Last modified on July 26, 2023, at 18:39

Southern Poverty Law Center

SPLC Logo.jpg

The Southern Poverty Law Center though founded with good activism in 1971, it has evolved and became also a destructive anti-values[1] far-Left[2] legal and anti-American activist organization - on the other hand.

Established in Montgomery, Alabama. It was founded by trial lawyers Morris Dees and Joe Levin, and its first president was civil rights leader Julian Bond, who would later take control of the NAACP, nevertheless, in its early years it has focused on fighting real hate. A dramatic change occurred in the Obama (admin.) years, including by branding any criticism of extreme-ideology behind Jihad terror as supposed "hate."

In recent years, while still doing good work on one hand, SPLC, on the other hand, supports a wide variety of extreme-liberal positions; it is anti-conservative Christianity, pro legal and illegal, advocates multiculturalism and the homosexual agenda, supports radical Muslims and racial preferences and defendants' rights, and advocates against what it considers "hate groups." SPLC co-founder Dees was fired by the group in March 2019,[3] and its president resigned shortly afterward.[4] In April 2019, Twitter finally ended its partnership with the organization.[5]

In 2012, Black pastors confronted the Southern Poverty Law Center for smearing as "hate groups" pro-family organizations opposed to the homosexual agenda.[6] Reverend Dr. Patrick Wooden admonished the SPLC in declaring that it is wrong to compare "my beautiful blackness" with homosexual perversion.[7]

The SPLC's op-ed writings have appeared in the Communist Party USA's newspaper People's World.[8] This "controversial, liberal organization"[9] has been criticized in mainstream press for being extravagant in its spending, and using charges of "racism" to stifle conservatives.[10] Despite the organization's far-left partisanship and its slander of mainstream conservative and Christian organizations, the mainstream media continues to cite the SPLC as an "authority" on hate groups.[11]


"Critics have long accused the SPLC of falsely slapping the "hate group" label on non-violent groups that hold traditional beliefs about hot-button issues such as gay marriage and abortion."[2]

Some highlighted examplary cases:

  • In May 2016, the SPLC apologized to Ben Carson after placing the then-potential Republican presidential candidate on its "Extremist Watch List" — which is mostly made up of hate groups and white supremacists — for allegedly being "anti-gay."
  • In 2018, the SPLC agreed to publicly apologize and pay $3.375 million in damages after branding British anti-extremism group Quilliam Foundation and its founder, Maajid Nawaz, "anti-Muslim" extremists.

Finances

The SPLC's IRS Form 990 for the year ending October 31, 2015, showed a total income of $54.2 million, and expenses of $45.3 million with a surplus of $8.9 million. The organization has a net worth of $315 million, and the top salaries were paid to Morris Dees, Chief Trial Counsel, $337,146; Richard Cohen, President, $333,296; Wendy Via, Chief of Development, $186,645; Jerri Katzerman, Deputy Legal Director, $183,752; and Joseph Levin, General Counsel, $160,626.[12]

The last year that the Better Business Bureau's Philanthropic Advisory Service reported on the SPLC, in 1994, Dees and then Executive Director Edward Ashworth took home over $150,000 each, and the organization then possessed over $62 million in assets.[13] It now controls over $200 million, and Dees pulls $286,000 in salary.[14] In 2000, SPLC fundraised $27 million and made an additional $17 million from investments, but spent only $13 million on its civil rights program.[15] It is no longer listed in the Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance[16] because that would require that "at least 50 percent of total income from all sources, should be applied to programs and activities directly related to the purposes for which the organization exists." The SPLC spent 89 percent of its total income on fund-raising and administrative costs.[17]

The SPLC has also been moving millions of dollars out of the U.S. into international accounts which it can use at will with no accountability. As a non-profit organization, this kind of activity is at the very least irregular if not illegal.[18] By September 2017, they had amassed at least $67 million in these offshore accounts.[19]

In addition to donations from liberal members, which are often elicited by sensationalizing hate crimes, the center raises a lot of revenue seizing assets of violent groups, and by extorting groups that do not want to be accused of racism. In 1987, the SPLC won a major case on behalf of Beulah Mae Donald, the mother of a Klan lynching victim. This was the invention of a clever new tactic—suing domestic terrorist groups into bankruptcy—but Ms. Donald benefitted very little. Of the $7 million verdict, only $50,000 went to her. This was because the Klan chapter had no assets other than a warehouse used as a headquarters, the warehouse itself was valued at about $50,000.[20]

The SPLC's fundraising tactics came under heavy criticism most recently by the Council of Conservative Citizens,[21] as well as by articles in Harper's magazine in 2000[22] and in the local Montgomery Advertiser newspaper in 1994.[23]

The SPLC has been described as a "money-making scam," which a former staffer has affirmed.[24]

SPLC's list of 'hate groups'

SPLC lists over 1000 organizations as hate groups. Many of these are widely accepted but the list continues to grow with the controversial additions of conservative and Christian organizations. Conservative political stances and Christian moral stances that the SLPC disagrees with are now targeted, many of these additions are organizations for the general welfare of American citizens and are not associated with hate.[25] Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Ron Dermer has described the SPLC as "defamers and the blacklisters."[26]

These fine organizations and many others are lumped together with the KKK and White nationalists, skin-heads, Neo-Nazis and Black separatists.

Hate Map

The Southern Poverty Law Center posts a "Hate Map" on their website.[27] The organization lists various "hate groups" for their opposition to the homosexual agenda, abortion and social justice to name a few. Homosexual activist Floyd Corkins utilized the information with the intent on causing mass murder at the Family Research Council in D.C., the conservative organization is listed by them as a hate group. Corkins entered FRC's lobby allegedly shouted “I don’t like your politics” and shot an unarmed guard in the arm with a 9mm pistol before being wounded and arrested.[28] The SLPC denied they were responsible but the gunman admitted as much. Though Corkins' actions perfectly fit the definition of a hate crime, no such sentence was given likely due to his liberal sympathies. Corkins did receive a 25-year prison sentence.

SPLC attacks on conservatives and Christians

While SPLC attacks obvious hate groups such as the KKK or Aryan Brotherhood, it also lumps in conservative and Christian organizations in an attempt to defame and delegitimize them.[29] For instance, SPLC considers Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) a "hate group", because it opposes illegal immigration, and uses demonstrations as a method, which the SPLC deems intimidation.[30] Similarly, the SPLC labels the immigration reductionist/reformist website VDARE as a "hate group", because it argues against illegal immigration.[31]

The SPLC followed Laird Wilson in publishing a list of "hate groups" but after Wilson rejected the usefulness of that approach, the SPLC continued with it, becoming prominent for using it against groups standing for traditional values.[32][33][34] Laird Wilcox, claims to have provided SPLC with some of the information initially used to compile their list of "hate groups". He "concluded that a lot of [the SPLC's hate groups] were vanishingly small or didn’t exist, or could even be an invention of the SPLC." Some of the "hate groups" were creations of SPLC informants, rather than legitimate groups. And with the advent of the internet, some of them exist "nowhere except in cyberspace." Wilcox concludes, "The whole issue of “lists” is full of smoke and mirrors."[35]

Also smeared as "hate groups" by the SPLC include: the California Coalition for Immigration Reform, Liberty Counsel, and The Social Contract Press (a liberal group publishing environmentalist works such as those of Garrett Hardin, apparently smeared solely because they republished French writer Jean Raspail's 1973 novel The Camp of the Saints which foretells catastrophe befalling Europe from boatloads of illegal immigrants arriving from South Asia).

Another example is the Council of Conservative Citizens, a conservative activist organization that advocates for states' rights and against immigration, Communism, racial quotas, and gun control. SPLC labels the entire organization as "racist" because a minority of members had decades-past connections to segregationist organizations. In fact, the CCC attracts such mainstream speakers such as former Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.), Gov. Kirk Fordice (R-MS) and Rep. Bob Barr (R-Ga.), and engages in charitable and cultural events.

The SPLC has also recently added new categories to its categories of "hate groups", including Traditionalist Catholics (that is, those who advocate for a return to the Latin Mass), and an "anti-gay" category of groups who do not support the homosexual agenda and/or advocate for homosexuals to come out of that lifestyle.

During the 1990s, the SPLC maintained a separate list of "patriot groups", which although they did not include them as part of their "hate groups" list, carried the same intent: to smear those groups by association, and create the public impression those groups were some sort of threat to society. Their "patriot groups" list included groups opposed to the income tax, groups campaigning for jury and court reform, and the John Birch Society, among others.

In 2010, the SPLC created a list entitled "Meet the Patriots", which included such people such as Chuck Baldwin, Orly Taitz, and Alex Jones as supporters of this "patriot movement".[36] A supplement entitled "The Enablers" was also released, which included Michele Bachmann, Glenn Beck, Ron Paul, and Judge Napolitano.[37]

In 2012, the SPLC found four individuals to file a lawsuit against a group providing therapy to homosexual men in order to help them become ex-homosexuals.[38] The SPLC alleges the group violated New Jersey's Consumer Fraud Law in advertising that conversion therapy will help people become ex-homosexuals. Instead of being a pro-consumer lawsuit, as the SLPC implies, the suit is a collateral attack on conversion therapy and the free exercise of religion.

In 2017, the SPLC labeled the Alliance Defending Freedom a "hate group,"[39] a label that mainstream media outlets picked up on.[40] That same year, it labeled the conservative Center for Immigration Studies a "hate group."[41] The SPLC caused serious financial harm to the Ruth Institute, a Catholic organization that combats the decline of the family, due to the SPLC's "hate group" designation of the Institute.[42] That same year, D. James Kennedy Ministries, an evangelical Christian ministry based in Florida, filed a lawsuit against the SPLC due to its designation of the ministry as a "hate group."[43][44] In 2017, a college graduate was placed on the SPLC's "hate group" list because she did an interview with the conservative Family Research Council.[45]

In 2017, the SPLC included Twitter hashtags such as "#Christmas", "#MerryChristmas", and "#jesus", on its list of "trends in a community of far-right Twitter users."[46] It was reported in early 2018 that the SPLC was working with YouTube to police the site's videos and censor conservatives and Christians in the process.[47]

The SPLC has falsely claimed that the conservative Value Voters summit, along with the conservative John Birch Society, was somehow promoting "hate" and "bigotry."[48]

The SPLC has set itself in blatant opposition to the Trump Administration.[49]

All of the incidents listed above further prove the SPLC is a left-wing political organization, as well as itself being a hate group,[50] rather than one focused on racism and civil rights.

Demonizing activists for values

In June 2023, the SPLC vilified parents who wish to protect their young children. It listed ‘Moms for Liberty’ a hate group.[51] Margaret Huang still defended its decision after backlash.

We're not going to stop': Moms for Liberty co-founder slams Southern Poverty Law Center for labeling it an 'extremist' group - and accuses organization of an 'orchestrated attempt to stop our voices.

Undeterred by the label, Justice said: We're going to keep doing the work that we do across the country. We're set up by chapters. We have over 120,000 members. And if you talk to the moms and dads on the ground, they're concerned about some of the things that they're seeing taught in schools. They're concerned about the fact that not every American child is learning to read in school.'

'So we're going to keep focused on our mission of getting liberty-minded individuals elected to school board[s] and ensuring that parental rights are protected at every level of government.'[52]


Mothers, Jewish leaders criticize Southern Poverty Law Center listing ‘Moms for Liberty’ a hate group.

Bethany Mandel, a mother and conservative columnist, and co-author with Karol Markowicz of the 2022 book '"Stolen Youth: How Radicals Are Erasing Innocence and Indoctrinating a Generation, has worked with Moms for Liberty; delivered speeches to its chapters; and befriended many of its members. She is going to the group’s summit, which begins later this month.

“It is a group of passionate women who in no way resemble extremists or a hate group. The SPLC are beclowning themselves and exposing nothing but their own bias,” Mandel told JNS.

“It’s unfortunate that the SPLC has made clear that Jewish families don’t have a reliable source for this kind of content,” she added. “They just have another left-wing group, which falsely uses antisemitism as a cudgel against its political enemies.”

‘Obvious anti-Jewish bias’

The Coalition for Jewish Values, which represents Orthodox rabbis, has stated that the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Southern Poverty Law Center—both of which were listed as partnering organizations in the new White House national strategy on antisemitism—have demonstrated “obvious anti-Jewish bias.”[1]

Family Research Council shooting

In the wake of an August 2012 shooting at the headquarters of the Family Research Council, some columnists criticized the SPLC's listing of the Family Research Council as an "anti-gay hate group". Dana Milbank, of the Washington Post, wrote that the SPLC was "reckless in labeling as a “hate group” a policy shop that advocates for a full range of conservative Christian positions." [53][54] Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said, after the attack, “I believe [the gunman Floyd Corkins] was given a license to do that by a group such as the Southern Poverty Law Center who labeled us a hate group because we defend the family and stand for traditional orthodox Christianity.”[55] Capital Research Center states that the SPLC "deliberately mischaracterizes conservatives and tea partiers as “extremists”."[56]

In July 2021, Google scrubbed from its search engine results[57] Mike Cernovich's How a Convicted Terrorist used the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Website to Identify Targets.[58]

Proud Boys controversy

Roger Stone noted:

Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio.[59]
"To pull off their version of a “color revolution”, Democrats and their fake news propaganda machine in mainstream media have set up a cynical diversionary effort. In recent weeks, corporate-owned Democrat shill media has been in overdrive falsely and maliciously smearing and defaming a fraternal organization called the “Proud Boys,” an extraordinarily small group of mostly young men of all races and identities (the national chairman is a black latino of Cuban descent) who are essentially a drinking society. Truly vile Democrat stooges in media have published libelous and slanderous statements falsely labeling these men as “white supremacists.” Having absolutely ZERO evidence to substantiate this defamation, all they do is cite a criminal front group run by leftist zealots called the “Southern Poverty Law Center” or SPLC (an organization whose name is three lies in one).

The radical leftists behind this shady defamation factory disguised as a public interest group are neither neutral nor objective, and are a credible arbiter of absolutely nothing on this planet. They have been a malicious propaganda generator against anyone with views that are anything right of the Chamber of Commerce. This evil organization was essentially setup as a money-making scam for left-wing fundraiser Morris Dees, used to fleece well-intentioned low-dollar liberal donors of their money, thinking they were sending money to fight extremists on the right, like Gerald Ford. Meanwhile, they defame as a Nazi or Klansman anyone who doesn’t actively profess twisted hard left doctrine or bow down before the likes of Elizabeth Warren."[60]

Double standards and denialism

Despite labeling numerous mainstream conservative organizations as "hate groups", the SPLC has refused to label Antifa, a violent extremist left-wing group, a hate group.[61][62]

The SPLC has mislabeled Islamic terrorist attacks, such as the 2016 Orlando nightclub attack, and Black lives matter attacks as somehow being "Terror from the Right."[63][64][65]

In 2017, the SPLC labeled British Muslim anti-extremist Maajid Nawaz as an "anti-Muslim extremist",[66] something which the organization later apologized and paid a $3.3 million settlement for.[67]

Infiltration into the classroom

Additionally, the SPLC runs tolerance.org, a website that advocates multiculturalism, the homosexual agenda and "social justice". It is designed with teachers in mind so that these ideas can influence young children in the classroom [68] For instance, teachers can click "classroom activities" then "early grades" and "Tolerance Issues: Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual issues:" or "tolerance issues: Gender Issues" and arrive at a pro-alternative family article, among others.[69] Its magazine is sent to over 400,000 educators, and over 10,000 schools participate in its programs.

Interference in the Sierra Club

In early 2004, Morris Dees filed to run as a candidate for the board of directors of the Sierra Club, a leftist environmentalist organization. Dees, who has no background in environmental issues at all, ran only to use his ballot statement to smear three other candidates for the Sierra Club board, who advocated the Sierra Club address the environmental impact of excessive legal and illegal immigration into the United States. Dees and two other fake board candidates were part of a broader smear campaign by the radical left, which also included MoveOn.org. Dees, MoveOn, and others smeared these three candidates, all of whom were staunch liberals and environmentalists (one of them, former Democratic governor of Colorado, Richard Lamm) solely because they understood excessive immigration numbers to be an environmental issue.[70]

Cooperation with law enforcement

The SPLC has been criticized by civil rights writer Laird Wilcox for essentially functioning as a private intelligence gathering agency for the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other law enforcement agencies, doing activities as a private organization that public law enforcement agencies are barred by law from doing (such as keeping dossiers on people solely because of their political or religious views) because for a government agency to do them would be a violation of civil rights. Wilcox points out the dangers of the FBI and other law enforcement working with ideologically-driven groups like the SPLC, which has its roots in 1960s radical liberal activism, because of the danger this poses that the SPLC's own ideological differences with another group can be treated as a law enforcement issue rather than as an ideological dispute between a left-wing group (the SPLC) and a group on the right. This can, and has, led to attacks on such groups' freedom of speech and freedom of assembly.[71]

Indeed, the SPLC has a history of adding groups to its listing of purported "hate groups" in advance of a government law enforcement campaign against them. The SPLC inexplicably added the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints (FLDS) to its "hate groups" list just before FLDS leader Warren Jeffs was indicted on charges of arranging polygamous underage marriages. The timing of this listing by SPLC was suspicious, as is the accuracy of calling FLDS a "hate group" to begin with, any controversy over their polygamous practices notwithstanding.

The SPLC brags about being an informant for the FBI. Mark Potok, an SPLC spokesman, said, "Law enforcement agencies come to us every day with questions about particular groups." This was done to circumvent policies against domestic political spying.[72] But the FBI disavowed the SPLC by dropping it from being listed as a resource on the FBI website,[73] though it admitted to relying upon the SPLC as recently as mid-2018.[74]

Into the Mainstream controversy

In the summer of 2003, the SPLC's Intelligence Journal carried a feature article entitled "Into the Mainstream", by Chip Berlet. The cover of the journal had an image of Adolf Hitler in front of the American flag and the caption, "Marching toward the Mainstream: the radical Right invades American culture". The implication was that such conservative activists as David Horowitz and his Center for the Study of Popular Culture, as well as other groups including the libertarian Ludwig von Mises Institute, were "radical right" and Hitlerian.[75] This smear was denounced by David Horowitz, who demanded an apology, although none was forthcoming.

SPLC as film critic

The SPLC has published criticisms of movies they deem to be not politically correct, often smearing the filmmakers in the process and portraying them to be part of a purported "radical right" conspiracy to influence the culture. Films the SPLC has criticized in this manner include Ronald Maxwell's American Civil War epics Gettysburg (1993) and Gods and Generals (2003), and Mel Gibson's 2004 film The Passion of the Christ.

Corporate Partners

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bradley Martin, Mothers, Jewish leaders criticize Southern Poverty Law Center listing ‘Moms for Liberty’ a hate group, JNS, June 20, 2023.

    Rabbi Yaakov Menken of the Coalition for Jewish Values called the parental-rights group an ally to Orthodox Jews.

    (Those involved with Moms for Liberty in Washington state. Source: Facebook. [1])

    The Southern Poverty Law Center is a Montgomery, Ala.-based nonprofit that according to its website was founded in 1971 “to ensure that the promise of the civil rights movement became a reality for all.”

    Before reaching that first paragraph on the group’s site, however, comes the SPLC’s self-identification as “a catalyst for racial justice in the South and beyond, working in partnership with communities to dismantle white supremacy, strengthen intersectional movements and advance the human rights of all people.”

    SPLC is often quoted in news articles as an authority on whether an entity is a hate group, and as critics, including 100 Orthodox rabbis at one point, have noted, the law center often deems mainstream groups with traditional religious values as hateful on the basis of those values.

    In its report “Year in Hate and Extremism,” which SPLC released earlier this month, the group listed the nonprofit Moms for Liberty, and other parental-rights organizations, alongside the KKK and neo-Nazi groups.

    “Moms for Liberty is a far-right organization that engages in anti-student inclusion activities and self-identifies as part of the modern parental rights movement,” per the SPLC.

    Bethany Mandel, a mother and conservative columnist, and co-author with Karol Markowicz of the 2022 book '"Stolen Youth: How Radicals Are Erasing Innocence and Indoctrinating a Generation, has worked with Moms for Liberty; delivered speeches to its chapters; and befriended many of its members. She is going to the group’s summit, which begins later this month.

    “It is a group of passionate women who in no way resemble extremists or a hate group. The SPLC are beclowning themselves and exposing nothing but their own bias,” Mandel told JNS.

    “It’s unfortunate that the SPLC has made clear that Jewish families don’t have a reliable source for this kind of content,” she added. “They just have another left-wing group, which falsely uses antisemitism as a cudgel against its political enemies.”

    ‘Obvious anti-Jewish bias’

    The Coalition for Jewish Values, which represents Orthodox rabbis, has stated that the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Southern Poverty Law Center—both of which were listed as partnering organizations in the new White House national strategy on antisemitism—have demonstrated “obvious anti-Jewish bias.”

    Rabbi Yaakov Menken, managing director of the Coalition for Jewish Values, told JNS that the SPLC turns a blind eye against antisemitism perpetrated by radical Islamic groups, which he said have killed more people than far-right groups on the SPLC list combined. That includes four Israelis killed on June 20 in a terrorist attack in Samaria.

    “SPLC does not even list the Council on American-Islamic Relations on their hate map, despite its history of antisemitism,” Menken said. He said SPLC was demonizing an ally for Orthodox Jews in America by listing Moms for Liberty as a hate group.

    “By this standard, we would like to be recognized as a hate group, too,” he said.

    “Moms for Liberty supports parental rights at a time when New York is encroaching on yeshivah education,” said Menken. He predicted that the law center would list Orthodox Jewish families, which support gender-segregated synagogues and swimming hours, as hate groups as well.

    ‘Stop labeling concerned moms’

    Former school-board members Tiffany Justice and Tina Descovich founded Moms for Liberty in January 2021. The nonprofit “is dedicated to fighting for the survival of America by unifying, educating and empowering parents to defend their parental rights at all levels of government,” says its site.

    The nonprofit has 120,000 members in 285 chapters across 45 states, per its Twitter handle.

    The law center should try to dismantle “groups that promote reprehensible ideas, like teaching children about sex and hijacking their education for the pleasure of adults,” Alison Centofante, a mother and longtime pro-life activist, told JNS. “They should also stop labeling concerned moms who value parental rights and their children’s innocence.”

    Centofante added that the SPLC designation is “reckless” and puts members of parental-rights groups in danger. A shooter used the SPLC “hate map” to find and target people at the Family Research Council in 2012, she noted.

    “SPLC’s labels have led to violence and they should be held accountable,” she said.

    Lyndsey Fifield, a mother and digital consultant who has worked at several Conservative organizations, told JNS that she knows the staff at SPLC, having lived in Alabama.

    “As a Christian with Jewish friends, it is scary to see this coming from people who claim to be fighting for racial and social justice,” she said.

    According to Fifield, SPLC uses its designations of hate groups as an intimidation tactic, to silence mainstream Conservative voices. She told JNS that “it is chilling to see how the SPLC is weaponizing their hate map against what was considered mainstream only 10 years ago.”
  2. 2.0 2.1 Jessica Chasmar , Joe Schoffstall. The SPLC apologized after labeling Ben Carson an ‘extremist’, Fox News, June 9, 2023.
  3. Multiple references: See also:
  4. Multiple references: See also:
  5. Newman, Alex (April 18, 2019). Twitter Drops Hateful SPLC, Coalition Asks Others to Dump It Too. The New American. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  6. http://americansfortruth.com/2012/0/16/press-conf-black-pastors-confront-southern-poverty-law-center-for-smearing-pro-family-organizations-opposed-to-homosexual-agenda-as-hate-groups/
  7. http://americansfortruth.com/2012/01/16/press-conf-black-pastors-confront-southern-poverty-law-center-for-smearing-pro-family-organizations-opposed-to-homosexual-agenda-as-hate-groups/
  8. SPLC article featured in communist newspaper, The Daily Caller, January 22, 2011
  9. https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/daily/dec98/southern19.htm
  10. http://cofcc.org/?p=984
  11. Adams, Becket (February 23, 2019). Don't fall for the SPLC's lies. Washington Examiner. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  12. SPLC Form 990 (PDF). Retrieved on January 11, 2017.
  13. http://www.zpub.com/notes/znote-splc.html
  14. http://www.splcenter.org/donate/financialinfo/financial.jsp
  15. http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3a3e5cb925c4.htm
  16. http://us.bbb.org/WWWRoot/SitePage.aspx?site=113&id=1bce9b1f-74e9-4c94-96e8-1ee2b519b0c4
  17. http://www.theamericanresistance.com/thousand_words/pics_splc_expands.html
  18. https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/sep/5/irs-investigate-splc-cayman
  19. https://www.lc.org/newsroom/details/083117-splc-sends-millions-of-cash-to-tax-haven-accounts-1
  20. http://www.americanpatrol.com/SPLC/ChurchofMorrisDees001100.html
  21. http://cofcc.org/?p=5108
  22. Silverstein, Ken. "The Church of Morris Dees: How the Southern Poverty Law Center Profits from Intolerance". Harper's, November, 2000. http://www.harpers.org/archive/2000/11/0068709
  23. Morse, Dan and Greg Jaffe. "Critics Question $52 Million Reserve, Tactics of Wealthiest Civil Rights Group". Montgomery Advertiser, February 13, 1994
  24. Kirkwood, R. Cort (March 22, 2019). Former Staffer Admits SPLC Is a Money-making Scam. The New American. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  25. Wilcox, Dale (March 1, 2019). Wilcox: SPLC’s Hate Map Hysteria Enables Hoaxes. Breitbart News. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  26. Israeli Ambassador Ron Dermer Slams Southern Poverty Law Center As ‘Defamers and Blacklisters’. Breitbart News (from The Times of Israel). Retrieved April 26, 2018.
  27. Before Shooting: Southern Poverty Law Center Put Family Research Council on ‘Hate Map’ - See more at: http://cnsnews.com/news/article/shooting-southern-poverty-law-center-put-family-research-council-hate-map#sthash.WwD1HS7R.dpuf CNSNews, April 16, 2012
  28. FRC's Perkins: Southern Poverty Law Center Gave Gunman 'License to Shoot'
  29. Newman, Alex (February 26, 2019). SPLC Invents Crisis, Claims Trump Rise Fueled by Racism. The New American. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  30. http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2007/12/11/fair-crossing-the-rubicon-of-hate&splcnewsletter=panewsgen-121107/
  31. http://blog.vdare.com/archives/2008/10/07/freedom-folksblogs4borders-interview-with-peter-brimelow/
  32. https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2011/0223/Annual-report-cites-rise-in-hate-groups-but-some-ask-What-is-hate
  33. http://editioncnn.com/2012/08/16us/dc-shooting-blame/index.html
  34. https://thehill.com/blogs?blog-briefing-room/news/243921-shooting-spurs-heated-battle-on-gay-rights-and-hate-group-label
  35. "An Expert on Fringe Political Movements Reflects on the SPLC’s Political Agenda - An Exclusive Interview with Author and Researcher Laird Wilcox", Volume 20, Number 3 (Spring 2010) http://www.thesocialcontract.com/artman2/publish/tsc_20_3/tsc_20_3_wilcox_interview.shtml
  36. http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2010/summer/meet-the-patriots?page=0,0
  37. http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/intelligence-report/browse-all-issues/2010/summer/meet-the-patriots/the-enablers
  38. http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/27/15486181-four-men-sue-new-jersey-organization-over-gay-conversion-therapy?lite
  39. Richardson, Valerie (July 16, 2017). ABC, NBC hit with backlash after pinning ‘hate group’ label on Alliance Defending Freedom. The Washington Times. Retrieved September 3, 2017.
  40. Weaver, Corrine (July 13, 2017). ABC, NBC under fire after smearing Christian organization as a “hate group”. Fox News. Retrieved September 3, 2017.
  41. Krikorian, Mark (March 17, 2017). How labeling my organization a hate group shuts down public debate. The Washington Post. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
    See also:
  42. Richardson, Valerie (September 5, 2017). Southern Poverty Law ‘hate map’ label proves costly to pro-family Ruth Institute. The Washington Times. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
  43. Llorente, Elizabeth (August 24, 2017). Southern Poverty Law Center ‘hate group’ label hit in evangelicals’ lawsuit. Fox News. Retrieved September 3, 2017.
  44. O'Neil, Tyler (August 23, 2017). IT'S ON: Christian Group Sues SPLC and Amazon Over 'Hate Group' Designation. PJ Media. Retrieved September 3, 2017.
  45. Conservative College Grad Put on Hate Group List for Radio Interview. Fox News Insider. September 30, 2017. Retrieved September 30, 2017.
  46. Multiple references:
  47. Multiple references:
  48. Murphy, James (September 28, 2018). Value Voters Summit and John Birch Society Attacked by SPLC. The New American. Retrieved September 28, 2018.
  49. Bedard, Paul (March 28, 2019). Southern Poverty declares war on Trump, with Michelle Obama aide’s help. Washington Examiner. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  50. Everything You Need to Know about Alabama Hate Group "The Southern Poverty Law Center" (But Were Afraid to Ask)
  51. Moms for Liberty Is Not a ‘Hate Group’, WSJ, June 20, 2023.
    The SPLC vilifies parents who wish to protect their young children
  52. Sophie Mann, We're not going to stop': Moms for Liberty co-founder slams Southern Poverty Law Center for labeling it an 'extremist' group - and accuses organization of an 'orchestrated attempt to stop our voices', Daily Mail, 08 Jun 2023
  53. https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/dana-milbank-hateful-speech-on-hate-groups/2012/08/16/70a60ac6-e7e8-11el-8487-64e4b2a79ba8_story.html
  54. Dana Milbank, Washington Post Writer, Slams LGBT Activists, SPLC For FRC's 'Hate Group' Label
  55. FRC's Perkins: Southern Poverty Law Center Gave Gunman 'License to Shoot', https://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/perkins-shooting-family-research/2012/08/16/id/448862?s=al
  56. Southern Poverty Law Center: Wellspring of Manufactured Hate, http://www.capitalresearch.org/2012/09/southern-poverty-law-center-wellspring-of-manufactured-hate/
  57. https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2021/07/09/google-scrubs-mike-cernovich-report-on-splc-link-to-mass-shooter-from-search-results/
  58. https://www.cernovich.com/splc-floyd-lee-corkins-family-research-council-shooting/
  59. https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/07/exclusive-capital-one-cancels-proud-boys-leader-enrique-tarrios-credit-card-adverse-past-present-legal-action/
  60. https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/10/roger-stone-exclusive-democrats-plan-steal-2020-election/
  61. Nelson, Steve (September 3, 2017). Southern Poverty Law Center condemns antifa, but won't call hate group. Washington Examiner. Retrieved September 3, 2017.
  62. Richardson, Valerie (December 2, 2017). Antifa isn’t a ‘hate group,’ Southern Poverty Law Center claims. The Washington Times. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  63. Stranahan, Lee (December 10, 2016). Southern Poverty Law Center Calls Islamic and Black Lives Matter Attacks ‘Radical-Right Terrorist Plots’. Breitbart News. Retrieved April 26, 2018.
  64. Pfeiffer, Alex (December 8, 2016). The SPLC Considers The Most Deadly Islamic Terror Attack Since 9/11 A Right-Wing Plot. The Daily Caller. Retrieved April 26, 2018.
  65. Sulzer, John (December 12, 2016). SPLC: Dallas Ambush, Orlando Shooting “Right Wing Terror”. The Liberty Conservative. Retrieved April 26, 2018.
  66. Tomlinson, Chris (August 29, 2017). Why a British Muslim Is Suing the Southern Poverty Law Center. Breitbart News. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  67. Multiple references: See also:
  68. http://www.tolerance.org/teach/activities/index.jsp
  69. http://www.tolerance.org/teach/current/event.jsp?cid=305
  70. For much background and material on the takeover of the Sierra Club in 2004 by radical pro-immigration and political correctness advocates, including Dees' role as a fake board candidate, see http://sierrademocracy.org/
  71. Wilcox, Laird. The Watchdogs. Olathe, Kansas: Editorial Research Service, 1999.
  72. [2]
  73. Feb. 2014 page [3], current hate crime page [4]
  74. Byas, Steve (August 1, 2018). FBI Admits to Using Left-wing Southern Poverty Law Center. The New American. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  75. Kantor, Myles. "Morris Dees' Defamation". FrontPage magazine, September 25, 2003. [5] The Southern Poverty Law Center, and Morris Dees himself, have engaged in a dispute with conservative intellectual and activist David Horowitz over material related to Horowitz's campaign against slavery reparations, which the SPLC claims constitutes "hate speech". Horowitz writes [6]:
    The effect is to multiply the number of racial hate groups, to scare well-meaning citizens into the belief that mainstream civil rights organizations like the Center for the Study of Popular Culture are really fever swamps of hate that deserve to be lumped alongside the Ku Klux Klan. The purpose of this fear-mongering is transparent. It is to fill the already wealthy coffers of your organization by exploiting unsuspecting donors into helping you promote leftwing agendas under the guise of civil rights.
  76. https://www.2ndvote.com/splc/

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