[May 21, 2004]
They bare many monikers. Neo-Nazi. White Supremacist. Skinhead. No matter what the label, the Southern Poverty Law Center says activity of what it calls the radical right is increasing, and that this movement has staged something of a comeback nationally. That's also true in Nebraska, where one group - the National Alliance has increased it's activity in recent months. The Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups, calls the National Alliance "the Neo-Nazi organization that has produced and influenced more violent criminals in the last three decades than any other." The Anti-Defamation League has called the National Alliance the "most dangerous organized hate group in the United States." The National Alliance defends itself as a white separatist educational organization, protecting the interests of men and women of European descent. "Statewide's" Mike Tobias reports that their problems with Jews, blacks and immigrants are detailed in leaflets they've spread in towns throughout Nebraska.
"Statewide's" Mike Tobias talks with Patrick McNamara, coordinator of the Hate Crimes Project at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, about the National Alliance.
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