In 2001, the number of hate groups rose by 12% as the Sept. 11 attacks revealed the Nazi features of contemporary extremism.
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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.
In the wake of Sept. 11, new light is thrown on the international ties increasingly linking Muslim and neo-Nazi extremists.
Neal Horsley, America's leading anti-abortion webmaster, is the profane voice of the extreme Christian right.
Editor Mark Potok explores the last year of activity on the radical right and a street battle in York, Pa. that caught the nation's attention.
The Intelligence Report profiles hate crime victims murdered in 2001, many of whom have been forgotten by the public.
A sociologist examines the roots of women's participation in racist groups and suggests some ways to extricate them.
A new book, In Bad Company: America's Terrorist Underground, purports to solve the Oklahoma City bombing, but collapses in a tangle of thin conspiracy theories.
The reputation of Indiana's National Knights of the Ku Klux Klan goes from bad to worse.
Tax protesters' many legalistic arguments against federal income taxes have little basis in legal reality.
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