Street art, Butte Sainte-Anne. Credit: Charlène.

White supremacists operate at ease in positions of authority within law enforcement and defense.

After a 2009 report by the Department of Homeland Security identified right-wing terrorism as a growing threat, Tea Party backlash put the issue on the back burner.

But the white terrorists didn't go away. In fact, an Intercept investigation showed the FBI is increasingly concerned about white supremacists and terrorists joining police departments, which lack the resources and often the will to screen applicants.

Related: The Southern Poverty Law Center had already reported on extremists in the military.

Feb 9, 2017

Had he tried before he killed a bunch of worshipers, the Canadian suspect would've been welcomed across our borders. Rather than emboldening the case for Trump's executive order, the Quebec City case destroyed it.

Jamil Smith on the perplexing blind spot in American terror laws. Hint: It's not so perplexing if you consider a context of three centuries of white supremacy.
↩︎ MTV
Feb 9, 2017

Tulsa has been in denial over the fact that people were cruel enough to bomb the black community from the air, in private planes, and that black people were machine-gunned down in the streets. 

In 1921, white terrorists killed hundreds and burned Tulsa's Black Wall Street to the ground.
↩︎ Smithsonian
Feb 9, 2017

The urge to tell their stories, to try to make sense of their paths is natural. What’s wrong is our failure to give equal time, energy, emotional and narrative consideration to the experiences of those figures who are not white and male.

Rebecca Traister on why every suspect deserves the attention given to white terrorists like Dylann Roof, Robert Dear, and James Holmes.
↩︎ New York
Feb 9, 2017
More Headlines