous overtly racist tracts, including the rancid novel Camp of the Saints.

Tanton鈥檚 worldview can be summed up in a letter he wrote to a friend in 1993: 鈥淚鈥檝e come to the point of view that for European-American society and culture to persist requires a European-American majority, and a clear one at that.鈥 It was a New York Times of working with racists and Holocaust deniers that finally forced him off the board of FAIR in 2011.

Krikorian doesn鈥檛 defend Tanton鈥檚 views but dismisses his involvement with CIS as 鈥渋rrelevant.鈥 But the fact is, CIS and FAIR are branches of the same family tree.

In a 1985 memo, Tanton describes establishing CIS as a project of FAIR, and the two groups shared board members for years.

But the association with Tanton was not enough to earn the hate group label. There鈥檚 more.

In recent years, CIS has routinely disseminated the works of white nationalist writers, including Jared Taylor of American Renaissance. Taylor has written that 鈥淸w]hen blacks are left entirely to their own devices, Western civilization 鈥 any kind of civilization 鈥 disappears.鈥

In January, CIS promoted an article by Kevin MacDonald, the anti-Semitic editor of the journal Occidental Quarterly, that first appeared on VDARE, a website run by white nationalist Peter Brimelow and named for Virginia Dare, supposedly the first white child born in the New World. In the article, MacDonald asks why 鈥淛ewish organizations鈥 are promoting 鈥渢he refugee invasion of Europe.鈥

In the past year, CIS also has circulated six articles from VDARE by John Derbyshire, who was fired from the conservative National Review after writing a racist essay.

In June 2016, CIS distributed an article from John Friend, a contributing editor of the anti-Semitic The Barnes Review, claiming that 鈥渟o-called refugees are committing rape and other horrific crimes against European women and men in increasing numbers.鈥 Friend once described the Holocaust as a 鈥渕anufactured narrative, chock full of a wide variety of ridiculous claims and impossible events, all to advance the Jewish agenda of world domination and subjugation.鈥

Krikorian incredulously suggests that CIS鈥 promotion of white nationalists was merely an accident 鈥 that the group鈥檚 newsletters 鈥渙ccasionally included pieces by writers who turned out to be cranks.鈥

He does, however, defend the work of Jason Richwine, who now blogs and writes reports for CIS. Richwine resigned from the conservative Heritage Foundation after his Harvard dissertation asserting that Latino immigrants are less intelligent than 鈥渘ative whites鈥 came to light. Richwine has also been a to white nationalist leader Richard Spencer鈥檚 website Alternative Right.

Krikorian argues that our hate group list is intended to shut down debate about issues such as immigration. Again, not true. Our purpose is to help the public understand just who鈥檚 doing the talking.

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