After a year of reverses, the future of the radical right may lie in those profiled here, who are still peopling the fringe.
After a year of reverses, the future of the radical right may lie in those profiled here, who are still peopling the fringe.
The battle over the future of the Sons of Confederate Veterans remains unresolved after the group's annual convention.
Report editor Mark Potok discusses the future of the American radical right and the nation's leading neo-Nazi group, the National Alliance.
Fugitive Eric Rudolph, accused bomber and radical right Butch Cassidy, is finally captured; more on how radical right ideas permeate the mainstream in this issue of the Intelligence Report.
Around the country, radical right groups are staging 'European' festivals in a bid to draw ethnic whites into the movement.
A Milwaukee conspiracist says punctuation such as the colon is the key to liberty, but others say David Wynn Miller is full of it.
The Year in Hate, 2002: hate takes a hit as deaths, defections, arrests and internal splits roil America's embattled white supremacist movement.
The Southern Legal Resource Center (SLRC), a North Carolina legal group, calls itself the leading advocate for 'Confederate Americans.' Its exaggerations and dismal record suggests otherwise.
The near-universal repudiation of Sen. Trent Lott — after statements amounting to an endorsement of institutionalized segregation in December 2002 — belies the spread of radical right ideology into the American mainstream.
With its leader imprisoned, its name illegal and its ranks thinned by splits, the World Church of the Creator is on the ropes.