Introduction
As Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1970s, David Duke urged Klan
members to "get out of the cow pasture and into hotel meeting rooms." For the
past 25 years, he has increasingly attempted to follow his own advice, by using code
words, and increasingly disguising his ideas behind more mainstream conservative-sounding
rhetoric. As a result, in 2000 David Duke remains one of the most dangerous extremists in
America.
Starting as a small-time leader of a campus white supremacist organization at Louisiana
State University in the early 1970s, Duke, now 49, has had many incarnations. In an
attempt to demystify Klan ritual, he renamed the position of Grand Wizard "National
Director," and referred to cross burnings as "illuminations." In 1980, Duke
resigned from the KKK and formed a "political organization" to promote the cause
of "White Rights," The National Association for the Advancement of White People
(NAAWP). He has also unsuccessfully attempted to host a racist radio talk show program in
Louisiana.
Another tactic in Duke's strategy of "mainstreaming" racism has been his
effort to run for political office. Although he was elected to the Louisiana State
Legislature in 1989, as a political candidate Duke has been largely unsuccessful, losing
bids for Governor and the U.S. Senate in Louisiana, and for President of the United States
in 1988 and 1992. Most recently, in May, 1999, he lost the race for US
Congress. Although he has been repudiated by the national leadership of the
Republican Party, currently he is serving as party chairman for the St. Tamany Parish in
Louisiana.
In November 1998, he self-published My Awakening, a 700-page autobiographical
magnum opus of Duke's racism, anti-Semitism, and bigotry.
In January 2000, Duke announced the formation of a new organization, NOFEAR (The National Organization For European American Rights), whose purpose is to "defend the civil rights of European Americans."
Since the formation of his new organization, Duke has made no secret of his allegiances to other racist and anti-Semitic organizations. He has reportedly appeared at a variety of extremist events, including a meeting of The American Friends of the British National Party in March, and an American Renaissance conference in April, 2000. In addition, in keeping with the stated goals and political ideology of NOFEAR, he has appeared at various pro-Confederate flag, anti-immigrant, and anti-affirmative action rallies. He also claims to have completed another book, which will be entitled "The Ultimate Supremacism," which he says will be released in the fall of 2000, and is currently working on another book "about the spiritual aspect of the struggle to preserve and protect our heritage."
The following three decades of quotations demonstrate that, no matter how David Duke
attempts to recreate himself, his own words reveal that he has always been and remains
David Duke, the hatemonger.
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