Britain might seem like an unlikely location as a crucible of far-right
radicalism and Nazi-Satanism. In recent
years, though, a succession of extreme far-right groups, advocating violence and Satanic ideologies, have proliferated in the UK.
It’s important to understand what these groups really represent. On the
whole, they are NOT “Nazis” in what many think of in the traditional sense;
since the Second World War, many so-called “neo-Nazi” groups are more exactly
“Nazi-inspired” than direct ideological successors. While there are have been
plenty of far-right nationalist groups in recent decades that certainly
continue the anti-Semitic “race war” ideology of the Nazis, many other groups
take their inspiration from the Nazis in a more esoteric form.
In this sense, the Satanist far-right groups in the UK nowadays (like in
other parts of the Christian West) are “Nazi” in the sense that they see the
Nazi ideology and the persona of Hitler as an “inspiration” for their own
nihilistic, anti-Christian agenda. They see the Nazis as a "force of chaotic energy" that fits their own. Their agenda is the destruction of Western
civilization, as the Nazis was, through the use of extreme violence and “shock tactics”; but the "Nazi Satanists" of today are using
their own moral degeneracy as a weapon to infect the rest of society like a
virus. These are the same tactics that Fascism used nearly a hundred years ago,using extreme violence and powerful esoteric rhetoric to instill chaos in society, and not unlike how Islamic
fundamentalists have done in the era since 9/11, ISIS in particular wanting to create their own "Islamo-Fascist" state in the Middle East.
Violence, moral degradation and psychological terror are the weapons
that the far-right uses, along with spreading paranoia and conspiracy theories.
It’s no coincidence that “climate skepticism”, “flat earth theory” and
campaigns against “cultural Marxism” are all propagated within the far right; the
origins of these beliefs are anti-Semitic in their origin, and some of them go
back a hundred years or more.
Fascism as a modern-day "in-joke"
Fascism as a modern-day "in-joke"
At the same time, however, the “crackpot” beliefs disseminated by the
far right (and the Nazi-Satanist creed in particular) are held as a kind of
“in-joke” by their own ranks.
Unlike when Fascism and Nazism first appeared, the 21st century incarnation doesn’t take itself too seriously; it spreads nonsensical beliefs and conspiracy theories more as a tactic to confuse society (i.e. as a form of psychological terror). The rituals held by the Nazi-Satanist groups in Britain, for example, are clearly absurd, and are meant to be; but they instill terror in everyone else all the same, which is entirely beneficial to their cause; their cause is to instill fear, confusion, moral degradation and chaos.
This is why when the “alt-right” first came to popular prominence through the image of “Pepe the Frog”, it was all meant as a joke at everyone else’s expense; the joke was on society, and society – unclear about how to interpret what was happening – played along at its own deprecation.
Unlike when Fascism and Nazism first appeared, the 21st century incarnation doesn’t take itself too seriously; it spreads nonsensical beliefs and conspiracy theories more as a tactic to confuse society (i.e. as a form of psychological terror). The rituals held by the Nazi-Satanist groups in Britain, for example, are clearly absurd, and are meant to be; but they instill terror in everyone else all the same, which is entirely beneficial to their cause; their cause is to instill fear, confusion, moral degradation and chaos.
This is why when the “alt-right” first came to popular prominence through the image of “Pepe the Frog”, it was all meant as a joke at everyone else’s expense; the joke was on society, and society – unclear about how to interpret what was happening – played along at its own deprecation.
This was how the “alt-right” was able to become so powerful,
disproportionate to its own numbers. Other Populist groups achieved a similar
level of recognition and “air-time” using the same tactics, making their fringe
ideas mainstream by exploiting the malleability of fallibility of society’s
beliefs. When no-one can claim to know what is right or wrong, or true or
false, a land of “alternative facts” is never far away.
Likewise, by spreading fear and confusion, the agenda of the pagan far-right
is furthered. Using, for instance, a picture of Hitler as part of a Satanic
ritual is certainly shocking; but then, that is the entire point. When the
far-right advocates social or ethnic cleansing, it does so more than anything
to influence wider opinion, by making these views “normal”. By spreading these
ideas on social media, for example, its chaotic ideology seeps into the popular
imagination. This is how “random” acts of violence, or hate crimes on the
street, become more and more endemic. Views that would have once have been seen
as extremely racist or hateful (and indeed still are, by any objective
standard) are instead seen as “typical”.
The mainstream media plays along with this, by giving these extreme
views a form of “moral equivalence” on talk shows or debates. Extreme views are
then publicized without criticism, or not even by pointing out where they are
factually inaccurate. In this way, nonsensical beliefs become “mainstream”.
This has been happening gradually since 9/11, but accelerated after the
global financial crisis, and Britain has been one of the crucibles of this
ideological transformation. These days, Britain has become a country in the
grip of a “belief-based” project. No one in their right mind thinks that
Britain could benefit economically from leaving the EU, but the power of belief
over facts was behind what led to the referendum result in 2016.
The power of belief – of “the will” – is also a strongly-held concept in the far-right. The fact that some of the beliefs are nonsensical, as mentioned
earlier, is also a kind of “in-joke” at the expense of society; if they can
convince the rest of society that they are serious they have already succeeded
in their task at manipulating society.
This is why the psychology of the “cult” is so similar to that of the
far-right: they are ran according to belief systems that defy rational thought;
their agenda is, indeed, to destroy rational thought (or at least, make enough
people question it). If their beliefs are then shown to be in error when they
come up against reality, it is not the fault of their belief system, but reality
itself that in in error; the only explanation for this dichotomy must be some
kind of conspiracy against them.
This is why conspiracy theories find such fertile ground in the
far-right: they are the only way to rationalize how their beliefs are so
self-evidently nonsensical.
The cult of chaos
The cult of chaos
Britain nowadays seems a fertile ground for conspiracy theories,“magical thinking” and “cultish” ideology. All these things have come together under the convenient banner of “Brexit”, and it is no coincidence that the same crackpot
conspiracies once held by the far-right gradually came to be held by a large
portion of the electorate: the EU is responsible for all the ills in British
society; the EU is a Jewish plot; the EU wants to abolish the British army etc.
etc.
The “Nazi Satanists” in Britain are meanwhile reveling in the potential
they see for chaos; spreading race hate, hate between the Abrahamic religions,
hate for minorities, outsiders and those from alternative lifestyles. Their aim
is to create fear and chaos between them all in order to make civilization disintegrate,
and replace the old order with an ideology completely free of morality; an age
of Satan.
No-one in their right mind expects Britain to morally desintigrate to that extent; but Nazi Satanists only need their degenerate beliefs to infect enough of society to create moral disorder and a spike in intra-community violence in order to consider their methods to have been successful. Their use of the internet is the way they have been promoting their extreme ideas.
No-one in their right mind expects Britain to morally desintigrate to that extent; but Nazi Satanists only need their degenerate beliefs to infect enough of society to create moral disorder and a spike in intra-community violence in order to consider their methods to have been successful. Their use of the internet is the way they have been promoting their extreme ideas.
Britain has a tradition of the esoteric and the occult, with Aleister
Crowley being one of its most famous figures. It was said his disciples tried
to form a connection between him and Hitler, in the end to no effect. The esoteric world blossomed in Germany in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, around the same time as in the UK. The factors behind the fascination were the same; the rapid change in society and technology sent many looking to alternative routes for guidance amidst the uncertainty of an ever-changing world; falling back on ancient wisdom was something that had a strong tradition in both German and British paganism, through Nordic and Celtic (Druid) culture.
Satanism has become mixed in with these among the modern far-right in Britain. Fascism, since the global financial crisis, has had a "reboot" as a force for energetic, chaotic change. The hypnotic power of esoteric symbolism has seen a new home in the changing social and economic climate in Britain, and it will take a radical rethink if its dark forces are to be defeated.
Satanism has become mixed in with these among the modern far-right in Britain. Fascism, since the global financial crisis, has had a "reboot" as a force for energetic, chaotic change. The hypnotic power of esoteric symbolism has seen a new home in the changing social and economic climate in Britain, and it will take a radical rethink if its dark forces are to be defeated.
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