The podcast explores the second incarnation of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s, distinguishing it from the original Reconstruction-era group. It highlights how the second Klan, while still racist, broadened its targets to include white Catholics, Jews, immigrants, and bootleggers, reflecting a WASP supremacy agenda. The discussion covers the Klan's transformation into a fraternal organization with millions of public members, resembling the Masons, and its surprising popularity in the North and Midwest. The hosts examine the Klan's origins in entertainment, particularly the novel "The Klansman" and the film "The Birth of a Nation," and its exploitation of cultural anxieties around prohibition, immigration, and changing social norms. The episode details the Klan's sophisticated sales and marketing operation, complete with bizarre titles and pyramid scheme recruitment tactics, and its dark side, including vigilante violence and moral policing.
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