Recently, I did an experiment. I emailed the Southern Poverty Law Center to ask them why they condemn catholic groups like ones run by E. Michael Jones, Robert Sungenis, John Maffei, etc. as radical anti-semitic hate groups basically pairing them with the Ku Klux Klan or the Neo nαzιs even though as far as i'm concerned, these catholic groups teach truth and I guess politically correct liberals at the SPLC don't like truth and want to stop "hate". I have learned a lot more about these traditionalist catholics who run these groups that the SPLC condemns for a while now especially E. Michael Jones who I used to be critical of. But, I have learned he is a big truth seeker like the rest of these guys. Anyways, Here is the email I sent to the SPLC and their response back to me. I hope you all enjoy this entertainment of a response and let me know what you all think. Their response is truly a circus. Enjoy and God bless.
My Email:
Dear SPLC,
I see how on your website you have tried to expose hate on the internet for years. My question is why do you put Catholic organizations on an αnтι-ѕємιтє list when Catholics have never been anything like white supremacists. I don't see catholics burning crosses and doing neo-nαzι rallies. Catholics are truth-seekers and they are trying to show the world the truth. You have attacked John Maffei, E. Michael Jones, Robert Sungenis, etc. when these people are just people teaching the truth about Catholicism and America when you are all just attacking these catholics for no good reason. I truly think that you people at SPLC have a leftist bias. Let me know why you attack these great catholic people. Thank you and God bless.
The Southern Poverty Law Center's response to my email.
Nathan,
Thank you for your recent note to the Southern Poverty Law Center. I appreciate your inquiry, and I am delighted to address your concerns about our annual list of active hate groups and extremist organizations operating in the U.S.
Since 1981, the SPLC’s Intelligence Project has monitored the activities of hundreds of racist and neo-nαzι hate groups. We define a hate group as one that holds beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class or people, typically for their immutable characteristics. The list is compiled throughout the year using hate group publications and websites, citizen and law enforcement reports, field sources, and news reports. Hate group activities can include criminal acts, marches, rallies, speeches, meetings, leafleting, or publishing.
Using this information, we provide critical information and intelligence to law enforcement agencies through face-to-face trainings and other no-cost resources, including the Intelligence Report. Law enforcement professionals are more likely to encounter dangerous extremists than virtually any other segment of American society — and those confrontations are, tragically, sometimes fatal.
Thank you again for your inquiry, and I hope this explanation of hate groups and our work tracking them is sufficient.