It has been well established at this point that Donald Trump united the nation's various white supremacist groups behind his candidacy in a way that hadn't been seen in decades. PBS famously ran a profile of a phone-banking Trump supporter without mentioning the large and prominent white supremacist tattoos covering both arms; human garbage pits like Jared Taylor and David Duke were forever going on about Trump; white supremacist sites were giddy with support for Donald Trump's anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim stances.

So it should be of little surprise that Trump's election has resulted in a steep rise in white supremacist activities.

Since the beginning of the school year in September, and particularly since January, college campuses across the country have seen an uptick in activity from white supremacist groups targeting students, according to a report from the Anti-Defamation League out Monday. The report found there have been 104 incidents involving white supremacists on college campuses since September, 63 of which have occurred since the beginning of 2017.

The ADL report notes that the attention to college campuses is intentional. White supremacist groups see American colleges as both prime recruitment territory and good targets for stirring up trouble in general.