That is just it. If no one came out to protest them they would not have anyone in front of them to make their cause look right. I would prefer to have a streets lined with white people who have their backs turned towards them. Maybe that will send a very clear message to them.
He was a KKK member and then a neo-Nazi: How one white nationalist renounced hate. Ken Parker, a U.S. Navy veteran who said he grew up in a “good Christian” family outside Chicago, attended his first Klan rally in May 2012. Parker’s journey into the KKK and the National Socialist Movement illustrates the pull of hate groups, his path out shows how extremists can be deradicalized. Ref. USAToday.
We looked at 900 yearbooks across the country. Racist images showed up at every turn. Photos of students in blackface and KKK robes, like the one on Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam’s yearbook page, were pervasive in the 1970s and '80s. In one of the most extensive yearbook searches ever, USA TODAY Network reporters uncovered examples from the Deep South to the Ivy League. Source 2w.