While peaceful American Muslims were hounded and harassed after 9/11, far more dangerous right-wing extremists got a pass.
While peaceful American Muslims were hounded and harassed after 9/11, far more dangerous right-wing extremists got a pass.
“Radicalization” has long been treated as the sole preserve of Islamists, even as far-right extremists have eclipsed them.
What that Protestant Reformation can teach us about the durability of far-right movements — and the order they seek to replace.
The far right is on the rise from North America to Europe to Asia. Each case is different, but they share key similarities — and require similar responses.
Far more dangerous than the far-right effort to win elections alone is its concerted campaign to change the culture — a strategy it owes, perversely, to the left.
Germany funds foundations for its political parties. If the far right gets one, we’re one step closer to globalizing the alt-right.
When the neo-fascist National Front is more willing to condemn neo-Nazis than Trump, we have a problem.
In one video clip, a glimpse of the Trump team’s plan to divide Europe, cozy up to right-wing dictatorships, and rally the extreme right.
The “war on terror” has killed millions of innocent people. You don’t have to be a “bad Muslim” to oppose that.
Now we all stand on the precipice — of aggressive nationalism, of ugly prejudice, of climate change, of despair.