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The private conference will be an opportunity for identitarian and Alt-Right activists and leaders to discuss the future of their movement and to coordinate their activities at this fun and inspirational extravaganza. No more than 300 people will be permitted to register to attend the conference, which will cost $40 per person to attend so that some costs can be recovered. The location of the conference and itinerary will not be publicly disclosed.



Thorough vetting of prospective attendees will occur.



When FMI hosted a conference during the summer of 2016 in Detroit, over sixty attendees toured the ruins of Detroit, met during one evening for informative speeches at a scenic location—with an open bar and catered hors d'oeuvres—, explored the Detroit Institute of Arts, met for brunch in a swank suburb bistro, and enjoyed a dinner at a private room of a traditional Polish restaurant in a Polish enclave of Southeast Michigan.

White supremacist Richard Spencer will be among a panel of far right wing and neo-Nazi speakers at the Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas conference on Sunday, March 4 in metro Detroit.Guests at the event, which is private and limited to 300 people, will then travel to Michigan State University to hear Spencer speak on March 5 The FMI website doesn't provide a specific location for the conference, and states that the location won't be publicly disclosed.Confirmed speakers also include Kyle Bristow , FMI's executive director, a white supremacist and a Clinton Township-based attorney who attended MSU.FMI's website provides a few details on the event:Confirmed speakers include Bristow, Spencer, Cameron Padgett Matthew Heimbach , and Eli Mosley It's the second FMI conference. Its 2016 event went well, Bristow writes on FMI's site.Spencer will also likely speak at the University of Michigan sometime this year.