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President Donald Trump told Fox News that a replacement for the Affordable Care Act may not come until 2018.

Declaring his love for voters who swept him to victory Tuesday in the Nevada presidential caucuses, Donald Trump claimed his third straight victory in an early voting state.

State Rep. Tommy Benton has come out in favor of two bills that will formally uphold holidays celebrating Confederate members.

A Ku Klux Klan rally in South Carolina Saturday was overthrown by anti-racism protesters and a few viral moments that shifted the conversation from hatred to the…

Amid the debate about what the Confederate flag stands for, a new poll reveals the majority of White Americans view the flag as a symbol of southern pride,…

A federal law enforcement says the fire was not arson, yet there are concerns that the church was racially targeted.

I believe Klansman John Abarr (pictured) when he says he’s “evolved” from his White supremacist views, after meeting with members of the NAACP in Casper, Wy.,…

Community activist and revolutionary leader Faya Rose Toure was reportedly arrested during a city council meeting in Selma, Alabama on Nov, 25. after protesting the construction…

Entertainment News

White supremacist and extreme-Right organization the Ku Klux Klan began their reign of terror in Tennessee in 1865. Early on, it was a group made…

The Ku Klux Klan can forget about adopting a highway in north Georgia’s Union County. The Georgia Department of Transportation has rejected an Adopt-A-Highway application by the KKK to adopt part of Route 515 near the North Carolina border. The application was filed by the Klan’s International Keystone Knights on May 21. GDOT Commissioner Keith […]

The Ku Klux Klan wants to take part in Georgia’s Adopt-A-Highway program by “adopting” a stretch of highway in North Georgia’s Union County, near the North Carolina border. If the KKK’s application to adopt a one-mile stretch of Route 515 is approved, it would allow the white supremacy group to receive official state recognition for […]

Catherine Ariemma never intended for students to be offended by the sight of four Ku Klux Klansmen at Lumpkin County High School. But that’s how senior Cody Rider said he felt last Thursday when he looked up and saw the students — dressed in white hoods and sheets — walking through the school cafeteria.