The hatred that led to Pittsburgh and Charlottesville is finding new adherents around the world, Jonathan Greenblatt of Anti-Defamation League, civil liberties watchdog, told USA Today after New Zealand attack... ..…
The hatred that led to Pittsburgh and Charlottesville is finding new adherents around the world, Jonathan Greenblatt of Anti-Defamation League, civil liberties watchdog, told USA Today after New Zealand attack... ..…
The hatred that led to Pittsburgh and Charlottesville is finding new adherents around the world, Jonathan Greenblatt of Anti-Defamation League, civil liberties watchdog, told USA Today after New Zealand attack... ..…
In an ABC News/Washington Post poll taken just after the Charlottesville rally in August 2017, 9 percent of the respondents said they thought it was strongly or somewhat acceptable to hold neo–Nazi or white supremacist views. ... “It is more open in its expression, both online and in protests..…
After a white-supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 left a woman dead, for instance, Trump held a freewheeling news conference in which he said 'both sides' were to blame. . ..…
The center says that the number of white nationalist groups surged from 100 to 148 in 2018, noting that the groups have retreated from activism following Charlottesville... ..…
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