Hate Rises

Racism continues to grow in America

Each year, the Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center takes stock of racist groups in the United States by publishing a "year in hate" report. In 2008, despite—or maybe in part because of—the racial breakthrough of Barack Obama's election as president, the number of hate groups rose—by 54 percent, according to the center.

New Mexico, however, bucked this trend, according to this report. Susan Seligman, regional director for New Mexico's Anti-Defamation League, concurs.

"Right now there's very little activity going on in New Mexico," she says.

In the past year, the local ADL has tracked some Aryan Brotherhood activity in the prisons and "a few" white supremacists, Seligman says.

"The groups are different than they were back in the '90s. A lot of them have dispersed," Seligman says. Not only that, she says, "the internet has changed the face of hate."

Apparently everybody's on Facebook—even neo-Nazis.

Why has New Mexico been spared? Seligman says the smaller cities here limit fundraising and organizing for white supremacist and anti-immigrant groups that thrive next door in Arizona.

Nonetheless, the broader picture of racism in the US, which is SPLC's focus, remains chilling. This week, SFR presents SPLC's Intelligence Report on these groups, as well as an editorial from Intelligence Report Editor Mark Potok.

The Year in Hate
Number of Hate Groups Tops 900

By David Holthouse

From white power skinheads decrying “President Obongo” at a racist gathering in rural Missouri, to neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klansmen hurling epithets at Latino immigrants from courthouse steps in Oklahoma, to anti-Semitic black separatists calling for death to Jews on bustling street corners in several East Coast cities, hate group activity in the US was disturbing and widespread throughout 2008, as the number of hate groups operating in America continued to rise. Last year, 926 hate groups were active in the US, up more than 4 percent from 888 in 2007. That’s more than a 50 percent increase since 2000, when there were 602 groups.

As in recent years, hate groups were animated by the national immigration debate. But two new forces also drove them in 2008: the worsening recession and Barack Obama’s successful campaign to become the nation’s first black president. Officials reported that Obama had received more threats than any other presidential candidate in memory, and several white supremacists were arrested for saying they would assassinate him or allegedly plotting to do so.

At the same time, law enforcement officials reported a marked swelling of the extreme-right “sovereign citizens” movement that wreaked havoc in the ’90s with its “paper terrorism” tactics. Adherents are infamous for filing bogus property liens and orchestrating elaborate financial rip-offs.

Somewhat surprisingly, it wasn’t just the usual suspects from the white supremacist underworld who sought to exploit the country’s economic turmoil and political strife. A key 2008 hate group trend was the increasing militancy of the extremist fringe of the Hebrew Israelite movement, whose adherents believe that Jews are creatures of the devil and that whites deserve death or slavery.

These radical black supremacists have no love for Barack Obama, calling him a “house nigger” and a puppet of Israel. They preach to inner-city blacks that evil Jews are solely responsible for the recession. The rhetoric of white-skinned hate group leaders in 2008 was equally alarming. Last September, for example, the cover of National Socialist magazine depicted then-presidential nominee Barack Obama in the crosshairs of a scope, with the headline “Kill This Nigger?”

What follows is a detailed look at the three most active and dangerous white supremacist hate group sectors in 2008: Ku Klux Klan groups, neo-Nazis and racist skinheads.

KU KLUX KLAN

Reversing a generally declining trend since 2000, Klan groups in the US increased significantly in 2008, from 155 chapters to 186. Seventeen new chapters belong to the Brotherhood of Klans Knights of the Ku Klux Klan (BOK), which during the past five years has grown into the largest Klan organization in the country. In 2008, the Marion, Ohio-headquartered BOK launched a handful of chapters in Canada, linking up with the Aryan Guard, a fast-growing white nationalist group based in Alberta.

A smaller but likewise rapidly expanding Klan group, the United Northern and Southern Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, which in 2007 absorbed the National Aryan Knights, more than doubled its number of chapters and tripled its geographic reach last year, going from 11 chapters in eight states to 24 chapters in 24 states.

The continued rise of the United Northern and Southern Knights and the BOK paralleled the decline of the Imperial Klans of America (IKA). Since 2005, the IKA has shriveled from 39 chapters in 26 states to just six chapters in five states. Last year, it suffered a crippling blow when a Meade County, Ky. jury delivered a $2.5 million judgment against members of the IKA, including $1 million against IKA leader Ron Edwards, in a lawsuit brought by the Southern Poverty Law Center on behalf of a mixed-race teenager who was assaulted by IKA thugs in Kentucky.

Beyond the IKA trial, the biggest Klan story for the mainstream media in 2008 was the murder of a 43-year-old Tulsa, Okla. woman during a backwoods Klan initiation ritual near Bogalusa, La. According to law enforcement investigators, the victim was recruited over the internet to join the Sons of Dixie, a tiny KKK faction led by Raymond “Chuck” Foster. Foster allegedly shot the woman in the head after she changed her mind about joining the Klan.

Blipping on the media’s radar last December was the National Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, whose imperial wizard, Ray Larsen, called for all Klansmen “worldwide” to wear black armbands and fly the American flag upside down on Jan. 20, the day of Barack Obama’s inauguration.

NEO-NAZIS
A slight drop in the number of neo-Nazi chapters last year from 207 to 194 was attributable largely to the dissolution of National Vanguard after its leader, Kevin Alfred Strom, was convicted in January 2008 on child pornography charges. (Strom was released last fall after serving prison time.)

Another major neo-Nazi leader, American National Socialist Workers Party “Commander” Bill White, also suffered legal troubles in 2008, culminating in his December indictment on several federal felony counts for posting death threats on his website or by making them by phone. Along with the threats, White often posted the home addresses of perceived enemies, ranging from Canadian human rights attorney Richard Warman (in an item subtly titled “Kill Richard Warman”) to Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts to officials of the Southern Poverty Law Center.

When the seven-count federal indictment came down, White was already jailed in Chicago on separate charges. He was arrested last October and extradited from Roanoke, Va., where he owns apartments in black neighborhoods, to face a federal obstruction of justice charge for allegedly threatening the foreman of a Chicago jury that convicted neo-Nazi leader Matt Hale in 2004 of soliciting the murder of a federal judge. Still, despite White’s legal and personal financial turmoil (he declared bankruptcy last June), the ANSWP grew last year from 30 chapters in 26 states to 35 chapters in 28 states, making it the second-largest neo-Nazi organization in the country, after the National Socialist Movement (NSM).

Apart from its usual literature dispersals, book burnings, swastika lightings and its annual “Hated and Proud” hate-rock festival, the NSM in 2008 targeted Latino immigrants with sizable “illegal invasion” protests in Washington, DC and Omaha, Neb. Subjected for years to ridicule by the movement for their brown-shirt uniforms, NSM national and state chapter leaders also voted at the group’s National Congress last April to switch to “more militant looking” black BDUs (Battle Dress Uniforms). Even with the makeover, the NSM lost 30 chapters last year (it later added 26, for a net loss of six chapters) after leader Jeff Schoep abandoned his family and relocated NSM headquarters from Minneapolis to Detroit in January 2008, reportedly to move in with a new girlfriend of dubious Aryan purity.

Nevertheless, the NSM benefited from diminished competition as the formerly dominant National Alliance continued its long decline, shrinking to 11 chapters in nine states. Similarly, Aryan Nations, another one-time powerhouse, withered to 11 chapters in 10 states. White Revolution gained no ground, ending the year as it began with a dozen chapters.

Two upstart neo-Nazi groups emerged in 2008. The League of American Patriots, which held its inaugural meeting last March 29, appears to be comprised of former National Vanguard members. The second newcomer, Knights of the Nordic Order, was founded by “two former captains of the Aryan Brotherhood,” a notorious white supremacist prison gang, according to its website.

New Mexico’s one listed hate group from this report falls under this neo-Nazi category. In June 2004, Schoep personally announced on stormfront.org that his para-militaristic neo-Nazi organization was forming a New Mexico unit. The unit’s first mission: transporting “troops” by car pool to Lincoln, Neb. for the group’s annual rally. Although currently NSM claims a unit in New Mexico, the state’s page on nsm88.org (88 is code for “Heil Hitler”) is blank of information, devoid of contact details. But, back on the stormfront.org white-nationalist message board, Robert Smalley of Albuquerque is looking for romance: “I want to find true Aryan Love on Stormfront…We together will stop this leftist, race-mixing, anti-life, anti-family nightmare.”

RACIST SKINHEADS
The total number of racist skinhead crews, driven by the addition of a couple of new organizations, rose from 90 in 2007 to 98 last year.

Relatively inactive in 2007, Hammerskin Nation, long a force to be reckoned with in the racist skinhead subculture, came back in a big way in 2008. The diminished tally of Hammerskin chapters (which dropped from 15 to 12) is misleading, as it represents the merging of smaller chapters and Hammerskin leaders weeding out weaker outfits, rather than a real drop in the organization’s strength and membership. On the contrary, the Hammerskins last year stepped up recruiting while forging new bonds with other skinhead groups and hosting dozens of hate-rock concerts, white-power cookouts, Mixed Martial Arts prizefight viewing parties and other widely promoted events.

The Confederate Hammerskins (CHS), the organization’s southeastern regional division, kept particularly busy, beginning last March with a St. Patty’s Day concert in Central Florida that was heavily attended by skins from across the country. Represented crews included Volksfront, Blood & Honour American Division, Atlantic City Skins, Troops of Tomorrow, and The Hated. Members of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club, a notorious biker gang, also attended.

A close Hammerskins ally, the Portland, Ore.-based Volksfront, held its first annual “Althing” gathering last Aug. 29-Sept. 1 on private land purchased by Volksfront in rural Missouri, about an hour’s drive north of St. Louis. Part three-day hate-rock blowout, part skinhead summit, the Althing was held in the “Samuel Weaver Memorial Hall,” named after white supremacist Randy Weaver’s son, who was killed by federal agents during the infamous Ruby Ridge standoff in 1992 (Weaver’s wife and a US marshal were also killed). Among the white supremacist leaders who attended was veteran skinhead organizer David Lynch, leader of the resurgent Sacramento, Calif.-based crew American Front.

Last December, more than 100 skinheads from at least five states gathered in Florida for a “Martyr’s Day” party, co-sponsored by CHS, Volksfront and American Front, that featured a keynote address phoned in from prison by Richard Kemp, a member of the white supremacist terrorist group The Order. Martyr’s Day commemorates the 1984 death of Order founder Bob Mathews, who died in a shoot-out with the FBI.
Another noteworthy development in the skinhead sector was the severe weakening of the Vinlanders Social Club (VSC), a skinhead coalition that began in 2003 and grew to become Hammerskin Nation’s primary rival. Plagued by infighting, criminal prosecutions and desertions, the Vinlanders made no public appearances in 2008, limiting their activities to private beer bashes. Three inner-circle Vinlanders, including co-founder Eric “The Butcher” Fairburn, were convicted last year of a March 2007 racially motivated attack on a homeless black man in downtown Indianapolis, Ind. At his sentencing hearing last August, Fairburn publicly renounced the skinhead movement.

Formerly aligned with the VSC, the Keystone State Skinheads (KSS) distanced their group from the Vinlanders, changed their name to Keystone United and recast themselves as media-friendly “pro-white” activists. Keystone mouthpiece Keith Carney denounced hooliganism in several newspaper and television interviews. Last October, the group held a “Leif Ericson Day Celebration,” honoring the Viking explorer, in a Philadelphia public park on the banks of the Schuylkill River. In contrast to the screaming hate rock performed by Absolute Terror and Total War at the annual Keystone-sponsored “Uprise” concert in January 2008, which was held in a secret location, Celtic folk musicians provided entertainment at the two-faced crew’s “family-friendly” event.

In contrast to KSS, the United Society of Aryan Skinheads (USAS) made no effort to revamp its image in 2008. Formed in recent years inside California’s state prison system, the USAS continues to espouse white-power skinhead ideology and grow into a strong presence throughout Southern California as members are paroled. The USAS went from a single chapter in 2007 to nine chapters in 2008, including three separate crews in San Diego, the group’s base of operations in the outside world. Though populated almost entirely by ex-cons, the USAS, unlike most prison-based white supremacist groups, actually maintains a powerful racist identity and rarely compromises principles in favor of criminal profits.

One major new racist skinhead group surfaced in 2008: the Supreme White Alliance, or SWA. Co-founded by Kentucky skinhead Steven Edwards, son of Imperial Klans of America leader Ron Edwards, the SWA by year’s end boasted eight chapters in as many states, an active website and a substantial online presence on MySpace as well as on the white nationalist social networking site New Saxon. The group’s vice president is former IKA member Jarred Hensley, who served more than a year for his role in the hate crime assault that led to the SPLC lawsuit. “Out of prison and back on the streets,” Hensley posted on MySpace last July upon his release. “It’s gr88 to be a Skinhead!” Last October, former SWA probate Daniel Cowart was arrested in Tennessee with another skinhead he met online for allegedly plotting to assassinate Barack Obama after killing 88 black students (once again, 88 is neo-Nazi code for the phrase “Heil Hitler”). The SWA claimed that Cowart had been kicked out prior to hatching the plan. 

Diversity and Its Discontents

By Mark Potok

Barack Obama, the son of a white mother from Kansas and a black father from Africa, is a symbol of the rich diversity of our nation, his election a sign of how far our nation has come in embracing that diversity.
But there are other signs of just how far we have to go.

The wave of Latino immigration that began in the 1990s and continues today has sparked a white-hot nativist backlash that is largely responsible for a more than 50 percent jump in the number of hate groups operating in the United States since 2000. As outlined in this year’s issue of the SPLC’s Intelligence Report, that number hit a record high last year, 926. The best government study suggests that some 210,000 people a year are victimized by hate crimes, the vast majority of them motivated by race or ethnicity. Vicious denunciations of brown-skinned immigrants are everyday occurrences, and hate crimes against Latinos have jumped 40 percent since 2003.

What’s going on? How is it that, at this moment of triumph for diversity and multiculturalism, racial and ethnic anger seems so intense?

Robert Putnam, a Harvard professor of political science, has for more than a decade explored the consequences of diversity on American society. His controversial conclusion, most recently enunciated in a 2007 article in the journal Scandinavian Political Studies, is that, in the short to medium run, immigration and ethnic diversity “tend to reduce social solidarity” and trust in one’s neighbors. For example, in highly diverse Los Angeles and San Francisco, about 30 percent of inhabitants said they trust their neighbors “a lot”; in ethnically homogenous areas of North and South Dakota, 70-80 percent said the same.

But in the long run, Putnam argues, immigration greatly strengthens societies. It fosters and enhances creativity. Contrary to the propaganda of the anti-immigrant lobby, it increases the net income of native-born Americans. It helps offset the looming fiscal effects of the aging native population. And, it leads to greater economic development in the home countries of immigrants.

Getting past the backlash to diversity—so that we can enjoy its long-term benefit—poses difficult challenges for our country. As Putnam explains, we need to put the era of “us” and “them” behind us and “create a new, broader sense of ‘we.’” An essential first step, in our view, is exposing the false propaganda that emanates from the far right and continues to divide us.

One of the most recent examples, recounted in this year’s Intelligence Report, is the nativist fairy tale alleging that “illegal aliens” hold 5 million bad mortgages in the United States—and are therefore, presumably, responsible for the subprime banking disaster and subsequent economic crisis. This utterly false claim originated on KFYI-AM in Phoenix, Ariz., was fired into cyberspace by The Drudge Report and was then carried to hundreds of thousands of television viewers via CNN’s “Lou Dobbs Tonight” show, which has specialized in this kind of material.

Hate propaganda has consequences. That was demonstrated again on Jan. 21, the day after Obama was inaugurated, when a 22-year-old white man in Brockton, Mass. allegedly stormed out of his house and killed two black people, and raped and gravely wounded another. Later, the man told police he’d intended to invade an Orthodox synagogue and kill as many Jews as possible. The reason, he said, was that he’d spent six months perusing racist websites and concluded they “spoke the truth about the demise of the white race,” according to court filings.

We are living in difficult and contentious times. And, perhaps, more difficult years lie ahead. Tough economic times provide fertile ground for those who would foment hate against minorities by
scapegoating them for our problems. In addition, demographers are predicting the loss of a white majority in 2042—an eventuality that is likely to further anger whites who see this country as their own.

At the same time, the possibilities before us have never been greater. The shattering of glass ceilings—whether they’re related to race, ethnicity or gender—is letting our country draw on the talents
of groups that have long been marginalized. It is up to all of us, as a nation, to remain alert to the dangers but dedicated to building a better future.

As The New York Times editorialized this February: “It’s easy to mock white supremacist views as pathetic and to assume that nativism in the age of Obama is going away.…But racism has a nasty habit of never going away, no matter how much we want it to, and thus the perpetual need for vigilance.…[I]t takes only a cursory look at a worsening economic climate and grim national mood to realize that history is always threatening to repeat itself.” SFR

Letters to the Editor

Mail letters to PO Box 4910 Santa Fe, NM 87502 or email them to editor[at]sfreporter.com. Letters (no more than 200 words) should refer to specific articles in the Reporter. Letters will be edited for space and clarity.

We also welcome you to follow SFR on social media (on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter) and comment there. You can also email specific staff members from our contact page.