What the Klan Looks Like in 2024

They Have Several Names With a Single Goal

William Spivey
The Polis
Published in
4 min read14 hours ago

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Anthony Crider; cropped by Beyond My Ken (talk) 20:37, 9 April 2018 (UTC), CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

White supremacists have leaders and followers with entirely different agendas. The leaders have economic goals that can only be accomplished by mobilizing the masses. The followers are filled with resentment, hatred, and jealousy. They think someone is taking something from them that is rightfully theirs. The Klan, in times past, was more of a grassroots organization. Hundreds of local chapters (Klaverns) had loose relationships with a national body. The Klan today is more top-down driven, with the followers mimicking official policy without being able to articulate why.

My definition of the Klan is admittedly broad. Historically, most of the hundreds of Klan organizations at least had the word Klan in their name. Organizations like the Knights of the White Camelia and the White League joined them. Many current organizations try to downplay the current size of the movement. They would tell you only a few thousand Klan members are remaining, and they are dying out. They would ignore the thousands of organizations with millions of members with the same agenda. In my view, the Proud Boys, the Boogaloo Bois, Oath Keepers, and others are all the Klan, though they might despise being linked to their low-class brethren.

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William Spivey
The Polis

I write about politics, history, education, and race. Follow me at williamfspivey.com and support me at https://ko-fi.com/williamfspivey0680