Though many religious right leaders criticizing homosexuality claim that they 'hate the sin but love the sinner,' their vicious personal attacks poison public debate and reinforce a cultural hatred that could lead to violence and death.
Though many religious right leaders criticizing homosexuality claim that they 'hate the sin but love the sinner,' their vicious personal attacks poison public debate and reinforce a cultural hatred that could lead to violence and death.
Read a timeline of the radical right's thirty-year crusade against homosexuality.
After the successes of early anti-gay crusaders like Anita Bryant, various fundamentalist groups organized around the polarizing issue of homosexuality.
Long criticized for its brand of journalism, The Washington Times makes a habit of publishing the work of extremists — including Marian Kester Coombs, wife of the newspaper's managing editor.
At the third annual Alabama Tea Party, frightened right-wingers gather to keep the 'Cradle of the Confederacy' safe from leprosy, pedophiles, Spanish and rampant godlessness.
In Hunting Eric Rudolph, a journalist and a retired cop detail the Rudolph case while also taking law enforcement to task.
Ambitious neo-Nazi stage mom April Gaede is positioning her singing twin daughters for stardom — of a sort.
Defying mainstream science, 'ex-gay' ministries claim that homosexuality is a chosen behavior that can be 'cured.'
After years of extremists promoting 'Holocaust revisionism,' some anti-gay religious crusaders now allege that far from being persecuted by Nazis, homosexuals were behind the Holocaust.
National Alliance pamphlets were distributed in Tombstone and this predominantly Hispanic community just two days before the Minuteman Project got going on April 2.
We tracked 1,430 hate and extremist groups in 2023. Hate has no place in our country.