Wake Forest accountability for racism is no longer optional in the age of camera phones and social media.
The Fear That Never Left
Across North Carolina, some stories never made it into the history books β stories passed quietly between generations, in kitchens and on porches.
Stories about white hoods flickering in torchlight. About meetings held after midnight in the woods. About the sound of engines idling at the edge of someoneβs land.
Participants were told to film minors, log license plates, and RSVP to an encrypted ProtonMail address.
Days later, videos appeared online under titles like Children at Pride, accompanied by rhetoric describing LGBTQ residents as βindulging in a depraved lifestyle.β
The hoods are gone, but the secrecy remains.
Confronting Wake Forest Accountability for Racism
This wasnβt journalism. It was organized intimidation β a twenty-first-century revival of the same tactics that terrorized communities a century ago.
Under North Carolina law, this conduct may be more than unethical; it may be illegal.
Chapter 14, Article 4A of the General Statutes β our βProhibited Secret Societies and Activitiesβ law β makes it unlawful to organize or assist any group that uses secrecy or disguise to violate or circumvent the law.
It was written to dismantle the Ku Klux Klan. It still speaks directly to this moment.
The Whisper Campaign Goes Paper and Digital
The intimidation hasnβt stopped with cameras or keyboards.
Over the past few years, small-business owners on White Street have received anonymous letters β some typed and unsigned, others written in words cut from magazines, like ransom notes.
Local publishers have found the same in their mailboxes: letters condemning them for supporting marginalized communities.
The tools may change, the hood becomes a hoodie, the burning cross becomes a keyboard, the whisper becomes a letter or webpage, but the impulse is the same: to make people afraid to be in public.
When the Camera Exposes What Words Cannot
Each envelope is another act of concealment, echoing a century-old habit of hiding behind disguise and righteousness to enforce conformity. Where once intimidation came by torchlight, now it arrives by inbox and mailbox. Itβs the same architecture of control β secrecy, surveillance, and shame β just written in different fonts.
The Architecture of Intimidation
Authoritarianism doesnβt announce itself with armies. It builds quietly, through culture.
Its architecture is simple:
Secrecy β coordination in the dark, justified as βprotecting the community.β
Surveillance β watching neighbors, compiling names, turning the camera into a weapon.
Shame β transforming difference into danger.
Thatβs precisely what we just saw in Wake Forest.
A group convinced of its moral mission, organized in secrecy, using cameras, emails, and letters to police who belong in public space. Different tools. Same blueprint.
A Community Worth Defending
Building a Wake Forest That Answers for Its Past
The laws that once dismantled the Klan were born from the same soil we stand on β laws meant to stop secret societies that used faith and fear as weapons. Yet here we are, in 2025, watching that same logic return under new names and new tools.
Authoritarianism doesnβt always arrive from above. It grows quietly, when neighbors turn on neighbors, when fear is mistaken for morality, and when harassment hides behind the language of βfree speech.β
The stories our elders told β about hoods in the woods and meetings in the dark β were never just history. They were warnings. They remind us that the past isnβt gone; it waits for silence to let it grow again.
Wake Forest is a good town. But good cities arenβt immune to destructive patterns. We can shrug and say, βItβs just politics,β while secret groups film our neighborsβ children or send anonymous threats through the mail β or we can remember where secrecy and fear once led, and stop it here.
Democracy isnβt only about ballots. Itβs about courage β the courage to speak, to differ, to defend each otherβs right to exist without fear. The old hood and the new camera serve the same master: control.
The only antidote is community β not the kind that hides in the dark, but the type that stands together in the light.
This is who we are in Wakeβ―Forest. We stand up for each other. We protect the vulnerable. We refuse to be silenced by fear or intimidation.
When someone tries to skirt our values, we hold firm. Because belonging isnβt conditional, itβs our commitment. Let us reject the old hood, the hidden camera, the anonymous website. Let us refuse to let secrecy become strength. Let us be a town where difference is not a threat β but a truth, where kindness is not weakness β but courage, and where the only power that ever wins is the power of community, light, and shared dignity.
For continued coverage of racial justice and accountability in Wake Forest, follow Wake Forest Matters and Wake Forest Gazette. Learn about community efforts through Wake Forest Pride and Wake Forest Conservation. Official town resources are available at the Town of Wake Forest.
π₯ Most Read
- Wake Forest Commissioners Work Session: $95M Road Planning, $337K Traffic Study, Monuments Policy Discussion | April 7, 2026
Apr 8, 2026 Β· Town Government - Wake Forest Board of Adjustment Faces Mungo Homes Fight Over Former Golf Club
Apr 14, 2026 Β· Development & Growth, News, Town Government - Wake Forest Commissioners Seal $18M Fire Station Loan, Close $725K Charter School Lawsuit β Both Without Debate
Apr 23, 2026 Β· Business, News, Public Safety, Town Government - What Happened at Tuesdayβs Board Meeting: $18 Million in Debt, a Rezoning in the Path of High-Speed Rail, and Anonymous Letters Targeting Wake Forest Voters
Mar 23, 2026 Β· News, Town Government - What’s on the Agenda: Wake Forest Board of Commissioners April 21 β $18M for Fire Station 6, a $725K Settlement Buried on Consent, and the Hospital Fight Still Hanging Over Town Hall
Apr 20, 2026 Β· News, Town Government






