Hope Not Hate: Difference between revisions
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== Stories == | == Stories == | ||
* Claims that "alt-tech" are harbouring extremists as they are purged from mainstream social media sites.<ref name="alt">https://archive.is/rbHPO</ref> | |||
* Named as a source in the [[Coutts]] papers involved in banning [[Nigel Farage]] from banking facilities.<ref name="coutts">https://archive.is/2KxpL</ref> | * Named as a source in the [[Coutts]] papers involved in banning [[Nigel Farage]] from banking facilities.<ref name="coutts">https://archive.is/2KxpL</ref> | ||
* Received government funding amongst others campaigning against the Rwanda scheme of £7,694,408.<ref name="funding">https://archive.is/EbjEg</ref> | * Received government funding amongst others campaigning against the Rwanda scheme of £7,694,408.<ref name="funding">https://archive.is/EbjEg</ref> |
Revision as of 12:58, 22 March 2024
Stories
- Claims that "alt-tech" are harbouring extremists as they are purged from mainstream social media sites.[1]
- Named as a source in the Coutts papers involved in banning Nigel Farage from banking facilities.[2]
- Received government funding amongst others campaigning against the Rwanda scheme of £7,694,408.[3]
- The government rhetoric around immigration is moving more and more in line with the extreme anti-migrant views of the far right.[4]
- Received funding from the Paul Hamlyn Foundation.[4]
- Claims far-right groups are actively recruiting armed forces veterans by contacting them on social media and through charities.[5]