Residents of an Upstate NY village have been finding Ku Klux Klan recruitment flyers with a Valentine's Day-themed message: Love your own race.

KKK recruitment flyers found in Fort Plain, NY.

WNYT-TV reported that residents of Fort Plain in the Capital Region first found the flyers in a parking lot next to the post office. The flyers invited white people to "love their own race" and join the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.

Interim police chief Ryan Austin told the station his department would like to unmask the recruiters, but said they don't have any solid leads. Even if they did, Austin said there's probably not much that can be done since no one has been threatened.

WNYT called the number on the flyer, and KKK Grand Dragon Will Quigg -- who made national news last year when he claimed the KKK had donated $20,000 to Hillary Clinton's campaign -- called them back from his home in California.

Quigg explained that the flyers were part of a nationwide recruitment effort with a Valentine's Day theme.

"We just want to let everybody know, mainly the white people, but let every race know, to love your own race," Quigg told the station. "The last eight years with Obama as president, he has been doing nothing for the white Christian person. He's been helping the Negroes."

Quigg said the campaign has already successfully recruited 100 new members in New York and Massachusetts.

Quigg also told the station that he wouldn't go as far as calling President Donald Trump an ally, but said, "I would call him somebody that we agree with some of his ideals."

Residents of Fort Plain expressed disgust at the flyers.

"My girlfriend's daughter is married to a black person and I got no problem with it," Eugene Buley told WNYT. "He's just like you and me. Stuff like that should have gone out a long, long, long time ago. It disgusts me."

"We don't need those people around here because they have twisted minds," another resident, Joan Eckler, told the station.

It's not the first time the KKK has made itself known in Upstate NY in the past year. In September, a Rochester neighborhood was flooded with "Make Rochester Great Again" flyers that promoted white supremacy. Last summer, flyers promoting "white pride" and attacking Jews were found littered around Syracuse and its suburb Liverpool.

Watch the WNYT-TV video report, below.