Deseret News | Covering the tattoos: How a skinhead left hate behind @DeseretNews | Uploaded October 2020 | Updated October 2024, 7 hours ago.
In a hyper-partisan country where conflicts about politics and racial inequality happen daily, the potential for someone fighting on the extremes of either side to change their mind seems low.
But Arno Michaelis did change his mind. He’s proof that people can change, even from one extreme to the other. He was the leader of a white supremacist hate group in his youth and now he speaks out against the very kind of hate he encouraged.
The Deseret News talked to Michaelis about his change of heart and his efforts to help others change, too.
In a hyper-partisan country where conflicts about politics and racial inequality happen daily, the potential for someone fighting on the extremes of either side to change their mind seems low.
But Arno Michaelis did change his mind. He’s proof that people can change, even from one extreme to the other. He was the leader of a white supremacist hate group in his youth and now he speaks out against the very kind of hate he encouraged.
The Deseret News talked to Michaelis about his change of heart and his efforts to help others change, too.