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IPFS News Link • Hate Crimes

EXPOSED: The SPLC is a hate group pretending to be an anti-hate group

• Natural News

(Natural News) If you're not familiar at all with the Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center, it's nothing more than a Left-wing hate factory ginning up angst and even violence against conservative-minded, America-first types who voted for President Donald J. Trump.

But the organization disguises itself as an anti-hate group allegedly battling "white supremacy," "fascism" and "nationalism" in America.

As reported by Frontpage Magazine, a new video released by Prager U fully exposes the SPLC for the hate mill that it is, always on the attack against traditional, Christian, family-values America — precisely the demographic that put Trump in the White House to drain the D.C. swamp.

"Shutting down people you don't agree with is about as un-American as you can get," says Karl Zinsmeister, author and vice president of The Philanthropy Roundtable, in opening the video.

Such actions go against our country's founding principles of rigorous and open debate, the free exchange of ideas and honest discussion he notes. And yet, the SPLC — with "such a sweet-sounding name" — is an organization dedicated to quashing debate, enforcing Marxist ideals and demonizing anyone who opposes them, just like Josef Stalin did to his political opponents in the former Soviet Union.

SPLC was originally founded in 1971 as a legitimate law center established to assist the poor with legal defense. But in the 1980s, after Ronald Reagan's conservatism swept the country, the group reinvented itself as a Left-wing political attack organ dedicated to the elimination of opposition through various intimidation tactics.

The primary vehicle for this is an annual list the group puts out — a list that is seldom fact-checked but eagerly parroted by the equally Left-wing "mainstream" media — of organizations, people and charities it claims are "extremists" and "haters."

"The SPLC employs a two-pronged strategy," said Zinsmeister. "First, find a handful of crazies with barely any followers, no address and no staff, and then turn them into a 'dangerous' movement — proof that there are neo-Nazis lurking everywhere."

On the group's most recent "hate map" there are 917 "active hate groups" listed in the United States (though wouldn't you know it, the SPLC doesn't list itself), but the fact is, most people have only ever heard of a handful of them.


www.universityofreason.com/a/29887/KWADzukm