Hundreds of Ukrainian refugees are arriving every day at a makeshift refugee camp in Tijuana, Mexico on the border with San Diego, CA.
Author: Will Carless, USA TODAY
A regiment in Ukraine’s military was founded by white supremacists. Now it’s battling Russia on the front lines.
Ukraine’s neo-Nazi Azov Regiment was founded by white supremacists. Experts say it has somewhat moved on from its hateful past.
What is extremism? Does it include far-left? Far-right? Choosing a definition is fraught.
Think you know what “extremism” is? Don’t be so sure. The word has been debated, misunderstood and weaponized. Now scholars are trying to define it.
Vegas parking valet, Yale law graduate, unhinged Oath Keepers leader: Who is Stewart Rhodes?
Stewart Rhodes and 10 other Oath Keepers face 17 criminal counts including a seditious conspiracy charge, which carries a max of 20 years in prison.
‘Fringe ideas’ are going mainstream in US politics. That’s a danger to democracy, extremism experts say.
Sitting politicians and candidates for office are increasingly embracing white supremacist and other extremist messaging, according to two new studies
Far-right extremists look to bring vaccination opponents into their fold
Far-right extremist influencers and leaders have increasingly jumped onto the anti-vaccination bandwagon since COVID-19 took a deadly grip on the U.S.
Down the barrel of a gun: How Second Amendment activism can be a gateway to extremist ideologies
Recruiters for extremist groups use gun rights talking points and fears of government ‘gun raids’ to draw in members.
Where’s Antifa been this year? Anti-fascist groups stepped away from street protests, not activism
Anti-fascist groups haven’t been very visible, but the movement hasn’t gone anywhere. Activists continue to research and out racists, experts say.
White supremacist threat remains, but experts see hope in combatting online extremism
Experts who track white supremacist and extremist movements say there is hope on the horizon, with new methods already having an impact.
Defendant uses neo-Nazi propaganda to make his closing argument in Charlottesville white supremacist trial
The lawsuit argues that 24 defendants engaged in a conspiracy to commit racially motivated violence at the deadly 2017 “Unite the Right” rally.