Voting trends in the European election have resulted in a combined team of MI5 and MI6 analysts predicting that, for the first time since Hitler, Fascism is threatening to erupt across the continent, according to a report in Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.
With about 375 million European citizens eligible to vote, the electorate turnout was a record low - 43 percent - for the 736 seats for which more than 10,000 candidates stood.
But in countries like Austria, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Belgium and even Britain, extremist parties and their supporters emerged from the shadows of Auschwitz, Buchenwald and Dachau to promote their views in the new European Parliament.
Jewish leaders throughout Europe have warned their congregations to increase security precautions at their synagogues and to be alert for attack by extremists.
"Just as the Nazis used anti-Semitism to attack the Jews, so a number of political parties in the European Parliament election, the biggest trans-national election in history, gained office on anti-immigration and anti-Muslim policies," said an MI5 analyst.
The result will see the Jobbik party in Hungary, with its anti-gypsy extremism, with three of its country's 22 seats in the European Parliament. Austria's two far-right parties mustered 18 percent of the national vote. Slovak extremists won their first seat in the European Parliament.
Even for embattled British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, facing his own Labour Party internal revolt, the extreme BNP won two seats – one for its leader, Nick Griffin, the other for Andrew Brons.
An exultant Griffin told the BBC his poll victory was proof that "no longer can every different ethnic group in this multicultural, multi-ethnic society our masters have imposed on us be allowed to stand up on their behalf where the indigenous majority are not."
Fear that Fascism is now on the march has seen Anglican and Catholic Church leaders join forces.
(frontpage)
Trackback(0)
TrackBack URI for this entryComments (1)
Show/Hide comments







