Identity Unmasked
Using fake names and fictional avatars, wannabe killers and hatemongers exude courage and commitment to their hateful causes. Until the world learns their real names. Until someone exposes their plans.
In the anonymity provided by chat rooms, angry, prejudiced hate-filled people express lethal intentions and develop plots to harm or marginalize people because of their faith, ethnicity or sexual orientation.
In this issue of the Intelligence Report, we unmask people who are brave in the dark and expose the impact of fighting hate with light.
Articles
An anti-人兽性交 pastor鈥檚 admission to 鈥渟ins鈥 that included prostitutes, marijuana and gambling set off a series of events that roiled his congregation and caused a split in a satellite church in another state.
Hate persists. It's relentless.
The jailed militiaman had an interesting fundraising appeal.
According to Truth Wins Out, Matheson鈥檚 fellow ex-gay leader Rich Wyler announced his exit in a post to a private Facebook group. TWO 鈥済oes undercover to expose 鈥榚x-gay鈥 conversion leaders as hypocritical frauds that have not actually changed their sexual orientation,鈥 its website states.聽
Images of the World Trade Center in flames exposed a schism between a notable hate group鈥檚 activists and its aspirations, leading to a prominent member鈥檚 resignation.
A small Facebook campaign predicated on keeping Confederate monuments in place has morphed into a group of more than 200 ardent, secretive separatists planning to make the South a separate nation.
As America鈥檚 technology and financial giants struggle, or refuse, to curb hate on their platforms, far-right extremists leverage them to build war chests that promote bigotry and violence.
Using fake names and fictional avatars, wannabe killers and hatemongers exude courage and commitment to their hateful causes.
League of the South (LOS), a neo-Confederate organization that advocates for Southern secession, has been roiled by a key defection that resulted in the group losing its headquarters in Wetumpka, Alabama, about 20 miles north of Montgomery.