Abortion abolitionists, once considered a fringe extremist movement, are gaining political influence—pushing for laws that equate abortion with murder and call for prosecuting, even executing, those who seek or provide the procedure.
Coupled with the peaceful, nostalgic imagery commonly associated with the movement, tradwives have transformed illiberalism from an academic or political exercise into a charming, algorithm-friendly aesthetic.
The world’s richest man has adopted an approach to Jews informed and augmented by the far right, with seemingly contradictory positions that are more consistent than they at first appear.
Holocaust Remembrance Day, marked in January, served as a solemn reminder of the necessity for marginalized groups, particularly Jewish people, to retain agency over their histories and narratives.
From Vivek Ramaswamy to Usha Vance to Jay Bhattacharya to Sriram Krishnan, Trump 2.0 is replete with a number of high-profile Indian—and Hindu—Americans.
Despite frequently using the cover of “religious freedom” to advance hard-right activism, extremist groups and politicians undermined this common tactic as they responded with verbal attacks against Episcopal Bishop Mariann Budde.
Vought seems to embody the reactionary agenda of right-wing legal activists whose goal is to overturn the New Deal and return the U.S. to an era when states’ rights trumped civil rights.
There’s a widespread misconception that American workers’ loss was Mexican workers’ gain. In reality, the only winners were multinational corporations.