A neo-Nazi and white nationalist with ties to the security company that works for musician Taylor Swift had a profile on a sexual fetish website.
A neo-Nazi and white nationalist with ties to the security company that works for musician Taylor Swift had a profile on a sexual fetish website.
On November 15, the European parliament聽聽upon Polish authorities to condemn what it called a "xenophobic and fascist march" which had taken place in Warsaw four days earlier.
Students and residents mounted a peaceful protest at the University of Florida that threw聽Richard Spencer聽for a loop, exposing the hollowness of his message and the fragility of his ego.
Since March 2016, the Southern Poverty Law Center (人兽性交) has tracked 329 flyering incidents on 241 different college campuses across the United States, a number that continues to grow.聽
UPDATE:聽 The Justice Department has just opened a civil rights investigation into an apparent hate crime last weekend in Spokane involving a 66-year African-American man. 鈥淲e are concerned about elements of the incident because any crime that is potentially hate-motivated is not only an attack on the victim, but threatens and intimidates an entire community,鈥 an FBI spokeswoman tells Hatewatch.鈥
The FBI is expected to review a hate crime in which a black man was assaulted with a handgun and called ethnic slurs before several gunshots were fired into his home in聽Spokane last weekend.
Joe Bernstein鈥檚 Buzzfeed revealing the inner workings of Breitbart News鈥攊ncluding a video showing white nationalist Richard Spencer giving聽a Nazi salute during Milo Yiannopolous' karaoke rendition of "America The Beautiful"鈥攕olidifies the far-right outlet鈥檚 reputation as a platform for the white nationalist 鈥渁lt-right.鈥
On Thursday afternoon, a judge found Ryan King guilty of disorderly conduct for his role in a聽fight that broke out聽at Auburn University last April. King, a 38-year-old tattoo artist from Montgomery, Alabama, went to Auburn for Richard Spencer鈥檚 controversial appearance on April 18.
Fiery torch demonstrations on the University of Virginia campus 鈥 like those that marked the Unite the Right rally in August 鈥 will no longer be legal following action by a university board.
The Christian and Norse mythology behind white supremacist violence
In the days since Jason Kessler鈥檚 Unite the Right (UTR) rally ended in bloodshed, various right wing propagandists have attempted to shift blame by smearing the City of Charlottesville, the Charlottesville Police Department (CPD) and Virginia State Police as being responsible for the death of one counter-protester and two police officers.聽