American Nazis: The Aryan Freedom Network is riding high in Trump era
HOCHATOWN, Oklahoma - Wearing cargo shorts, flip-flops and a baseball cap shading his eyes from the sun, Dalton Henry Stout blends in easily in rural America.
Except for the insignia on his hat. It bears the skull and crossbones of the infamous Deaths Head SS units that oversaw Nazi Germanys concentration camps and the initials AFN, short for Aryan Freedom Network, the neo-Nazi group Stout leads with his partner.
From a modest ranch house in Texas, the couple oversee a network they say has been turbocharged by President Donald Trumps return to the White House. They point to Trumps rhetoric his attacks on diversity initiatives, his hardline stance on immigration and his invocation of Western values as driving a surge in interest and recruitment.
Trump awakened a lot of people to the issues weve been raising for years, Stout told Reuters. Hes the best thing thats happened to us.
While the Aryan Freedom Network and other neo-Nazi groups remain on the outermost edges of American politics, broadly regarded as toxic by conservatives and mainstream America, they are increasingly at the center of far-right public demonstrations and acts of violence, according to interviews with a dozen members of extremist groups, nine experts on political extremism and a review of data on far-right violence.
Several trends have converged since Trumps re-election, Reuters found. Trumps rhetoric has galvanized a new wave of far-right activists, fueling growth in white supremacist ranks. Trumps pardons of January 6 rioters and a shift in federal law enforcements focus toward immigration have also led many on the far right to believe that federal investigations into white nationalists are no longer a priority.
https://www.reuters.com/investigations/american-nazis-aryan-freedom-network-is-riding-high-trump-era-2025-08-08/