X-Nico

unusual facts about white supremacist



Heritage Front

In 1992, the Heritage Front illegally brought prominent American neo-Nazis Tom Metzger and John Metzger to Canada to speak, and provided security at a speech by Holocaust denier David Irving.

Lou Dobbs Tonight

Critics of his broadcast, such as the Southern Poverty Law Center, allege Lou Dobbs Tonight regularly aired segments featuring, and had as on-air guests, people that the SPLC considers to be involved with white supremacist groups, without the show revealing involvement in such groups.

Occupy Oakland

South Africa Project has attracted controversy as an alleged white supremacist group, and Occupy members claimed they had ties to Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke.

Patriotic Youth League

The PYL allegedly has numerous links to international White Supremacist groups, including the New Zealand National Front and Volksfront.

Rebirth of a Nation

The title of the album is a reference to the 1915 white supremacist film The Birth of a Nation as well as one of the group's prior albums, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.

The Covenant, The Sword, and the Arm of the Lord

The CSA also had links with other radical organizations, including the Aryan Brotherhood, The Mountain Church, and The Order, all dangerous white supremacist organizations which advocated the violent overthrow of the United States Government.

United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi, 2008

The candidates are Republican Gregg Harper, attorney and chairman of the Rankin County Republican Party; Democrat Joel Gill, Pickens town alderman and a cattle broker; and independent candidate Jim Giles, a former systems engineer and white supremacist.


see also

Dionne Farris

It would appear again as the opening song to the (1996) Rob Reiner film Ghosts of Mississippi, about the true story of the 1994 trial of Byron De La Beckwith, the white supremacist accused of the 1963 assassination of civil rights activist of Medgar Evers.

James Keegstra

In 1986, he ran unsuccessfully for the party's leadership with the support of white supremacist Don Andrews and Holocaust denier Ernst Zundel.

Jared Taylor

The Southern Poverty Law Center describes Taylor as "a courtly presenter of ideas that most would describe as crudely white supremacist – a kind of modern-day version of the refined but racist colonialist of old".

Jocelyn Benson

Prior to attending law school, Benson also lived in Montgomery, Alabama, where she worked for the Southern Poverty Law Center as an investigative journalist, researching white supremacist and neo-Nazi organizations.

Martin K. Weiche

In 1981, Weiche was named as one of the financial backers of Operation Red Dog, a failed white supremacist plot to overthrow the government of Dominica.

Melissa Fay Greene

Last Man Out (2002) tells the story of the 1958 Springhill mining disaster in Springhill, Nova Scotia and the absurdist American white supremacist coda to the spectacular rescue of a handful of Canadian men.

The Substitute 4: Failure Is Not An Option

Starring Treat Williams once again as Karl Thomasson who is now an undercover policeman that must infiltrate a military school's faculty to cease the actions of a white supremacist cult.

Van Tongeren

Jack van Tongeren (born 1947), Australian white supremacist and right-wing activist

William D. Johnson

William Daniel Johnson (born 1954/55), American attorney and white supremacist activist