Several times over the years I have attempted to correct The Remnant’s Wiki entry which, ever since 2007, has listed us as a hate group, based on a 2006 “Intelligence Report” vomited onto the Internet by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).
I have fought SPLC libel many times over the past two decades. In fact, here in Minnesota, I even won a few rounds against local media who made the mistake of trotting out SPLC “proof” texts in our daily newspapers.
No matter how thoroughly the SPLC was exposed and discredited over the years, I have never been successful in convincing the Leftist idealogues at Wikipedia to dial back their hero worship of the SPLC.
But no matter how thoroughly the SPLC was exposed and discredited over the years, I have never been successful in convincing the Leftist idealogues at Wikipedia to dial back their hero worship of the SPLC, not even after SPLC co-founder, Morris Dees – a notorious charlatan from way back – was canned in March of 2019 after being accused by his own staff of misconduct, sexual harassment, gender discrimination, and racism.
We thought the SPLC might be going down then. We thought wrong. As John Stassel found out, the SPLC was too rich to fall. In 2023, Stossel blew the lid off the SPLC, aptly calling them out as a “left-wing money-grabbing slander machine.”
Even after an actual domestic terrorist shot up the offices of the Family Research Council – and told the FBI that it was the SPLC that had inspired him to do it – the SPLC still managed worm out if it. And so, they soldiered on, terrifying retired Jewish ladies out of their social security checks. I know this because I attended one of the SPLC’s terror talks at a synagogue in Richmond back in 2007. It was presented by something called Heidi Beirich and, honestly, I had never before seen such over-the-top fearmongering at the expense of vulnerable old people. And they’ve been trafficking in that sort of thing for decades.
As part of the mission from Hell, the SPLC was even behind the FBI’s infiltration into Traditional Latin Mass parishes a couple of years back. Like Wikipedia, the FBI made the mistake of basing their “investigation” on SPLC fake news.
Fast-forward to 2026.
The SPLC now faces their biggest challenge yet – a criminal indictment served by a grand jury in their home state of Alabama. When that indictment was codified by the U. S. Department of Justice last week, this suddenly became a big problem for the Hate Hucksters of SPLC.
“It finally feels like the end of the line for the SPLC,” writes Jeffrey Tucker, this morning at the Epoch Times. “It is not possible to exaggerate the high place of the SPLC in the conventional thinking of the left in America. They have been the longtime masters of patrolling the country for ‘hate.’ Their fundraising operations have been masterful, constantly feeding paranoia that the United States has a mighty and growing pocket of quasi-Nazis organized in cells and hiding out in cliques, preparing for some kind of coup d’état.”
I agree, and I have been on the SPLC hate map for twenty years. Still, while I welcome the news, I don’t anticipate it necessarily changing anything. The lawyers of the SPLC are on a mission from Hell. They have long claimed that Traditional Catholics are a dangerous hate group. How so? Because we accept the Church’s defined dogma: “Outside the Church there is no salvation,” which, they claim, is just the sort of “religious supremacism” that leads to domestic terrorism – you know, the sort of thing that’s going on right now in Israel.
As part of the mission from Hell, the SPLC was even behind the FBI’s infiltration into Traditional Latin Mass parishes a couple of years back. Like Wikipedia, the FBI made the mistake of basing their “investigation” on SPLC fake news. Senators Josh Hawley and Jim Jordan made them pay for it in that case, but the SPLC know their Modernist theology. They use Vatican II as a battering ram against traditional Catholics.
With a grand jury, an indictment, and now the DOJ doubling down, this may finally be the end of the line for the most notorious hate group in American history – the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Still, this most recent DOJ case goes further than any other critic by accusing the SPLC of funding the very hate groups that, for years, they were pretending to expose – systematic deception from which they extorted millions of dollars. And when they could not buy a hate group, the SPLC would just make one up. . . as they did in the case of The Remnant.
Still, with a grand jury, an indictment, and now the DOJ doubling down, this may finally be the end of the line for the most notorious hate group in American history – the Southern Poverty Law Center.
By the way, I just checked again. Wikipedia remains undaunted: “The Southern Poverty Law Center organization lists Remnant Press as a radical traditional Catholic hate group.” In other words, Wikipedia remains as reliable as the Southern Poverty Law Center.
The best thing I can say about AI is that at least at Google, the AI search option has demoted Wikipedia to something only boomers bother with anymore after years of relying on mis- and disinformation “source material” peddled by Christophobic charlatans like the kids running the SPLC.
Sayonara, Wikipedia. Thanks for all the laughs.