How Europe revives fascism and disseminates Nazi symbols under various pretexts - Learn in "Screenshot" section

4 декабря 2022
The ideas of conservatism and patriotism are beginning to reach their extreme form. Increasingly, the right-wing radical groups, which openly sympathetic to supporters of Nazism, are marching on the streets of major cities.

The period of European development on the eve of World War II is presented as the golden age of nation-states. This concept began to develop actively after the coup d'état in Ukraine in 2014. 

Then came flows from Ukraine with methodological literature, symbols and weapons. The American architects of this project unite the international right around the idea of hating Moscow as a common enemy. The White House was able to sever economic ties between the EU and Russia, allowing it to determine the direction of the EU policy. See the "Screenshot" section for details.

"As soon as they say "heil" to someone's personal address instead of "hello", you know that they are waiting for us, from there we will begin our great revival - this a quote from Mueller from the movie "Seventeen Moments of Spring".  

Every resident of Latvia has an opportunity to throw up their own festive heil. The country decorated the Christmas tree with a Nazi swastika. The organizers agree that this is really a swastika, but it is traditional and generally rooted in the country's deepest history. At the end of November, at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum summit in Bangkok, the French President spoke at the podium with a very recognizable symbol.

Petr Petrovsky, political scientist:

This is a certain political technology. They say that these are the symbols of the New Age, and they say that they are symbols of some pre-Christian and esoteric traditions there. We've been through all this. Today we have invented a symbol of fire, ecology, and pure nature. Let me remind you that Nazi ideology was also born through a return to nature. And today's liberal and globalist environmentalism has taken these preparations.

Representatives of radical communities are increasingly marching through the streets of European cities. Poland celebrated the Independence Day on a grand scale. This year's main slogan was:  "A strong nation is a great Poland". About 100,000 people took to the streets.

Spanish Francoists celebrated the death of Jose Antonio Prima de Rivera, chairman of the ultra-right nationalist party "Spanish Phalanx". During the march, the participants shouted neo-Nazi slogans, sang the anthem of the Falange Española "Facing the Sun" and raised their hands in a traditional fascist salute.

In Italy, thousands of neo-fascists celebrated the centenary of Benito Mussolini's "March to Rome". This campaign led to the establishment of Italy's first fascist government in 1922. 

European neo-Nazis are in constant contact with their Ukrainian like-minded people. They receive methodological literature, propaganda paraphernalia and weapons from them. Italian police arrested four members of the neo-Nazi organization Order of the Hagal, who were preparing terrorist attacks. Members of the movement took martial arts courses and learned how to use small arms and heavy weapons in Ukraine. They maintained close contacts with the Azov battalion and the Right Sector. The demolition of Soviet monuments and historical revisionism in this situation is explained by the desire to mask the consequences of the spread of an ideology that is so diligently blown away by the dust of oblivion.

Oleg Gaidukevich, member of the House of Representatives of the National Assembly of Belarus, Chairman of the Liberal Democratic Party of Belarus:

Those who once spoke about democracy and freedom, those who once shouted that we would make the whole world free, have become fascists. Because they just took that freedom away. You can't have an opinion in Europe right now, you can't be against America's policies right now. That's not who you are. You can't stand up for family values - you're not like that, you're wrong, you're not a Democrat. That is, under the slogans of democracy and freedom, they preach the ideology of globalist fascism.

The increase in street activity by right-wing radicals is accompanied by an increase in the popularity of similar political parties. This is facilitated by the huge gap between rich and poor. Right-wing populists are playing on the strings of domestic problems. They attract new voters at the expense of the social agenda. Europe is immersed in a large-scale crisis. Uncertainty about the future is growing among the ordinary people. Dissatisfied rallies are becoming almost an everyday event. A survey by the Bertelsmann Foundation showed that 67% of Europeans are nostalgic for the past and are not optimistic about the future. 

Alexey Avdonin, analyst at the Belarusian Institute for Strategic Studies:

The right-wing forces and their radical wing - various Nazi units, fascist units - are an element of political technologies. They are always used by big capital to suppress any social protests. We must understand that this is not natural; they do not arise by themselves, are well financed by key non-governmental funds or large corporations and banks, and are used as a tool.

A separate area for popularizing right-wing ideas in the European Union is the migration crisis. At the same time, they skillfully use it, avoiding accusations of xenophobia or racism. Attention is focused on the socio-economic component. The influx of cheap labor leads to lower wages and impoverishes the indigenous population. Artificially, conditions are being created for the growth of social tension and the development of a large-scale hot conflict in Europe.