
Number of white nationalist groups falls as extremist views go mainstream
The number of white nationalist, hate and anti-government extremist groups in the US has dropped not because of their declining influence, but because many of their proponents feel their beliefs have become normalized in government and mainstream society, according to a new report by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).
The SPLC's annual Year in Hate and Extremism report, published on Thursday, said it documented 1,371 hate and extremist groups across the country in 2024, down from 1,430 groups in 2023.
These groups use 'political, communication, violent, and online tactics to build strategies and training infrastructure to divide the country, demoralize people, and dismantle democracy', the non-profit group said.
The 5% drop in hate and extremist groups in 2024 can be attributed to the fact that many feel a lesser sense of urgency to organize, because their beliefs have infiltrated politics, education and society in general, according to the report.
In 2024, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives became 'ground zero' for many of these groups, the report said, some using threats of violence and 'creating chaos that opened the door for political strongmen and authoritarian measures'.
These efforts built a foundation for nationwide policy actions to follow by Donald Trump, including legislative measures to restrict discussions of race and gender in classrooms, and cutting funding for programs that disproportionately affect marginalized communities.
The SPLC said there were 533 active hate groups in 2024, including ones that express views that are anti-LGBTQ+, anti-immigrant, antisemitic and anti-Muslim. Last year's report saw 'record numbers' of white nationalist and anti-LGBTQ+ groups, as well as an increase in direct actions such as hate crimes, flyering, protests and intimidation campaigns.
The groups featured in this year's report make up the 'hard-right movement that has long been behind rhetoric and actions that target Black people, women, immigrants, Jewish people, Muslims, and low-income, Indigenous and LGBTQ+ people,' according to the SPLC Intelligence Project's interim director, Rachel Carroll Rivas.
'Their power comes from the use of force, the capture of political parties and government, and infesting the mainstream discourse with conspiracy theories.'
The report's release comes as a Japanese American college professor is scheduled to make his first public appearance after he was brutally attacked in Los Angeles last month in a possible hate crime.
Aki Maehara, 71, was struck by a vehicle and called a racial slur while riding his bike in Montebello, 10 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. He suffered serious injuries to his elbow, neck, cheekbones, jaw, hips and lower back, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Maehara teaches a course on the history of racism in the US at East Los Angeles Community College. 'There's a long history,' he told the paper.
'They've picketed my classroom at East LA College. Chicano Republicans came after me and picketed me at Cal State Long Beach. The KKK came to my classroom at Cal State Long Beach when I was teaching a course on the US-Vietnam war. This is not the first time I've been targeted.'
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an hour ago
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