The Southern Poverty ‘anti-hate’ racket


The Southern Poverty Law Center has designated itself an organization hostile to women and people of color.
It fired its co-founder Morris Dees for unexplained reasons and removed his bio from its website at the same time it pledged to train its management in “racial equity, inclusion and results.”
Simultaneous with the cashiering of Dees after nearly 50 years at the SPLC, roughly two dozen employees wrote a letter warning that “allegations of mistreatment, sexual harassment, gender discrimination and racism threaten the moral authority of this organization and our integrity along with it.”
The missive is touching in its assumption that the SPLC still has moral authority or integrity. The scandal is, nonetheless, a remarkable comeuppance for an organization that has weaponized political correctness for its own money-grubbing.
Over the decades, the SPLC basically made the American philosopher Eric Hoffer’s famous line about organizational degeneracy its strategic plan: “Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business and eventually degenerates into a racket.”
Originally founded as a civil rights group in 1971 and gaining fame for its campaign to bankrupt the Ku Klux Klan, the SPLC shifted to a catch-all “anti-hate” group that widened its definition of bigotry to encompass more and more people as the Klan faded as a threat.
It used the complicity or credulousness of the media in repeating its designations to punish its ideological enemies and engage in prodigious fundraising. It raised $50 million a year and built an endowment of more than $300 million.
Imagine a left-wing outfit with the same shoddy standards as Sen. Joe McCarthy but with a better business sense.
Clear-eyed, fair-minded people on the left have long recognized the SPLC as a fundraising tool masquerading as a civil rights group, but its absurd overreach has in recent years earned skeptical coverage from the likes of The Atlantic and PBS.
The SPLC never sees honest disagreement over contentious issues if it can see “hate” instead. It named the Family Research Council and the Alliance Defending Freedom hate groups for opposing gay marriage. It designated perfectly respectable restrictionist immigration groups like the Center for Immigration Studies for the offense of favoring less immigration. It labeled the American Enterprise Institute scholar Christina Hoff Sommers as complicit in “male supremacy.”
The SPLC pretends not to be able to tell the difference between Charles Murray, one of the country’s foremost intellectuals, and the likes of the white nationalists who marched on Charlottesville.
Usually, being named by the SPLC means having the designation routinely noted by the press, whatever its merits, but occasionally there’s recourse.
True to form, the SPLC somehow deemed Maajid Nawaz and his Quilliam Foundation — devoted to pushing back against radical Islam — anti-Muslim, even though Nawaz is himself a Muslim. He sued for defamation.
The SPLC steadily climbed down. First, it withdrew the “Field Guide to Anti-Muslim Extremists” that included him, then settled for $3.375 million. “We would like,” the SPLC said, “to extend our sincerest apologies to Mr. Nawaz, Quilliam, and our readers for the error.”
The error? This makes it sound like the SPLC misspelled his name rather than going out of its way to include him in a research report meant to put a blot on his reputation forevermore.
There’s a lot of talk of the need for more civility in our public life. Any journalist who believes this should shun the SPLC. Its business model is based on an elaborate form of name-calling. It lumps together people who have legitimate, good-faith opinions the SPLC finds uncongenial with hideous racists, using revulsion with the latter to discredit the former. This is a poisonous form of public argument.
Not to mention that many of the groups the SPLC smears have never had their employees complain about a hostile workplace culture. If the SPLC is going to engage in a period of self-reflection, it should think about what it’s become — and recoil in shame.
“There’s a lot of talk of the need for more civility in our public life. Any journalist who believes this should shun the SPLC. Its business model is based on an elaborate form of name-calling. It lumps together people who have legitimate, good-faith opinions the SPLC finds uncongenial with hideous racists, using revulsion with the latter to discredit the former. This is a poisonous form of public argument.
Not to mention that many of the groups the SPLC smears have never had their employees complain about a hostile workplace culture.”
It’s sad when a terrorist inspiring hate group that doesn’t treat its own female and minority employees right and has a corrupt founder calls legitimate groups hate groups. It’s good that no legitimate groups pays them any positive attention any more.
300 million endowment for a "charity" that discriminates against blacks and harasses women while peddling fear to the gullible liberals.
Jim and Tammy Faye Baker would be jealous at how well Morris Dees scam worked.
You are of course exactly right. SPLC is nothing more than a criminal scam artist operation that cons willing idiots to believe their rankings or even act on them.
would SPLC have as big a fan club if it was the Northern Poverty Law Center?
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-reckoning-of-morris-dees-and-the-southern-poverty
The great Southern journalist John Egerton, writing for The Progressive, had painted a damning portrait of Dees, the center’s longtime mastermind, as a “super-salesman and master fundraiser” who viewed civil-rights work mainly as a marketing tool for bilking gullible Northern liberals.
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-reckoning-of-morris-dees-and-the-southern-poverty-law-center
Here's the full link.
I can't imagine how gullible the donors or people who cite it as some sort of authority must feel...
To them I quote Bill Clinton. “I feel your pain.”
All while discriminating against their own minority and female employees.....
More good news!
SPLC is broke arse. No money in the anti hate stuff. You'd think they'd know better.
no s/
err 1/2 s/ ?
Actually for them all their money is based on hate. They rely on stoking hate to keep in existence and to fundraise off of their lemming following. They have half a billion minus whatever Dees kept for himself in a golden parachute when he left them.