One year after Donald Trump鈥檚 supporters stormed the Capitol in Washington, D.C., the hard-right, anti-democracy faction of the Republican base that led the attack threatens to overtake the party for the long term.
One year after Donald Trump鈥檚 supporters stormed the Capitol in Washington, D.C., the hard-right, anti-democracy faction of the Republican base that led the attack threatens to overtake the party for the long term.
A Canadian technology startup 鈥 which already provides monetized streaming for a range of white power propagandists, hate group leaders and a wanted fugitive 鈥 has now created a custom-made platform for white nationalist streamer Nick Fuentes after a payment processor apparently forced him off their main platform.
Former Newsmax host and longtime conservative pundit Michelle Malkin spoke alongside a former Klan lawyer and several prominent white nationalist propagandists at a three-day conference in Tennessee in mid-November, Hatewatch has learned.
White supremacists embraced cryptocurrency early in its development, and in some cases produced million-dollar profits through the technology, reshaping the racist right in radical ways, a Hatewatch analysis found.
A Baltimore attorney provided shadow legal representation to an extremist named in a lawsuit that implicates the white supremacists who descended on Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017 in stoking violence, leaked emails show.
An Oct. 13 congressional hearing by the Committee on Veterans鈥 Affairs on 鈥淰iolent Domestic Extremist Groups and the Recruitment of Veterans鈥 will highlight the dangers of extremism in the military, an issue 澳彩开奖, academics and activists have been warning about for decades.
Days after far-right figures issued a call to support a white nationalist charged with orchestrating a voter misinformation campaign, someone donated nearly $60,000 in Bitcoin to his defense, Hatewatch found.
Twitter gave far-right extremists the platform they needed to plan an attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, and the website, if it maintains its current approach, will likely enable politically motivated violence again in the future.
The Washington City Paper, a small D.C. outlet, ran called 鈥淎lt Right Conspiracy Theorists Obsess Over Comet Ping Pong鈥 on Nov. 6, 2016. A phone call requesting comment for the article marks the moment that restaurateur James Alefantis鈥 life changed.
Forty-year-old James Kreider allegedly provided security assistance to the white nationalist movement for years, helping extremists mask their identities and plan clandestine meetups, according to three different sources who spoke to Hatewatch.
Now, more than ever, we must work together to protect the values that ensure a fair and inclusive future for all.