After posting in here about the very real dangers of radical Islamism in Europe, I couldn't help but to notice that there is a second pernicious force rising all over the continent: formerly marginal pro-Nazi, white supremacist, homophobic, supposedly "nationalistic" groups are acquiring ever greater relevance in many countries, where they have even positioned themselves as important political contenders with representation in the European Parliament.
If you read the two links I'll post, it's interesting to see how in a matter of just a few years, there has been a significant shift regarding the way in which these criminal organisations are perceived. Are we in for widespread support in just a few years? There are problems of racism and xenophobia in Europe which have never been properly addressed. A combination of diminishing resources available for the working classes, a sense of "otherness" and alienation from traditional political parties and prejudice can have terrible consequences - just look at the meteoric rise of Fascism all over the world in the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, and the way in which it nearly destroyed the entire continent.
Here are the links:
A Gallery of the European Far Right (http://www.theguardian.com/gall/0,,711990,00.htm"]here, from a few years ago)
Golden Dawn and the Rise of the Far Right in Europe[/URL] (here, a very current article)
Between neo-Nazis and Islamic radicals, Europe appears to be drawing closer and closer to a political and social hecatombe, aided by the inactivity and obsession with protecting plutocrats of the traditional political parties.
If you read the two links I'll post, it's interesting to see how in a matter of just a few years, there has been a significant shift regarding the way in which these criminal organisations are perceived. Are we in for widespread support in just a few years? There are problems of racism and xenophobia in Europe which have never been properly addressed. A combination of diminishing resources available for the working classes, a sense of "otherness" and alienation from traditional political parties and prejudice can have terrible consequences - just look at the meteoric rise of Fascism all over the world in the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, and the way in which it nearly destroyed the entire continent.
Here are the links:
A Gallery of the European Far Right (http://www.theguardian.com/gall/0,,711990,00.htm"]here, from a few years ago)
Golden Dawn and the Rise of the Far Right in Europe[/URL] (here, a very current article)
Between neo-Nazis and Islamic radicals, Europe appears to be drawing closer and closer to a political and social hecatombe, aided by the inactivity and obsession with protecting plutocrats of the traditional political parties.


