
A special broadcast of Rachel Maddow's recent live event at the 92nd Street Y: A conversation with Steven J. Ross, author of "The Secret War Against Hate."
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Stephen J. Ross
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Rachel
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Rachel
Hey, thanks for joining us. I am very excited to share this with you. I recently got to sit down with one of my favorite people, someone from whom I have learned a ton and who has become a real friend. So much of what I have written about and podcasted about and talked about in the news over the last few years about fighting fascism here in America, so much of that stuff that I have learned, I have learned from a man named Stephen J. Ross. Stephen J. Ross was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for his incredible, just shocking book, Hitler in Los Angeles. And now he's got a new book which is just as jaw dropping as that one. The new book is called the Secret War Against American Resistance to Antisemitism and White Supremacy. Resistance is the key word. I devoured this book. It picks up right at the end of World War II and goes through this incredible period in US history that's very poorly understood. Stephen J. Ross is an incredible historian. More than that, he is an incredible storyteller. He joined me live in front of a live audience at the 92nd Street. Yeah. In New York City. Oh, I'm so excited. I'm very excited to be here. Okay, so I'm gonna read you a tiny little squib from Steven's book. And then I'm gonna say a couple of things and then Steven and I are going to talk, and then we're going to take your questions. So there's no surprises. The second American Civil War began on the evening of October 20, 1945, as millions of veterans came back from World War II Ku Klux Klan leaders sounded a battle cry to preserve their beloved white Protestant nation from its many enemies. 55 year old obstetrician and Ku Klux Klan grand dragon Samuel Greene warned Atlanta's returning warriors. White supremacy is threatened. America, he said, is calling every white man who has red blood into the fight. Samuel Greene, who proudly supported a Hitler style mustache, renewed the fight for racial purity that balmy October night in Georgia. He did so by holding the region's first major cross burning since Pearl Harbor. Again, this was 1945. Patriotic Klansmen had halted cross burnings during the war, Greene explained, because it was necessary, he said, that all factions unite to win the war. But that night in October 1945, Klansmen signaled the start of a new domestic war by lighting a gigantic fiery cross that stretched 300 yards across the top of Stone Stone Mountain, Georgia, and could be seen 60 miles away. To ensure that no disruptions would occur, Greene asked an Atlanta policeman and loyal Klan enforcer John Nash and his fellow Klansmen cops to guide traffic and preserve order. That day, 300 men, many of them wearing their U.S. army uniforms, paid their $10 initiation fee and took the Klan oath to uphold the tenets of the Christian religion, the maintenance of white supremacy and the principles of true Americanism. Witnessing that ceremony were 3,000 men and women who had driven from nearby states to celebrate the Klan's October 1945 revival. Also observing the evening's events was a southern journalist named Stetson Kennedy. Posing as a sympathetic Klansman as he watched the cross burning atop Stone Mountain, Stetson Kennedy worried that a new race war was brewing, a national war that would, as it had in 1861, pit American against American. Kennedy, the southern journalist, would do all he could to stop that from happening. And thus starts the drama in Stephen Ross's new book. Everybody has heard of the clan, but it turns out that the clan is part of a big, unhappy, very dysfunctional family. The clan has lots of siblings and lots of inbred cousins and lots of unloved and neglected children. And they are groups whose names you might have heard once, or maybe you've never heard them, but you definitely never remember remembered them all. The National States Rights Party. Not to be confused with the States Rights Voters League. Not to be confused with the National Socialist League. Not to be confused with the National Socialist Party of America. Not to be confused with the National Socialist White People's Party. Not to be confused with the white American Nationalist Party. Not to be confused with the Christian Nationalist Party, the American National Party. The National Renaissance Party, the American Nazi Party, the America First Party. The Christian Anti Jewish Party. The Stoner Anti Jewish Party, which is not at all what you think. The National Committee to Free America From Jewish Domination. That was a real subtle one. The National Gentile League. The United White Party. The White Party of America. The Colombians. The National Alliance. I could go on and on and on and on, but the point is, part of the reason the far right has been a little bit hard to grasp is, in our time, a little hard to get our heads around, despite its very consequential recent ascendance, is because I believe the proper nouns associated with it, for the most part, are very forgettable. They mean nothing to us. The how did we get here? History of the far far right in America really is a musical chair's set of unfamous characters and lookalike uniforms and insignias and newsletters and paramilitaries and mad bombers and street thugs and fraudsters and perennial candidates and third parties and militias. And they all seem amorphous. They slide back and forth organizationally from one similar sounding, creepy outlet to another to another to another. And that makes it really easy. It really makes it tempting to write them all off as impermanent and therefore unimportant, as just crackpots and hoodlums. That dismissal, it turns out, is a bad idea. The historian Stephen J. Ross has done more than anyone in this time in America to disambiguate the individuals who have built this movement and done its work, their aims and their crimes and their tactics and their formations, so we can see and understand how they work and how they have succeeded and failed. But most importantly, what Stephen J. Ross has done in Hitler in Los Angeles, his Pulitzer Prize finalist, previous book, and with this book tonight, the Secret War Against Hate. What Stephen J. Ross has done, the reason you are here tonight, to hear about it most of all what he has given us in his work, is a widening of the aperture to broaden out our own view so we see the proverbial forest here and not just the weirdo individual trees that it is made up of. What Stephen J. Ross is now teaching us, now showing us in his latest work, is that there is something that coheres out of all of these pieces. There is something legible and important here, and we should understand it to be a single and continuing political formation that is very important. And it is the violent American far right, the persistent and violent American far right. The closer you look to understand the different groups, the different characters, the different clans, the different crimes, the more Stephen Ross proves that this is all one movement, one long standing and now newly very powerful American political faction. Far right, anti black, anti jewish, anti gay, anti minority, not just illiberal, but anti liberal, authoritarian, bluntly white supremacist, and always irreducibly violent. America Constitutionally is a multiracial democracy in which we are all promised, in writing and in law, equal protection under the law and equal rights. And alongside that, there is a persistent political faction, a long standing and poorly understood, poorly studied and often dismissed violent political movement in our country that has never stopped trying to end that. That has never stopped trying to end our multiracial democracy protected in law by individual and equal rights. They want to return us to something more like what the Confederacy fought for and lost. And that movement has been seeking since the end of World War II in what Stephen J. Ross calls the second American Civil War, they have been seeking two things. Number one, to unite with each other to defeat what Steve calls their too many furors problem, to unite with each other, to unite under one leader. And number two, to ascend to real political power. Which means, yes, it took a long while, but they are having a good few years right now, maybe their best ever. The Secret War against Hate is about that movement, how we got it, how it took root and then failed, how it grew and then failed, how it metastasized and then failed again, all leading up to what it is right now. Happily, it is also the. The story of the. The shockingly effective, controversial and mostly forgotten tactics that have been used against them, used against them by some very tough, very brave Americans who came up with this strategy against these groups on their own and who again and again risked their lives for it. These are Americans whose names might otherwise be lost to history. Without Stephen J. Ross to tell us their stories and to show us what they did, please join me in welcoming to the stage my friend, distinguished professor of history at the University of Southern California, Stephen J. Ross.
Stephen J. Ross
Well, that was a nice introduction. And I just want to say before we start, I don't want you to be nervous. Every Monday you look into a camera, there are no people. And now you have 900 people here.
Rachel
Why do you think I just changed my glasses? Because now you're an invisible blob. If you're further away than my wrist, you're gone. Steve, did I get anything wrong in that summation of your argument?
Stephen J. Ross
No.
Rachel
We think of the. Some people think about the Klan in its iteration in the 1920s. I think a lot of people think about the Klan in the 1990s, late 1950s and early 1960s. Some people think of it in terms of Reconstruction. I don't think that most Americans think of the immediate post World War II years as being a huge high point for the Klan. What happened that night in October 1945 with that huge cross burning? What was going on there?
Stephen J. Ross
Many of the men and some women who went to fight in World War II went to fight as patriots, but they did not sign up because they wanted to fight for democracy against fascism and Nazism. They weren't trying to defeat Hitler Tojo Mussolini. They went to fight because Japan bombed us. And if you're a good old boy and the good old boys we're talking about, Here are the 11 Confederate states across the Southwest up to California. And they went to war claiming they were patriots. And when they came back, they felt they were betrayed by Congress, by what they referred to as the Jew deal. They were insulted and offended by what they call President Rosenfeld. And they came back and I call them the betrayed generation. And what they said is, we were we. And here's what I would say for all of you. If you think this is a kind of clown show that's lasted all these decades, you're really wrong. They are dedicated Americans up to right now who believe they were betrayed by our government. Why were they betrayed? Because while they were fighting at war, the government made it easier for Jews and blacks to compete for housing and jobs. And they came back and they discovered black people were moving into their neighborhoods. Black people were taking their jobs. And they said, before the war, we had no trouble with Jews and blacks because they knew their place. But now they've come back from war, they're demanding all these things, and everything has been turned upside down. And we are going to restore the nation to what it was founded upon as a white Christian, white Christian nation.
Rachel
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Stephen J. Ross
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Rachel
You focus on what you call four godfathers of white supremacy. I think of the four, George Lincoln Rockwell from the American Nazi Party is probably the only one who counts as famous, the only one people might have heard of. But you really land on this guy Jesse B. Stoner or J.B. stoner, describing him as having the largest impact on American white supremacy of anybody of multiple generations in the 20th century. Can you explain who Stoner was and why he's so important to understand?
Stephen J. Ross
Right. Well, I have. The far right, from 1945 to today has had many different leaders and one could have written books about a whole bunch of them. But the four people I chose to write about, Jesse B. Stoner is one of them. Emory Burke, the head of the New York Nazi Party, post war party founded in New York City in 1949. James Madall and then Rockwell. These were unusual people because they all knew each other. They were all rivals and yet they all worked together from 1945 until their death, all of them. And Jesse B. Stoner, at the age of 18, grew up in Tennessee. He suffered polio as a young man. He actually wrote to German doctors before the war asking if they could fix his leg. And they promised that yes, once they conquer America, they will come over and fix his leg. And he was at 18, the youngest Klan kleagle, which is the organizer for the state of Tennessee. And while he was a young man, he was going to Atlanta at the same time the Klan was reviving. There was a group that was even further to the right than the Klan called the Colombians. And the Colombians were saying their leader, Emory Burke said, I am going to finish the job that Hitler began, but I'm going to do it with much more modern techniques. I'm going to exterminate every Jew in America and I'm going to send every black man, woman and child to Africa. And Jesse B. Stoner had been attending their meetings. Eventually they were put down by spies from New York from a group called the Non Sectarian Anti Nazi League, which is one of three groups running spy operations along with the Anti Defamation League and the American Jewish Committee. When the Colombians were broken apart and their leaders sent to jail, Jesse B. Stoner said, I've learned a lot now, and I'm going to go out on my own. And the first party he started had the very subtle name of the Stoner Anti Jewish Party. And when that name didn't click, he changed it to the Christian Anti Jewish Party. And he continued the Colombian mantra that I am going to get rid of every Jew. We're going to exterminate every Jew in America, but we're going to do it much better than Hitler did. We're going to use every modern technique we can. We're going to electrocute them, gas them, firing squad. But his main appeal, what really got the attention of a lot of people is he said, when the Jews are dead, the Christian Anti Jewish Party is going to take all the Jewish wealth in America and distribute it among every Christian. And every Christian in the United States is going to be fantastically wealthy once we do this. And I just should add, when Stoner was part of the Colombians and they tried to unite with the Ku Klux Klan, the Klan said, no, we are not going to form an alliance because you are too extreme in your racial views for us.
Rachel
This is admittedly a very small part of the book, but I found it deeply satisfying. Can you tell us about the part where Georgia's assistant attorney general punched out one of the Colombians in court?
Stephen J. Ross
Yeah, the Georgia assistant Attorney general, Daniel Duke, no relation to David Duke, had been an assistant attorney general right before the war, charged with putting down the Klan. He then enlisted in the Army. He refused to go in as an officer, and he wound up as a sergeant. And when he came back, he was put back in charge of trying to put down the Klan. And he was also then put down in charge of getting rid of the Colombians. And the Colombian leader, Emory Burke, who was a Southerner who liked to speak with a British accent. And Duke was being harassed constantly by Emory Burke. And at one point, they're in the courthouse and Burke starts accusing him. You're a coward. You're this. You gotta be part Jewish and part black. And he just kept adamant, adamant. Finally, the attorney general wheeled around and punched him out, knocked him out, knocked him down on the floor. And when Emory Burke got it back up and said to the judge, did you See that? Did you see that? The judge said I must have looked away at that.
Rachel
Tell me about the spying operations, particularly by the non sectarian Anti Nazi League, a group that doesn't exist anymore but maybe could stood to be revived. We could stand to have a non sectarian Anti Nazi league in America these days. What were their tactics against groups like the National Renaissance Party but also the Colombians?
Stephen J. Ross
Yeah, well, Stetson Kennedy was born in Florida. As I write in the book. He was born at the wrong time to the wrong family in the wrong place. His family had been Confederate leaders and his uncle was one of the Klan leaders in Florida, very well known. And Stetson Kennedy was too small to be drafted, but all his friends were drafted. And he said, I've got to do something. They're all dodging bullets. Well, I'm willing to dodge Klan bullets. And so he took himself from Florida to Georgia where he enrolled in the Klan under a fictitious, fictitious name. Relate it saying that he was the nephew of this famous Klan leader. And he then met James Sheldon from the non sectarian Anti Nazi League who also asked him, will you work for us? And he would go to Klan meetings and later he went to the Colombian meetings, he joined the Colombians as well. And he would send in weekly reports. He would write down after every meeting he would go back to his room and he's a journalist. He was writing articles under the name Stetson Kennedy, but he never had a picture taken so no one knew who Kennedy was. And eventually he writes to Sheldon in New York saying, look, I just went on a run, a ammunition run with one of our the meanest person I've ever met in my life who would cut your throat as soon as look at you. And they've now bought dynamite as well as rifles and they are planning to blow up the Southern Baptist Convention and we need to do something. And he said, you've got to send in agents because this is getting serious now. This isn't, you know, for some of you out there who think, well, these right wing groups, maybe they're keystone cops. A few of them, you know, a few members were, but they were dead, literally deadly serious. And so New York sent down two spies. Mario Buzzi and Renee Fruchtbaum. Oh, Renee Fruchtbaum, Renee Fruchbaum.
Rachel
So good.
Stephen J. Ross
And they came down to meet with the Colombian leaders and they said, look, we are organizing the Italian fascists in New York City and we want to make a alliance with you because you are preaching the same message as we are. Get rid of Jews and blacks, and we'd like to partner with you. And the Colombians were ecstatic that they could now have a stronghold in Judem America. You may not know, but New York City was Judem America. And Renee walks in and she says, well, I'm an independently wealthy New Yorker and I'm bored with everything, so I've come down to help you too. And I see your headquarters or your files, they're a mess. They're just a mess. You know what? I've done secretarial work. I'll get all your files organized. And so for the next three nights, she went in after everyone went home, and she did. She got all the files organized. And when they came back, they said, oh, wow, this is unbelievable. Everything's in order, it's filed, right? What they didn't know, and this is right out of James Bond, is every night she would pull out her cigarette lighter, which was a camera, and she photographed over 200 of the documents. And when she wrote, actually, she called Sheldon from Atlanta, told her what she had, and he said, get back here immediately. They went back to New York. She said, my mother's ill. Went back. They processed the 200 pages, and then they sent it to the attorney general, Assistant attorney general. And that evidence was enough to basically get rid of the charter of the Colombians, who had been chartered as an educational institution. And the two leaders, Loomis and Burke, were sent to jail. And that was the end of the Colombian. So.
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Tennessee 2012 can you talk a little
Rachel
bit about the effect of those tactics from the adl, from the Anti Nazi League with the Colombians, with the Klan, with all the different groups that they infiltrated. And the stories are unbelievably dramatic. The effect, the sort of knock on effect, the ripple effect on the far right of those operations against them being so effective, does it undermine their effectiveness, their ability to work together, their ability to plan long term? It seems to drive a real schismatic and sort of purge driven internal discipline that was very unhealthy for those groups in the long run just to have had them infiltrated successfully in some key cases.
Stephen J. Ross
Yeah. And word would get out all three groups were sending spies down. And here's the One of the few things that actually got the proverbial hair on the back of my neck to stand up was in May 1945. May 8, by the way, is V E Day. Victory in Europe. And my birthday. Well, actually it's significant. My parents were both Holocaust survivors. And imagine they, they went from Auschwitz to Bergen Belsen to Salzwedel, my father, from the Warsaw Ghetto to Treblinka and eventually to Dachau. And four years to the day after the war, they gave birth to a child that they never thought they'd have. Well, what was heroic about these groups is the fact that they were running in May, the first week of May, right before the war ended. The three offices of the adl, the American Jewish Committee and the Anti Nazi League were in midtown Manhattan, literally just a few blocks from one another. And I came across the three memos they wrote exactly the same week. And the three memos said the same exact thing, which is we can defeat any one group, even the Ku Klux Klan. But what we really are afraid of is one day all these scattered far right groups are going to find out a way to communicate instantaneously. And once they're able to do that, we don't know if we can stop them. And our second great fear is that some of these people from these far, far right groups are going to make their way into one of the two mainstream parties and take these far right ideas and move them from the margins to the mainstream. And then every American will be in trouble. But these people felt they had to do something. The three groups and the men and women who went to spy for them, who were almost all Christian. And even though they were spying, they knew they were spying for Jewish groups. They never felt they were working for the Jews. They were working for America. Because they argued in America it's not okay for another American to kill an American because of their race, religion, their ethnicity, or their immigration status.
Rachel
Steve, I want to ask you about violence and the tactical role of violence for these guys. How many bombings do you think J.B. stoner, Jesse Stoner, was involved in in the south?
Stephen J. Ross
Close to 100. Jesse B. Stoner was the leading bomb expert in the South. He was known as the mastermind. He would help groups, tell them how to make bombs. He would actually go to local communities and on the back of a truck, he would give them instructions on how to make bombs. There was, I think, between 54 and 59, there were something like 80 bombs that went off around the South. And they would bomb synagogues, they would bomb churches, black churches. They would bomb the homes of ministers. And Jesse Stoner, when the National States Rights Party started, said, we are the only ones who can stop the bombing. You gotta vote for us. Cause we can actually stop it. What he didn't say is, well, we're the ones doing the bombings. So, yeah, we know how to stop all the bombings. And Stoner would outlive the three other, as I call them, godfathers of white supremacy. And on his deathbed in, I think it's 2002, he was asked by a reporter, do you regret anything you've ever done? And he said, a man should never regret anything when he knows that everything he has done is right.
Rachel
When you talk about these guys running for office, it's jarring because immediately you always go to the fact that they didn't get many votes, they didn't win. But it's also weird that they were running because they were explicitly anti democracy. The very influential National Renaissance Bulletin, the newsletter of the National Renaissance Party here in New York. You describe it having on its masthead a quote from Hitler denigrating democracy. Right. And these guys are all very much in favor of an authoritarian type of government that would get rid of any of what we understand is the protections of our republic. What I was interested in though is that they're anti democracy almost on a religious level. It's not that they just wanted a whites only democracy. They call themselves patriots, they wrap themselves up in the flag. They say they're super Americans. All their stupid party names have American and patriotic in them. But they're not talking about the American form of government just reserved for us. They want to abolish democracy and instead have an authoritarian leader. Why is that?
Stephen J. Ross
Because democracy is a political system for weaklings. This is what they argued, that democracy was a system that had too many others in it and that it is who built Western civilization. It was white Christian, white Anglo Saxon Christians. And what we need is an autocracy. What we need, you know, not dissimilar to Lenin on the left who wanted, you know, his 10th, you know, the top 10% would be running the Russian government. People like James Madall in the National Renaissance Party, Jesse B. Stoner. When they got into office, they basically wanted to undermine democracy, abolish democracy and put in authoritarian leaders who would raise the standard of our government that we not be weaklings anymore. And also they were in favor of what we now call tradwives. So that the Colombians, for example, said if they get into power because they promised in 1946. So here's what you also have to. We haven't talked about this. 1946, Atlanta. They are marching down Peachtree street, the main street in Atlanta, in Nazi uniforms. They made their own Nazi uniforms in the style of the Hitler's ss. And they were marching down those streets and they wanted true manhood again. And what they said is when we get into power, no woman can ever have a divorce. No woman can ever wear makeup. And women should be at home taking care of the children. That is their job and to support their men.
Rachel
I have that in my notes as the Taliban issue. I'm going to ask one last question and then we have audience questions. And this is a little bit of a thought experiment, but you're very clear eyed I think, and very forthcoming about the limitations of these groups. The blood curdling aims that they had, but also their inability to put it together to get as far down the road as they wanted to. Had these groups had high level validation from the highest levels of the United States government. If they had these groups that had that kind of validation and sort of ideological endorsement from the highest levels of the US Government, would that have supercharged their capabilities? Would that have made them more dangerous?
Stephen J. Ross
Absolutely. And you referred to something in Your introductory remarks, which is what I called the too many Fuhrer problem. The reason that we didn't see these groups unite is in large part because every one of these groups, and there were literally hundreds of them. And in the 1960s, James Sheldon estimated that there were roughly 10 million people in America who either belonged to those groups or subscribed to their newsletters, their newspapers, whatever. 10 million. And the reason they never really united is because they kept calling for fascist unity. They had Meetings, Washington, D.C. 1968, the Congress of Racial Something or Other, where they were all calling for unity, and they all wanted one head, but no one was willing to not be the Fuhrer. Every one of them wanted a fascist front, but they wanted to be the Fuhrer. And what changed all that was 2016, when they found one man they could all unite around, and they finally had a single Fuhrer, who in 2017, after Charlottesville, said, there are good people on both sides. Now, I try to be an objective historian. I try to put my own prejudices aside, but here's what I want to tell you. If you're a fascist, you're not a good person. There are. There were no good people on the other side there, period, striking that the
Rachel
Charlottesville event, that we can all met the tiki torches and all that. The name of that event was Unite the Right.
Stephen J. Ross
That's it. It was yet another attempt.
Rachel
Yeah. All right, audience questions. You're all not only very, very good looking, you're very, very smart. And these are very, very good questions. What do you think is the most successful argument against the modern right and white supremacy for the younger generation? I find it difficult to argue against those who don't deeply understand the rights bigotry and the harm they're causing.
Stephen J. Ross
It's a good question. I wish I had a full answer. What kind of. I simply would ask, what kind of nation do you want to live in? What kind of country do you want? Do you want to support a group? One of the things I learned in writing this book is one of the things that these far right groups, and particularly the militia movement, which really gets started in this country, after all these groups realize that they can't get Jews and blacks out of America. They either can't kill them or. Jesse B. Stoner once offered black people, if you leave and we are in government, we're going to give Every Black family $10,000 and a Cadillac if they go to Africa. These groups all believe the militia movement. The core belief was Christian identity, which proclaims that Jews are not the chosen people. That Anglo Saxons are the chosen people, that Jews are the offspring of Satan and Eve. And to kill a Jew is to do their unborn children a favor because their children will never be baptized, and so they'll go to hell. And black people, they're not even people, they're mud people as well as other people of color. And therefore, to kill a mud person is not to kill a human being, and to kill a Jew is to do them a favor. So I would ask young people, what do you think about that idea? Because that's what many of these far right people are saying. And they also want an end to democracy. Do you have any friends who are of color or are not Christian? Do you want to see them either being deported or killed? Because that's what these groups are still arguing for in the militia groups. And before I came here a few days ago, I googled Christian identity churches and Christian identity militia, and they're still all over the country. This is not dead. This is not dead. And I. I would simply ask young people, what kind of nation do you want?
Rachel
I think the solution is to talk about really obscure history stuff on cable news all the time, see if it catches on. See if it catches on. This is a very good question, and I'm just going to preface it with another quote from your book. You quote a reporter named Albert Deutsch in 1946, who's writing at the time about the Colombians. The Colombians are in Nazi uniforms in Atlanta, 1946 into 1947, and by 1947, they're getting punched out in court. But this is Deutsch in 1946. There are great. There are great numbers of young men like these, with poor moorings and no Anchorage, who feel like outcasts, who feel that they have nothing to look forward to, whose natural craving for adventure is not socially directed into constructive channels, who have been poisoned by regional and national prejudices, who don't feel that they belong, who wish desperately to latch on to something concrete with the colorful overtones that youth yearns for. These men, he concluded, were, quote, duck soup for fascist demagogues. Put that in mind, one of our audience members asks, is there a common psychological trend that defines or binds together far right hate groups?
Stephen J. Ross
Well, amongst the men, it is a feeling that white men have been ignored in this country, that a lot of these people who joined, the young men who joined felt that they had missed out on World War II. They had missed out. Here's the irony. They missed out serving their country. They missed out on both serving their country as patriots. And they missed out on the excitement, what they thought was the excitement of war. And they loved the idea of being able to carry weapons, beat up the enemy, even if the enemy was domestic. And also they found themselves, not unlike this present generation, having a hard time finding jobs. And many of them in the next decade, as the government began really starting to do some civil rights activism, they said, why is the government doing all this for black people and we're not getting anything? And this would go on for decades. It went on again after Vietnam War. It was going on, I think today why we're seeing all these militias, all these young men who are going around, the proud boys like to say, we like to get tanked up on beer and then go out and beat the out of everyone. It gives us great pleasure. It makes them feel that they've done something. And again, what is really important is they see themselves as patriots. And if you don't understand that, then it's never going to end. Because somehow we have to reach youth of America to make them understand that hate is not patriotic. Killing is not patriotic.
Rachel
Steve Ross, thank you for enlightening us.
Stephen J. Ross
Thank you, Rachel. And thank you all for coming.
Rachel
Thank you so much for being here. Thank you very, very much.
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The Rachel Maddow Show – Special Episode: Rachel Maddow in Conversation with Steven J. Ross Date: May 26, 2026
This special episode brings Rachel Maddow together with historian Steven J. Ross, acclaimed author of Hitler in Los Angeles and now The Secret War Against Hate: American Resistance to Antisemitism and White Supremacy. In front of a live audience at New York’s 92nd Street Y, Rachel and Ross trace the history, evolution, and persistence of America’s violent far-right from the end of World War II to the present, exploring both the dark lineage of hate groups and the courageous resistance that opposed them.
Rachel positions Steven J. Ross as a foundational resource for understanding America’s anti-fascist efforts, crediting his work as “a widening of the aperture” on the far right.
She reads a gripping excerpt from the book, depicting the revival of the Klan in 1945 and the emergence of “a new domestic war.” (00:54–12:35)
Rachel explains why the far right appears amorphous and easily dismissed, warning against underestimating its persistence and interconnectedness:
“The dismissal... it turns out, is a bad idea... There is something legible and important here, and we should understand it to be a single and continuing political formation that is very important.” (10:03)
Ross corrects misconceptions: the postwar period was a high point for Klan and far-right resurgence, fueled by returning veterans who felt betrayed by social change during the war.
He describes them as “the betrayed generation,” incensed by increased rights for Black Americans and Jews as competition in jobs and housing.
“If you think this is a kind of clown show... you’re really wrong. They are dedicated Americans up to right now who believe they were betrayed by our government.” (13:32–15:31)
Ross spotlights four major postwar far-right leaders, focusing on J.B. Stoner’s particularly virulent antisemitism and violent tactics.
Describes Stoner’s rise and his creation of the “Stoner Anti Jewish Party,” later “Christian Anti Jewish Party,” and his promise of redistributing all Jewish wealth.
“When Stoner was part of the Colombians and they tried to unite with the Ku Klux Klan, the Klan said, no, we are not going to form an alliance because you are too extreme in your racial views for us.” (21:02)
Ross recounts dramatic spy operations by the Non Sectarian Anti Nazi League, the ADL, and the American Jewish Committee.
Highlights the daring infiltration of hate groups by Stetson Kennedy and Renee Fruchtbaum, who stole crucial documents from the Colombians using a camera hidden in a cigarette lighter, leading to the group's downfall.
“Every night she would pull out her cigarette lighter, which was a camera... she photographed over 200 of the documents.” (25:20)
Their successful penetrations led to intense paranoia, purges, and fragmentation within hate groups.
“The effect, the sort of knock on effect, the ripple effect on the far right of those operations... does it undermine their effectiveness...? It seems to drive a real schismatic and sort of purge-driven internal discipline...” (28:58)
Ross: The greatest fear of anti-fascist organizers in 1945 was hate groups developing instantaneous communications and infiltrating mainstream political parties.
“Our second great fear is that some of these people... are going to make their way into one of the two mainstream parties and take these far right ideas and move them from the margins to the mainstream. And then every American will be in trouble.” (31:18)
Ross describes widespread bombings led or enabled by Stoner—close to 100 bombings of synagogues, churches, and homes.
“He would go to local communities and on the back of a truck, he would give them instructions on how to make bombs... there were something like 80 bombs that went off around the South.” (32:37)
Rachel points out the contradiction of these groups running for office while being explicitly anti-democratic. Ross explains their contempt for democracy:
“...democracy is a political system for weaklings. This is what they argued, that democracy was a system that had too many others in it...” (35:02)
Describes how many groups idolized “tradwives,” enforced restrictive roles for women, and sought an authoritarian, white Christian autocracy.
Ross identifies the “too many führers problem”: chronic infighting and rivalry prevented unity, despite repeated calls for fascist unity.
Turning point: 2016, when far-right groups finally found a figure to unite around, culminating in mainstream validation post-Charlottesville.
“And what changed all that was 2016, when they found one man they could all unite around, and they finally had a single Führer, who in 2017, after Charlottesville, said, there are good people on both sides...” (37:47)
How to argue against the modern right with young people (40:17):
“I would simply ask young people, what kind of nation do you want?... hate is not patriotic. Killing is not patriotic.” (40:17, 45:40)
Psychological roots of hate group involvement (43:51):
“...they loved the idea of being able to carry weapons, beat up the enemy, even if the enemy was domestic...it gives us great pleasure. It makes them feel that they’ve done something.” (44:30)
Rachel’s parting thought:
Rachel Maddow:
“The history of the far, far right in America really is a musical chair's set of unfamous characters and lookalike uniforms and insignias…” (08:21)
Steven J. Ross:
“The historian Stephen J. Ross has done more than anyone in this time in America to disambiguate the individuals who have built this movement and done its work... so we can see and understand how they work and how they have succeeded and failed.” (10:09)
On spy operations:
“Every night she would pull out her cigarette lighter, which was a camera, and she photographed over 200 of the documents.” (25:20)
On the “too many Führers” problem:
“...the reason they never really united is because they kept calling for fascist unity... and they all wanted one head, but no one was willing to not be the Führer.” (37:47)
On modern hate group platforms:
“I googled Christian identity churches and Christian identity militia, and they're still all over the country. This is not dead.” (41:34)
Final audience takeaway:
“Killing is not patriotic.” (45:40)
Rachel and Steven are accessible but deeply serious, blending historical narrative with urgency and moral clarity. Their exchanges are rich with storytelling, wry humor, and forceful argument against complacency.
This episode is an essential and vivid education in the roots and continuity of American white supremacy – and the little-known, courageous resistance that fought it. The Secret War Against Hate reveals that the modern threat from the far right is neither new nor fringe, but rather the latest iteration of a longstanding, ever-evolving movement whose ultimate danger lies not just in its violence, but in being underestimated, ignored, or granted mainstream legitimacy. Through history, storytelling, and spirited discussion, Maddow and Ross argue that understanding the past is our best tool for resisting hate today.