Culture

Hate groups on the upswing

The Northwest has always had its share of racist groups, and the latest Southern Poverty Law Center report identifies 13 in Washington state alone.

Hate groups on the upswing
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Joe Copeland

The Northwest has always had its share of racist groups, and the latest Southern Poverty Law Center report identifies 13 in Washington state alone.

The Southern Poverty Law Center on Wednesday (Feb. 23) reported that the number of hate groups in the United States grew significantly  in 2010, topping more than 1,000 for the first time since it began  following trends in the 1980s.

There's no shortage of such groups in the Northwest, whose history  has always been tainted by strains of racially and religiously bigoted   thinking back to territorial days and the presence of pro-slavery elements. The Northwest also saw anti-Chinese riots that helped lead to a racist immigration policy nationally. And the  Aryan Nations movement is just one of the more recent white supremacist  ideologies to find a toehold here.

On its Hate Map,  the SPLC identified 13 groups in Washington alone that it believes are  based on racist or anti-Jewish thinking, or stem from founders who  largely engaged in such thinking. That was a modest decrease from 15  identified here in 2009. Most on the Washington list are Neo-Nazi,  skinhead, black separatist, or white nationalist groups, but there were also two churches in Spokane. A leader of one of the churches, St. Michael's Parish/Mount St. Michael, has argued with the Center previously that it isn't anti-Semitic but instead is engaged in correcting the errors of  supposedly heretical reforms by the Roman Catholic Church over the past  50 years.  Part of the Center's view of the church is here. (The Mount St. Michael group reportedly doesn't recognize any of the Roman Catholic popes since Pius XII, who died in 1958.)

Around the Northwest, Idaho had 13 groups, up four from a year  earlier; Oregon had 15, up from just 10 in 2009; Montana had 13, up one;  and Alaska had none after having had one hate group in 2009. For the  five states, the total is 54 this year, a growth of seven.

The Center said that right-wing extremist organizations  of various kinds (not necessarily hate groups) grew explosively last  year, with many believing that President Barack Obama embodies the  nation's problems. The renowned civil rights group said the growth was  "driven by resentment over the changing racial demographics of the   country, frustration over the government’s handling of the economy, and   the mainstreaming of conspiracy theories and other demonizing  propaganda  aimed at various minorities."

The Law Center also is tracking 'patriot' groups;  the center notes it isn't saying the groups engage in any violence,  advocacy of violence, or racist thinking. It cites 27 organizations in  Washington as belonging to this category, that generally "define  themselves as opposed to the 'New World Order,' engage in  groundless  conspiracy theorizing, or advocate or adhere to extreme  anti-government  doctrines." And the center said there had been a slight rise in " 'nativist extremist' groups — organizations that go beyond mere advocacy of restrictive immigration   policy to actually confront or harass suspected immigrants or their   employers." It cited four in Washington.

The center's Mark Potok wrote that the split control in Congress  could contribute to paralysis on  issues like immigration reform. And his  overall take was fairly  downbeat:

What seems certain is that President Obama will continue to   serve as a lightning rod for many on the political right, a man who   represents both the federal government and the fact that the racial   make-up of the United States is changing, something that upsets a   significant number of white Americans. And that suggests that the   polarized politics of this country could get worse before they get   better.

The center pointed to Spokane's Martin Luther King Jr. Day incident, in which a sophisticated bomb was found before a parade, as one of a number of signs that "the radical right has remained highly energized." The crime  hasn't been solved. At a Spokane NAACP-organized meeting on Monday, residents expressed concern that the FBI might not be able to solve the case.

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Joe Copeland

By Joe Copeland

Joe Copeland is the former senior editor for Crosscut, where he has been an editor since 2010. Before that, he was an editorial writer and columnist for the Seattle P-I and editorial page edi