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 KKK PIC The United States federal government should substantially curtail its domestic surveillance except for surveillance of white supremacist hate groups. hite extremist radicalism is on the rise and it is getting harder to trac! By Judy L. Thomas "#$% Only a matter of time? Kansas City Star http://projects.k ansascity .com/!"#/domestic$ter rorism/%/story/"&'()'*! Larry Ste+en ,c-uilliams ouldn0t hurt a 1y2 and as a loyal +olunteer3 his friends and others say . 4e performed at 5enaissance festi+als3 do6$sat for nei6h7ors.8 But in 9o+em7er3 ,c-uilliams3 )&3 red more than "!! rounds at se+eral 7uildin6s in ;ustin3 < e=as3 here he had mo+ed from >ichita. <he tar6ets included a police headuarters3 federal courthouse and ,e=ican consulate. ;fter police shot and killed him3 they found his map pinpointin6 nearly three do@en tar6ets3 to of them churches. 8 ;uthorities said ,c-uilliams A ho had the ords Let ,e ie2 ritten on his chest A held racist and anti$Semitic 7eliefs. olice Chief ;rt ;ce+edo called ,c-uilliams a home6ron ;merican e=tremist.28 4ate as in his heart32 he said.8 Dn many ays3 ,c-uilliams is the face of domestic e=tremism today : nondescript3 placid3 a helpful nei6h7or . 8   <he all 7eteen e=tremism and mainstream has really come don si6nicantly32 said Brian Le+in3 director of the Center for the Study of 4ate and E=tremism at Cali fornia State Fni+ersity$San Bernardino. 8 &omestic terrorists used to be easier to identify.  ' < enty years a 6o3 after the shockin6 ake$up call of the Oklahoma City 7om7in63 authorities 7e6an crackin6 don on a su7culture of e=tremist 6roups3 many armin6 themsel+es in preparation for a shodon ith hat they sa as an oppressi+e federal 6o+ernment. <he num7ers of such 6roups sharply declined. 8 But today3 at a time hen much of la enforcement0s focus has shifted from domestic to forei6n terrorism3 a networ! of extremism is a6ain spreading throughout the land.  ' >e0re just a penny dropping away from one or more ,cGei6hs32 said J.J. ,ac9a73 an author ho for to decades has 7een tr ackin6 anti$6o+ernment e=tremists3 referrin6 to the Oklahoma City 7om7er. 8 ;nd this time3 extremists are harder to trac!.  ' ;nti$6o+ernment 6roups are more loosely or6ani@ed3 makin6 them more diHcult to inltrate . >hite nationalist 6roups ha+e fe stron6 leaders and are splinterin6. ;nd hile 6roups sometimes seem to 6ht one another  as much as their percei+ed enemies3 that only adds to the noise that la enforcement tries to monitor .  8 <here0s no head to this thin632 said Leonard Ieskind3 president of the Kansas City$7ased Dnstitute for 5esearch and Education on 4uman 5i6hts3 ho has monitored e=tremist 6roups for decades. ithout leaders( they)re out there under no one)s control.* Continued surveillan ce is !ey to combat these groups + the plan stops it ,-I $" omestic <hreat: >hite Supremacy E=tremism32 #//"3 ;ccessed ,ay !3 !"#3 http:// .f7i.6o+/n...ism!# "//;   <he Bureau has 7een in+esti6 atin6 the criminal acti+i ties of hite supremacy e=tremists like Ku Klu= Klan mem7ers since as early as "&"M. <oday0s e=tremists are more challen6in6 than e+er. <hey0re aHliated ith a +ariety of hite supremacy 6roups3 and they can 7e moti+ated 7y any num7er of reli6ious or political ideolo6ies. >e0r e also seein6 more lone oNenders

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KKK PICThe United States federal government should substantially curtail its domestic surveillance except for surveillance of white supremacist hate groups.

White extremist radicalism is on the rise and it is getting harder to trackBy Judy L. Thomas 2015 Only a matter of time? Kansas City Star http://projects.kansascity.com/2015/domestic-terrorism/#/story/19374360Larry Steven McQuilliams wouldnt hurt a fly and was a loyal volunteer, his friends and others say. He performed at Renaissance festivals, dog-sat for neighbors. But in November, McQuilliams, 49, fired more than 100 rounds at several buildings in Austin, Texas, where he had moved from Wichita. The targets included a police headquarters, federal courthouse and Mexican consulate. After police shot and killed him, they found his map pinpointing nearly three dozen targets, two of them churches. Authorities said McQuilliams who had the words Let Me Die written on his chest held racist and anti-Semitic beliefs. Police Chief Art Acevedo called McQuilliams a homegrown American extremist. Hate was in his heart, he said. In many ways, McQuilliams is the face of domestic extremism today: nondescript, placid, a helpful neighbor. The wall between extremism and mainstream has really come down significantly, said Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University-San Bernardino. Domestic terrorists used to be easier to identify. Twenty years ago, after the shocking wake-up call of the Oklahoma City bombing, authorities began cracking down on a subculture of extremist groups, many arming themselves in preparation for a showdown with what they saw as an oppressive federal government. The numbers of such groups sharply declined. But today, at a time when much of law enforcements focus has shifted from domestic to foreign terrorism, a network of extremism is again spreading throughout the land. Were just a penny dropping away from one or more McVeighs, said J.J. MacNab, an author who for two decades has been tracking anti-government extremists, referring to the Oklahoma City bomber. And this time, extremists are harder to track. Anti-government groups are more loosely organized, making them more difficult to infiltrate. White nationalist groups have few strong leaders and are splintering. And while groups sometimes seem to fight one another as much as their perceived enemies, that only adds to the noise that law enforcement tries to monitor. Theres no head to this thing, said Leonard Zeskind, president of the Kansas City-based Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights, who has monitored extremist groups for decades. Without leaders, theyre out there under no ones control.Continued surveillance is key to combat these groups the plan stops itFBI 12 (Domestic Threat: White Supremacy Extremism, 5/22/12, Accessed May 20, 2015,http://www.fbi.gov/n...ism_052212)//ADThe Bureau has been investigating the criminal activities of white supremacy extremists like Ku Klux Klan members since as early as 1918. Todays extremists are more challenging than ever.Theyre affiliated with a variety of white supremacy groups, and they can be motivated by any number of religious or political ideologies.Were also seeing more lone offenders and small, violent factions of larger groups at work, which makes detection of these crimes tougher.White supremacy extremists specifically target racial, ethnic, and religious minorities; the federal government; and in some instances, even each other. Their tactics include assault, murder, threats and intimidation, and bombings. They also commit other kinds of crimeslike drug trafficking, bank and armored car robberies, and counterfeitingto fund their hate-filled activities. Over the years,the federal government has successfully charged white supremacy extremists using a number of federal statutes, including civil rights violations, racketeering, solicitation to commit crimes of violence, firearms violations, explosives violations, counterfeiting and forgery, and witness tampering.In recent months, the FBI has led or participated in several significant investigations involving violence or attempted aviolence by self-admitted white supremacists. A few examples: In February 2012,an Arizona man was sentenced to federal prison after pleading guilty to possessing and transporting improvised explosive devices near the U.S.-Mexico border. Details In January 2012, the last of four Arkansasdefendants charged with firebombing the home of an interracial couple was sentenced to federal prison. Details In December 2011,a Washington man was sentenced to 32 years in prison for attempting to bomb a Martin Luther King, Jr. Unity Day march in Spokane. Details In May 2010,an Oregon man pled guilty to mailing a hangmans noose to the home of the president of a local NAACP chapter in Ohio. Details Moving forward,we seethreekeys to turning back the ongoing scourge of white supremacy extremism: Ourincreased emphasis on thelawfulgathering, analyzing, and sharing of intelligenceon current and emerging trends, tactics, and threats.Lack of Monitoring Allows White Supremacy to Run RampantScaminaci 09 [James Scaminaci III, September 25th, 2009, http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2009/09/24/immigrants-out-to-destroy-us-washington-times-columnist-warns/]If you put the FAIR-inspired Washington Times article into context, the white supremacists in the Radical Rightincluding John Tantons networkare preparing for revolution and secession which are code words for a racial civil war to create a white Christian theocracy. The context of Minutemen bearing arms to intimidate immigrant workers and children; of bringing weapons to town hall meetings; threatening to kill union workers who come to the same health care town hall meetings; threatening to come armed at the next Tea Party march on Washington, D.C.; threatening a million man, armed militia march on D.C.; threatening to kill federal law makers who do not vote to make English the official language; Chuck Norris call to fly a revolutionary flag for a revolutionary movement; and, the right-wing smear of liberal treachery all lead to the conclusion that comprehensive immigration reform that includes a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants could be the last straw for the white supremacist movement. That Causes a Race WarRowan 96 [Carl T. Rowan, Washington Post, The Coming Race War in America]If decent Americans become afraid to stand up to the threats and violence of the white supremacists, things will become worse very fast. Pierce and his followers will believe that they are in what he calls "a revolutionary phase" in which the federal government "can be defeated." The conflict that I foresee will be as crazily complex as it will be violent, cruel, and heinous. We now see the skinheads and Ku Klux Klansmen emboldened in their campaigns against blacks, Jews, Catholics. We see the Muslims at war not only against Jews, but against the Italian mayor of New York, Rudolph Giuliani, and against America as a whole, as reflected in terrorist bombings. We hear black students talk about "the basis of truth" in a speech full of anti-Semitic invective by Nation of Islam minister Khalid Muhammad at Kean College in New Jersey. We see blacks in political struggle with Hispanics. And from Los Angeles to Detroit to New York, we see a growing underclass at war against "the establishment." This dreadful upsurge in hurting and hatred in America, the increase in murders that are both random and born of rage, flows in part from the denied but obvious racism and contempt for the poor that were so venomous during the Reagan years, and before that from the spineless neglect and indifference of the Nixon and Ford years. But that is history. A race war of destructive proportions that will shock the world is probable because of these facts.