FBI cuts ties with the Southern Poverty Law Center

The FBI has severed its public ties with the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), a Washington D.C.-based private spy organization that labels conservatives who disagree with it as hateful. Its website features conservative organizations on a catalogue of “hate groups,”  including Mount St. Michaels, a traditionalist Catholic Church in Spokane, Washington that sponsors "The Singing Nuns."The SPLC hate list made headlines in 2012 when a domestic terrorist with a "gay" agenda carried out a politically-motivated shooting at a pro-family Christian organization, the Family Research Council (FRC). He admitted he obtained his target list from the SPLC.The shooter, Floyd Lee Corkins, stormed into the Family Research Council’s Washington D.C. headquarters with the intention of killing as many employees as possible, according to a news report that cites legal documents. He shot an unarmed security guard before the guard subdued him. Corkins pleaded guilty to three felonies, including committing an act of terrorism, and was sentenced to 25 years in prison.SPLC co-founder Morris Dees and his wealthy "Poverty Palace" drove Judge Roy Moore from the Alabama judiciary after Moore sponsored a campaign to display the Ten Commandments outside courthouses. Moore is another SPLC-stigmatized "hater" because he beleives in the public display of Old Testament law. Dees polices the thoughts of Americans. Those who do not conform to his standards are ipso facto branded as hateful.The SPLC, which is a darling of the Establihment media, has a decided Zionist bias, almost never investigating or exposing Israeli hate groups in the U.S.Big Brother Dees conducted a “Diversity Training Event” for the FBI. Later in the year, another outrage was exposed by a conservative coalition: the SPLC also provided the U.S. military with training supplies and briefings. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, a  Dept. of Justice (DOJ) entity, endorsed the SPLC as a source and listed it as a resource on its hate crime web page.Conservative groups fired off letters to both the DOJ and the Department of Defense (DOD) demanding an end to this outrageous relationship with the SPLC. The first one, delivered to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel in December, asks that the U.S. military stop using SPLC training materials.“It is imperative that the Defense Equal Opportunity Institute (DEOMI) ensure future materials do not rely on information from organizations such as the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) or any others that engage in groundless and highly pejorative mischaracterizations of long-standing ministries and organizations for their own political purposes,” the letter says.In mid-February of this year a similar letter went out to the DOJ and the FBI regarding the agencies’ relationship with the SPLC. It specifically addressed the fact that the FBI hate crimes' website lists the SPLC as a "partner" in public outreach. That means the FBI shared information and cooperated in operations with the SPLC. “The presentation of SPLC to the public as a trusted source of information on the serious matter of hate crimes is completely unacceptable,” the letter says. It further reminds the Federal government that the SPLC has used its website to inflame public sentiment against those who disagree with the group’s goals, resulting in tragic consequences.Thankfully, the Feds took the information seriously, though no formal notice was ever delivered and it’s unlikely that there will be any public announcement. The Washington Examiner reported this week that the FBI quietly dumped the SPLC as a resource on its hate crime website, calling it a “significant rejection of the influential legal group.” The “scrubbing” came at the end of February, 2014, shortly after the DOJ and FBI received the hard-hitting letter from the conservative coalition.______________A revisionist history of the rise of the Money Power in the West:Usury in Christendom: The Mortal Sin that Was and Now is Not by Michael Hoffman(Softcover, 416 pages)______________