Rise of the Radical Right

Anders Behring Breivik is not alone. In fact, Europe has many more dangerous extremists than anyone thinks.

BY JAMIE BARTLETT, JONATHAN BIRDWELL | JULY 25, 2011

For the past five years, in the bastions of civilized Europe, the far right has been resurgent. Extreme right-wing political parties have scored unprecedented electoral success in a number of countries, including Austria, France, the Netherlands, and Sweden. Far-right street movements of disgruntled young men, barely seen for a generation, are appearing in greater numbers in busy Strassen, plazas, and boulevards. Until Friday, July 22, governments and the security services viewed this as a worrying trend, but one that could be contained. With the stunning, tragic attacks in Norway, that has now changed. Intelligence agencies, concerned more with al Qaeda for a decade, are suddenly alert to a new and deadly threat.

The relationship between ascendant far-right extremism and political violence is suddenly a top political and security concern. Right-wing groups will come under great scrutiny, and governments are likely to re-examine the case for proscribing some of them. But should they? For the past six months, we have been examining this question through a large-scale survey of extreme right-wing political activists and sympathizers across Europe. The answer is far from simple.

Over the last decade, the extreme right in Europe has become more palatable. The overt racism and chest-beating nationalism of previous years have been discarded. What characterizes the new far-right is a defiant, aggressive defense of national culture and history in the face of a changing world, of secularism, and even of democracy and liberty. While each has its idiosyncrasies, far-right parties are responding to genuine concerns of many voters: that modern globalization hasn't benefited them, that mass immigration -- especially from Muslim-majority countries -- is threatening local and national identity.

Perhaps most importantly, these new far-right parties like Geert Wilders's Freedom Party in the Netherlands or Marine Le Pen's Front National in France expertly portray mainstream politicians as spineless, soft-boiled, venal, self-serving slaves to political correctness and orthodoxy. Recent events -- such as banking bailouts, the eurozone crisis, and the News International hacking scandal -- certainly lend some credibility to the view that politicians are indeed out of touch with ordinary people.

This potent mix of populism and far-right ideas -- often utilizing powerful historical and cultural reference points, such as Enlightenment philosophers and national flags -- has meant the forming of new alliances and a blurring of obvious left and right lines. Thilo Sarrazin, for example, author of the book Germany Does Away With Itself, which argues that the country is sleepwalking into a multicultural abyss, is a prominent member of the left-wing Social Democratic Party. One leader of a Danish far-right organization described himself to us as an atheist Marxist.

A significant chunk of European voters is clearly impressed. Le Pen is currently third in the polling for the 2012 French presidential election. Wilders's Freedom Party is also the third-largest in the Netherlands. In Scandinavia, the True Finns, the Danish People's Party, and the Sweden Democrats all secured their best-ever electoral results over the past 18 months. Germany's and Austria's far-right parties are resurgent, sparking atavistic European fears. Further east, the Jobbik party is now the third-largest political party in Hungary, having doubled its seats during the last election.

AFP/Getty Images

 

Jamie Bartlett is head of the Violence and Extremism Programme at the London-based think tank Demos. Jonathan Birdwell is a researcher on the Violence and Extremism Programme at Demos. They are undertaking a major research project into the growth of far-right, street-based movements across Europe, including the largest-ever survey of far-right activists, due to be completed this October.

COUNTCHOCULA1011

12:15 PM ET

July 25, 2011

Enlightened Europe

I love how all the Europeans always ignore the fact that a lot of the worst atrocities ever committed by European nations (Holocaust, World Wars, slave trade, colonialism, various genocides and massacres) occurred AFTER the "Enlightenment."

 

TOMHE

1:12 AM ET

July 26, 2011

Enlightenment = efficiecy

Enlightenment is about reason. Reason helps people in efficiency. so there were Holocaust, World Wars, slave trade, colonialism...

 

ABBAN AZIZ

6:07 AM ET

July 26, 2011

Enlightenment about reason..

Yes, and the enlightenment was followed by dozens of European revolutions that killed millions of people. So much for reason?

All before the "right" ideology. Read a history book for once.

 

AUKPERSPECTIVE

5:02 PM ET

August 4, 2011

Rise and fall.....

I disagree on this. There is a deep irrationality to the events in Norway. If you hate non white Muslims why kill 15 year old white Christians? Every neo nazi group is running for the hills over this. Second every intelligence service in Europe is re allocating staff to deal with domestic far right terrorists. Between now and Christmas you are going to see a lot more arrests.

 

ISABELDELOSRIOS

4:09 AM ET

August 5, 2011

And your also going to see...

Censuring of the internet. I believe this is a Zionist false flag operation to start shutting down websites that are exposing there criminal activity.

- Isabel De Los Rios

 

JANEBREADLY

10:02 AM ET

August 24, 2011

That's funny sometimes, how

That's funny sometimes, how people who belong to different nationalities, confessions, etc. are trying to blame each other is all the world's trouble. However, as they say every family has its black sheep. And there is no country that build its state basing on love, trust and friendship - all people are ugly on the inside, but some are even worse than others.
Jane, ACCA student.

 

FP_READER

12:25 PM ET

July 25, 2011

Religious Right

The US has a growing problem of right wing fanaticism in the form of religious fundamentalism and extremism. We are growing our own homegrown version of the Taliban right here - and no one seems to see it.

If any of these groups achieves any semblence of political power in goverment - and they fight hard to gain it from the school boards up to the president - then it may well be the end of the US as we know it.

"History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil government. This marks the lowest grade of ignorance of which their civil as well as religious leaders will always avail themselves for their own purposes. " - Thomas Jefferson

 

JOHNR22

4:42 PM ET

July 25, 2011

Nonsense!

The christian fundamentalists in the US are a relatively small group, and those that are militant are a tiny tiny fragment of that group.

I also want you to understand that the christian Right only emerged as an organized political constituency in the late 1970s and it was solely....solely....due to the excesses of the Left in the 60s/70s. The Left drove the US through a social revolution including abortion on demand, a hedonistic sex-obsessed entertainment industry, skyrocketing divorce and illegitimate birth rates....a total social meltdown.

Just like Obama/Pelosi were responsible for the rise of the Tea Party, the Left was totally, solely responsible for the rise of the religious RIght. And the Religious RIght will continue to be a political force until the excesses of the 60s are reversed.

 

CHR_RHC

3:52 PM ET

July 26, 2011

I felt I needed to fix your

I felt I needed to fix your comment for statistical accuracy, I left the tenor and tone of your statements untouched as I don't want to modify your opinions, to which you are entitled:

"I also want you to understand that the christian Right only emerged as an organized political constituency in the late 1970s and it was solely....solely....due to the excesses of the general American public in the 60s/70s. The general US public drove the US through a social revolution including abortion on demand, a hedonistic sex-obsessed entertainment industry, skyrocketing divorce and illegitimate birth rates....not even remotely a total social meltdown."

 

FSANA9073

6:38 PM ET

July 26, 2011

Piss Poor Excuse

JohnR22,

I like your energy; only if it was near this galaxy. Your observation of "Just like Obama/Pelosi were responsible for the rise of the Tea Party, the Left was totally, solely responsible for the rise of the religious Right. And the Religious RIght will continue to be a political force until the excesses of the 60s are reversed" shows great imagination.

Here on earth, and aside from your Tom Clancy-styled theoretical rant, the U.S. general population which happened to be many times more educated and informed than say...40-50 years ago will no longer believe in this right/wrong, left or right wing garbage. This country has become more devided in my years as a voter all because the person who was elected and not because his beliefs or what he is accused of believing in. Please lets stop sugar coating the truth about GOP sentiments of having a minority in the WH. Many informed voters understand how some politicians are simply taking advantage of the simple clergic-minded citizen called "evangelical Christians", and making them believe that there is room for clergical movement in Capitol Hill, just for a vote.

Smart, informed and educated voters; democrats, republicans and independents know that our country will never, never, never!...accept or approve the most useless, ineffective and impratical idea of religion mixed with state. Never! And if in doubt, then I suggest you take a trip to Iraq, and if you survive come and tell us how great and effective is to have fanatics running a goverment.

P.S. The oldest generation in Washington on both sides are realizing they are losing ground with the general population as we are becoming more educated and better informed. Lip service and statistical lies just don't work anymore.

good luck and wish you some learning...

 

LS090469

2:00 PM ET

July 27, 2011

@ JOHNR22

You just demonstrated why you monsters need to be contained. The "excesses" of the 60s and 70 were civil rights for blacks, rights for women, rights for youth, breaking the power of the white patriarchy, and secularizing society. All good works that are nowhere near complete. The fact that these issues still exist prove that it will be a generations long project. I get that my freedom is your slavery, and the reverse. Too bad it has to be this way. I'll train my daughter for the fight, and she her children.

 

TINA_MEANA

12:28 PM ET

August 7, 2011

Agree With JOHNR22

I'm with JOHNR22 on this one. U.S. Christian fundamentalists are indeed a very small group, and they've been around just a short time relatively speaking. They take their existence from the Left and who knows how long they will last. Not forever, that's for certain. -DeLonghi Magnifica 3300 Girl

 

GHOSTCOMMANDER

2:04 PM ET

July 25, 2011

Right wing extremist and irresponsible republican politicians

Before the Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 innoent men, women, and children, the irresponsible republicans in Congress were holding hands with hard right American extremist groups, giving them moral support.

To Date, over 550 of your fellow Americans have been killed because of these recidivious killers that were inspired by the radical extremist so-called republicans in Congress.

These fake republicans preach hatred of African Americans, Hispanics, the illegal immigrants, the Gays, Women's Choice, Doctors, the US government, Seniors, etc..

Look at the membership of the fake republican party electorate and you will see there the KKK, White Aryan Resistance, Skinheads, the Brotherhood, and others

These fake republicans and their radicalized supporters are a threat to a good civil government and the life of every American..

 

ERICDAVIS1

6:23 PM ET

July 25, 2011

What about black republicans?

Are you aware that there are two black republicans in Congress elected by the support of the Tea Party movement? There are black libertarians and conservatives who tend to vote republican. I am a black paleo-conservative (I have a dislike of neo-cons). It is a fake liberal position to say that conservatives are racists. The truth of the matter is that most blacks are not politically well informed (speaking from experience of black people that I know). Black people tend to be socially conservative because of the influence of the black church. However, most black people I know have never read either the Republican Party or the Democratic Party platforms. Hell, I thought I was a democrat until I had to read both party platforms for a project in my high school political science class during the 1996 elections. I found myself disagreeing with virtually everything in the democratic platform and agreeing with most things in the republican platform. My mother said, "oh my God I have raised a republican."

 

CHR_RHC

4:16 PM ET

July 26, 2011

"It is a fake liberal

"It is a fake liberal position to say that conservatives are racists."

I think maybe you're suffering from this flagrant misconception because you've never even one time in your life been alone in a room with white conservatives when there are no black people around. I don't know what it's like up North, but here in the South most of them definitely think your one step away from busting out into a jungle dance no matter how educated and affluent you may be. And we know this for an unmitigated fact because they don't hesitate to tell us this on a fairly regular basis as the topic arises. I could go on and on and on listing all the nasty vicious things conservatives have told me about black people just in the past two years, but I don't want to get banned. I'll leave out the Hispanics and the Arabs, but I am assured by the white conservatives I know that they are either as bad or worse than you are.

Telling me conservatives don't hate other races is like trying to tell me the sun doesn't come up in the morning.

 

FSANA9073

7:09 PM ET

July 26, 2011

You are 100% correct

I agree with your opinion. I identify myself as Hispanic, have an MBA, commisioned in the military, and still assumed that I cannot vote, I am lower rank enlisted, and would not have a chance to be successful in corporate (don't forget that most likely I have a green card, or possibly illegal). I have been told by "headhunters" in the past that "hiring executives" do not believe I have the "intellectual" capacity or "accumen" to make "critical and strategic decisions", but I have the skills to be a "floor supervisor", and highly technical for logistic "warehouse operations", whatever that suppose to mean (although I know exactly what it means).

More and more so called "minorities" (many of my peers) are becoming formally educated and earn substantial competetive salaries. We all pay taxes as we should and vote!. Lastly, many (many!) of us have danced with death in the battle field for this country. But we are still "un-American" and a threat to the American way.

Can someone, with some rational wit, explain to me why am I still questioned about my place in this country?

 

NWMAN7

9:17 AM ET

July 27, 2011

racists

You my freind have nothing but hate in your heart. You; sadly are not worth having as a freind.

 

ZEROZEE0

12:12 AM ET

July 28, 2011

GHOSTCOMMANDER

You truly must be an idiot.
If you were to look at what you wrote about the KKK, and then actually do a bit of reading about their origins, you would find that the majority of KKK membership during their heyday were Democrats, including Harry Truman, David Duke, (who later switched parties), and that Democratic Demi-God, Robert Byrd.
Before you try to lay blame for everything bad on the "Right", try cleaning up your own "Leftivist" history first. Or better yet, just get your facts straight.

 

ZEROZEE0

12:14 AM ET

July 28, 2011

GHOSTCOMMANDER

You truly must be an idiot.
If you were to look at what you wrote about the KKK, and then actually do a bit of reading about their origins, you would find that the majority of KKK membership during their heyday were Democrats, including Harry Truman, David Duke, (who later switched parties), and that Democratic Demi-God, Robert Byrd.
Before you try to lay blame for everything bad on the "Right", try cleaning up your own "Leftivist" history first. Or better yet, just get your facts straight.

 

MWPURCELL@YAHOO.COM

9:29 PM ET

July 28, 2011

liberals

The KKK was started by Democrats. The NAZIs were not exactly a pro-life less government lower taxes political party. The communists in the Soviet Union, China, and Cuba again were not exactly beacons of human/racial or sexual liberation. So I'm cofused why we should be so afraid of Jeffersonian democracy to restrict government. Please enlighten me.

 

BOYTHREEONE

2:00 PM ET

July 29, 2011

follow your own advice

Read up on the "Southern Strategy," with which the Republican Party (successfully) manipulated anti-African American racism to turn the "Solid South." The Republican Party of today bears no resemblance to the party of Lincoln or MLK, who would undoubtedly be Democrats today. It isn't the label "Republican" that means anything. It's the avowed ideology that goes with it at any given time.

 

JOHNR22

4:36 PM ET

July 25, 2011

I blame the Left

To every action there's an equal and opposite reaction. In a democracy, when one ideology gets power and goes too far, there's a counter movement on the opposite side.

In the US, the Bush administration was far too ideological and it brought to power the most far Left coaltion the US has had since FDR. This in turn created a backlash called the Tea Party which shellacked the Dems in the 2010 elections and will shellack them again in 2012.

In Europe, what passes for the RIght wing has been emboldened in the last 15 years by the absurdist and undemocratic policies of the EU. Europe has seen national identities blunted, seen MASSIVE immigration across national lines unchecked, and has seen the rise of a huge muslim minority that HAS NOT assimilitated into the host nation's culture. There was bound to be a backlash, and this Brevik is just an example of a lone extremist.

The fundamental problem is that the Left in the US and Europe has its roots in marxism and truly...honestly....does not respect or believe in democracy.

 

THE DEVIL'S LAPDOG

12:06 PM ET

July 26, 2011

Can't blame the Left for White Intolerance and Flight

If the Left is responsible for irresponsible immigration, than what about the fact that Whites cannot exist with non-whites.

Whites also have problem dealing with Carribean Christians (look at the racial tensions in England between black and white, lack of black success in schools, discrimination in housing, crime rates, race riots, etc.)? These blacks are largely integrated and speak English yet White and Black Christians detest each other (go to any big American city to see this is true). Even in Toronto Canada, blacks and whites live in differnet worlds.

Hispanics in America are Christian (and rabidly so), yet once they enter a community, the White Christians leave. The situation exists here in Canada too. When the hard working, very well educated and rich Chinese Canadians move into an area, and the whites leave for their enclaves. In Vancouver, you will see many Indian Sikh/Chinese tree-lined streets but few White/Sikh or White/Chinese streets. Why? Because as soon as non-whites enter whites leave. I won't even mention the Natives in North America who are treated like animals by whites, discriminated by the police, and live in pathetic reserves.

White flight is not just limited to South Carolina or South Africa, it exists in all white communities. Go to Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong, India, etc. and all you will see are whites who live in their own enclaves.

It is apparent that no matter how well integrated, successful or "Christian" you are, whites (not just Christian fanatics, but also Jews and Atheists) will always fear you and leave for a White area en masse. Perhaps, it has to do with declining birth rates that cause fears of Whites to rise. Islam is being used as a scapegoats by many White racists who used it as a smokescreen to cover their hatred of other religions, races and ideologies. Europe has treated immigrants poorly (especially non-whites) long before the Muslims came.

That is not to say that all whites are racist or evil- many white liberals and converts to Islam are quite open-minded to other cultures and not obsessed with protecting Christendom. Yet, I will concurr overall that most Whites are quite racist. BTW, thank God for Liberals/Marxists/Leftists in the West, as I would hate to live in a country full of white Conservative Christians like Brevik et all!!!

 

CHR_RHC

4:42 PM ET

July 26, 2011

Congratulations! You just

Congratulations! You just re-stated the core thesis of 2083 manifesto. In fact you are repeating him almost word-for-word. Not saying you endorse his tactic of shooting as many liberals as possible. But you clearly do endorse his motivation and beliefs, and are even blaming the many liberals who were shot like it's their fault and not the conservative that shot them.

And neither of you seems to grasp that "traditional American values" and the words inscribed on the Statue of Liberty might possible be more culpable than "Marxism" for why we think immigrants and their cultures can/should be welcomed with open arms if they wanna come here. Multiculturalism and tolerance are distinctly American values going all the way back to the Founding Fathers. My hatred of conservativism is a direct continuation of my youthful hatred of Marxism growing up during the end of the Cold War.

 

MAVKY

10:26 PM ET

July 25, 2011

These sociological studies

These sociological studies often lack historical perspective. For decades, in the United States, a white supremacist war was waged on Jews and blacks involving bombing their synagogues, churches and homes. It was chronic violence that took many lives. In the 1960s, white supremacist violence met with an anti-communist right inspired by events in Cuba. In this decade, the right began to produce instructions on how to make your own guerrilla war using high explosives. The US has had many militia groups who have trained in guerrilla warfare, stockpiled weapons, and fantasized about taking down the government, which they think has been taken over by communists, Jews and blacks. Whenever the economy has taken a downturn, the attraction to these organizations has increased, as white men blame everyone else for what they consider to be their unhappy lot. The worst thing a government can do is put these groups under strict surveillance or restrict their speech. This increases paranoia and the impulse to violence.

As for revolution, there are countless examples over the last two centuries of revolutionaries imagining that they are going to jump start the revolution with a large-scale symbolic act of violence. Breivik, and anyone acting with him, did nothing but cause repulsion. Think of it: one of the purposes of creating such an event is to recruit members. What young person would want to join this murderous movement that slaughters young people?--Ann Larabee

 

MARKOB

3:04 AM ET

July 26, 2011

Markob

We should not just restrict the radical right in Europe, nor elsewhere, to just extreme nationalist and christian identity movements/groups. Extreme or radical Islamists are also a part of the radical right for political Islam is a right wing conservative movement. The academic left states that for the latter we need to distinguish between the methods and ideology and focus on the grievances that radical Islamists seek to draw on in order to defeat extremism. But why not apply this across the board? The working classes of the West have taken most of the burden of neoliberal restructuring and at the very same time they have also taken most of the burden of multiculturalism; immigrants and refugees don't turn to crime etc in rich neighborhoods where affluent academics typically live. I'm sorry but multiculturalism doesn't work when working class living standards are under attack. Give people fair pay for a fair day's work, order and stability in the neighborhood, and secure long-term employment if you want acceptance of multiculturalism.

 

JANINE REILLY

4:54 AM ET

July 26, 2011

Radical Right Restrictions

There is now a growing consensus that fascism is best seen as a revolutionary form of populist nationalism which emerged in the inter-war period at a time when a systemic crisis seemed to many within the Europeanized world to be affecting not only national life, but civilization as a whole. A necessary precondition for the rise of fascism was a cultural climate saturated with apocalyptic forebodings and hopes for imminent or eventual renewal captured in such works as Spengler’s Decline of the West and H.G. Wells’ The Shape of Things to Come. It articulated, fomented, and channelled inchoate but extraordinarily widespread longings for a new type of political system, leadgeneration, a new elite, a new type of human being, a new relationship between the individual and society, for a more planned economy, for a revolutionary change in the values of modern life, for a new experience of time itself. The mobilizing myth which can be treated ideal-typically as the definitional core of fascism (the ‘fascist minimum’) is that through the intervention of a heroic elite the whole national community is capable of resurrecting itself Phoenix-like from the ashes of the decadent old order (‘palingenetic ultra-nationalism’). It is this myth which informs the obsessive preoccupation with national/ethnic decadence and regeneration in a post-liberal new order which is now widely acknowledged to be the hall-mark of all fascism

 

ABBAN AZIZ

6:09 AM ET

July 26, 2011

Violence in perspective

This act, tragic it might be, is nothing compared to violence committed by marxist groups and Islamist organizations.

Thousands are killed EVERY MONTH by these people. Suicide bombings last week in 2 continents - received one fraction of attention as this news.

Because in the end, White people are valued more than "dark" people. Only time dark people matter is when they are being killed by the "West."

But we cannot forget, 99% of muslims are killed by....other muslims. Mostly, independent of the West.

It would be a shame if the far-left uses this event to demonize the moderates, but considering their historic tactics I wouldn't put it past them.

 

DAVID BYRNE

2:26 PM ET

August 24, 2011

Point well made

"Thousands are killed EVERY MONTH by these people. Suicide bombings last week in 2 continents - received one fraction of attention as this news.

Because in the end, White people are valued more than "dark" people. Only time dark people matter is when they are being killed by the "West."

But we cannot forget, 99% of muslims are killed by....other muslims. Mostly, independent of the West."

Good point well made jewellery quarter directory jewellery quarter birmingham cosmetic surgery Simply Ibiza irish heritage

 

ISABELDELOSRIOS

1:38 PM ET

July 26, 2011

Interesting...

From reading the Telegraph today it looks like this Breivik compiled a 1,518-page manifesto where he suggested that one of two English extremists who attended a founding meeting of the Knights Templar in London in April 2002 might have been a member of the EDL. “I wonder sometimes if one of the EDL founders was one of the co-founders of PCCTS,” he wrote. “I guess I’ll never know for sure.”

Breivik also wrote about an English “mentor” he named only as “Richard”.

I find it interesting that this Breivik has connections to the knights templar. What do you guys think about that?

- Isabel De Los Rios

 

WRITEWING

1:58 PM ET

July 26, 2011

A little extreme on the "extreme"

The routine use of the words "extreme right wing" in so much of the media is irresponsible and inflammatory in itself. Obviously, a mass shooting of civilians such as occurred in Oslo last week is extreme, it's a horrific act of evil, the work of a madman. There's no question about that.

However, to classify the sentiments of Europeans who are concerned about the effects of mass immigration of Muslims on their culture as "extreme" is simply wrong. These immigrants do not assimilate into Western culture, they take over, and the culture they bring is for the most part incompatible with Western ideals Some of the blame for this can be placed on Europeans themselves, who have such a low birthrate. There is not a single country in Europe that is reproducing its population at a replacement rate, and for some countries it's been that way for decades. This necessitates immigration for the purpose of having a labor force, which has come at a high price.

 

WILLWISH

1:55 PM ET

August 5, 2011

Yes, let's blame the republicans

Are you aware that there are two black republicans in Congress elected by the support of the Tea Party movement? There are black libertarians and conservatives who tend to vote republican. I am a black paleo-conservative (I have a dislike of neo-cons). It is a fake liberal position to say that conservatives are racists. The truth of the matter is that most blacks are not politically well informed (speaking from experience of black people that I know). Black people tend to be socially conservative because of the influence of the black church. However, most black people I know have never read either the Republican Party or the Democratic Party platforms. We do not just sit at home and make handmade jewelry you know. Hell, I thought I was a democrat until I had to read both party platforms for a project in my high school political science class during the 1996 elections. I found myself disagreeing with virtually everything in the democratic platform and agreeing with most things in the republican platform. My mother said, "oh my God I have raised a republican.

 

KING SOLOMON

5:38 PM ET

July 26, 2011

How can 2% Muslims take over Europe?

According to CIA Factbook, Muslims are a minority around 2% in Western European countries that are pretending to be afraid of Muslims.

How can 2%, poor, undereducated, unsophisticated, unarmed civilan Muslims take over Europe?

Let me sum up White racism: Crusades good; Colonisation good; Slavery good; Endless invasions of Muslim countries good but 2% Muslims bad.

Here are the numbers:

Finland
Lutheran Church of Finland 82.5%, Orthodox Church 1.1%, other Christian 1.1%, other 0.1%, none 15.1% (2006)

France
Roman Catholic 83%-88%, Protestant 2%, Jewish 1%, Muslim 5%-10%, unaffiliated 4%

Germany
Protestant 34%, Roman Catholic 34%, Muslim 3.7%, unaffiliated or other 28.3%

Italy
Roman Catholic 90% (approximately; about one-third practicing), other 10% (includes mature Protestant and Jewish communities and a growing Muslim immigrant community)

Netherlands
Roman Catholic 30%, Dutch Reformed 11%, Calvinist 6%, other Protestant 3%, Muslim 5.8%, other 2.2%, none 42% (2006)

Norway
Church of Norway 85.7%, Pentecostal 1%, Roman Catholic 1%, other Christian 2.4%, Muslim 1.8%, other 8.1% (2004)

Sweden
Lutheran 87%, other (includes Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Baptist, Muslim, Jewish, and Buddhist) 13%

Switzerland
Roman Catholic 41.8%, Protestant 35.3%, Muslim 4.3%, Orthodox 1.8%, other Christian 0.4%, other 1%, unspecified 4.3%, none 11.1% (2000 census)

UK
Christian (Anglican, Roman Catholic, Presbyterian, Methodist) 71.6%, Muslim 2.7%, Hindu 1%, other 1.6%, unspecified or none 23.1% (2001 census)

Source: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/wfbExt/region_eur.html

Aurangzeb Khan
lalqila.wordpress.com

 

LIFELINE

7:55 PM ET

July 26, 2011

I think your point might

I think your point might still have weight, but post-911, or perhaps more accurately, post middle-eastern occupations, there has been an increase in immigration from predominantly 'muslim' countries into the western hemisphere.

Some stats are more recent figures then others, so just thought i should point that out.
I dont know how much it would alter those statistics.

Either way the political right is certainly overreacting.

I also dont understand how people can be so upset about thier culture changing, are they so ignorant of history? Since when has culture not been a living, breathing, changing thing. And whether they take measures to stop immigration or not, it wont stop the culture from altering.

A lot of the fear is rooted in the idea christian countries will become full of muslims, and thus eventually become muslim countries. I think thats ridiculous to think, its just not realistic to pop to that conclusion. Something like that may happen over centuries, but for it to happen sooner it would take more then just immigration.

 

WRITEWING

8:38 PM ET

July 26, 2011

Apology and Thank you

King Solomon, I would like to apologize for my comment about a Muslim "take over" of Europe. That was very much an overstatement, and here I was complaining about inflammatory rhetoric.

My understanding is that the culture as a whole, not just the religion, of the immigrants is apparently clashing to some degree with the current culture of Europe, causing some unhappiness to Europeans. Several leaders of Western Europe have come out and said publicly that multiculturalism doesn't work, so I have to believe there's something to it.

I would also like to thank you for the religious statistics you provided. While the overwhelming percentage of people in these countries are Catholics or Protestants, these numbers do not at all tell the true story of the spiritual condition of these countries or the people in them. The countries of Western Europe, particularly the Scandinavian countries, are very secular. The government churches in these countries have little influence over the citizens. If Anders Breivik had been a believing Christian, he would never have done what he did.

In my opinion, if Europeans are not happy with the way things are now in their countries, they have themselves to blame. They have abandoned faith in God and good values that lead to marriage and having children. Those are the things that make a society strong. They are not even having enough children to replace their population. This has created a situation where immigration is necessary, for better or for worse.

 

DR. SARDONICUS

8:03 PM ET

July 26, 2011

Objective cleansing or future Inquisition?

Rather than seeking to assign blame to Left or Right organizations based on ideology, politics, ethnicity or religion, we should be tracking the irresponsible sociopaths (4% of the whole population) and/or murderous psychopaths who drift in and out of all these organizations and drive them to extremes of misbehavior and irrational us-v.-them conclusions on which they thrive.

If we succeeded in identifying these individuals preemptively (ideally during childhood when their naive pathology would show up distinctly with relatively simple testing) and isolating them from positions of responsibility and leadership, then most remaining controversies could be restricted by the remaining 96% of the conscience-driven to the level of acrimonious debate and not cross so often the threshold of spilled blood based on insane ideologies.

Given that all our institutions: military, paramilitary and paracivilian, are saturated with closet sociopaths; we should be very careful about this identification project, since it will likely be taken over by the very people it was designed to identify and isolate, so as to further torment the innocent remainder -- their favorite pastime and power base.

 

RAJMEEJ23

11:26 PM ET

July 26, 2011

Rise of Radical Right.

i am sure that European do some thing always make sense. i still supported to the FSANA9073 (You are 100% correct) post. hope to see more

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FSILBER

7:13 AM ET

July 27, 2011

It's like the 1970s all over again

These worrisome links between the respectable vs. extremist Right reminds me of the philosophical links in the 1970s between the Social Democrats, on the one hand, and the Baader-Meinhof gang and Red Brigades Faction on the other.

 

FSILBER

7:18 AM ET

July 27, 2011

Could it happen here?

Bombs are always a threat, but fortunately in America the political changes to let private citizens once again go about armed can interfere with attempts to do mass shootings. (The argument that shooting back increases the danger is ludicrous; would return fire -- bullets going in two directions -- really have increased the number of deaths at Babi Yar?)

 

CHR_RHC

2:19 PM ET

July 28, 2011

There are way more mass

There are way more mass shootings in the US than in Europe, so consider that theory debunked.

 

STEVE LOSANDOS

12:58 PM ET

July 27, 2011

dissapointed...

From reading this part of the article:

"The relationship between ascendant far-right extremism and political violence is suddenly a top political and security concern. Right-wing groups will come under great scrutiny, diet solution and governments are likely to re-examine the case for proscribing some of them."

Maybe they will try and use this to crack down on the internet and destroy free speech?

 

DIANA RELKE

1:34 PM ET

July 27, 2011

gee, what a surprise

Sons of the original Angry White Men of the 1980s come of age. I don't know why anybody would be surprised by this.

 

PHILBEST

2:48 AM ET

July 30, 2011

Race is not Culture

Cultural Marxism and militant Islam are not issues that are anything to do with "RACE". It is a classic smear tactic of the Left, to use the term "racist" against anyone on the right who is actually arguing about CULTURE and RELIGION and POLITICS.
I am a WASP and I would be quite happy to see the USA run by a Junta made up of Thomas Sowell, Clarence Thomas, Bill Cosby, Alan Keyes, and Allan West. They would be some of the most effective people in dealing with Cultural Marxism and militant Islam, that I know. So calling me a racist would be absurd, but that would not stop the Left from doing it because I hate Cultural Marxism and militant Islam.
And Ann Coulter is right. Brevik is not a "Christian" and actually said so himself. That is just so much more lies from the culturally relativist media who want to excuse militant Islam. Did any government provide Brevik with backing? Is there a worldwide jihad for Christianity? The "silent genocide" that is going on in the world - follow the Barnabus Trust site, or "Voices of the Martyrs" - is Christians being routinely murdered all over Africa, the Middle East, and parts of Asia. With the complicity of governments.

 

BUSTERJACK

1:05 PM ET

July 30, 2011

The biggest problem

The biggest threat to our society still comes from the radical Islamist. Just read the newspaper every day and and see the bombings from all over the world. The Timothy McVey types are still rare.

lingerie

 

JANE BARRY

6:01 AM ET

August 9, 2011

BUSTERJACK, completely agree

BUSTERJACK, completely agree with you. When religion allows to kill people will kill. Most Christians don't justify murders (I don't speak about the Christian fundamentalist now).
Jane, MBA student

 

AMANDAJEFFERSON

6:44 AM ET

August 9, 2011

I absolutely agree with BUSTERJACK

The radical Islamist still feel their strength and impunity. The whole world community cannot defeat them, its so horrible, that they fight against civilian population in different countries. Terrorism is a great threat nowadays and still people haven't find the decision to struggle against it.

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COFFEPARTY

10:33 AM ET

August 5, 2011

Their greatest defeat

Your analysis is wrong. The Brevik incident has put right wing extremists right up there with Islamic terrorism. You can expect a massive increase in resources in monitoring and surveillance world wide. However unlike Islamic terrorists they have no home bases and are I

 

COFFEPARTY

10:42 AM ET

August 5, 2011

Their greatest defeat Part 2

... I suspect amateur hour when it comes to maintaining security protocols to prevent infiltration let alone cell integrity. Let them enjoy their victory parties in London and elsewhere they are too dumb to realize Brevic has been their greatest disaster.

 

ROMEO CLAPPER

4:24 AM ET

August 11, 2011

Rise of the Radical Right

In my point of view

In Britain, there is growing anxiety among mainstream parties about the increasing popularity of the BNP and the impact this may have upon the forthcoming election.
The widespread assumption that economic hardship is the main factor responsible for the current surge in popularity of the new radical right across Europe ignores the fact that it made notable progress at a time of economic prosperity and also overlooks the structural factors explaining its success.
The new radical right has managed to overcome the traditional split between left and right by combining strong anti-establishment resentment and potent demands for democratic reform with the use of protest and identity politics as mobilizing agents. Such a strategy stands in sharp contrast to the notable difficulties for ideological renewal displayed by most traditional parties.

Learn more:rachel starr

 

PHILBEST

10:21 PM ET

August 12, 2011

Persecuting "The Right"

Persecuting "The Right", and witch-hunting writers all over the world like Philip Longman and Keith Windschuttle, is like what the Nazis did on "Kristallnacht" using the actions of 1 violent Jew as an excuse.

These people are right about cultural marxism. If the Left witch hunts them and persecutes them and denies them freedom of speech, then it is the P.C. cultural marxist Left today who are the real totalitarian danger to civilization.

The cultural Marxist Left already jails Christian preachers and takes Christians children off them. Christian "fundamentalists" are the new Jews. None of these people would EVER commit murder, just as Jesus their Lord allowed his wicked enemies to take Him and crucify Him, and told His followers NOT to fight.

No nation that persecuted its Jews ever prospered for long afterwards - proof they are God's people. Christian fundamentalists are like that too - if a nation persecutes them, that nation will wither. Officially "Established" "Christian churches are actually worse than useless - they do not save souls or preach a true gospel at all. They are now mostly part of the "sell out" of their own nation's true Christian culture. The USA's fouding fathers were very wise men, to prohibit the "Establishment" of a "church". Real Christianity is not "establishments".

 

KYLE STREESEN

8:02 PM ET

August 15, 2011

He is crazy

He should Have been put on trial faster. He's crazy and I do not think he deserved to enjoy such conditions as expected of a Norwegian prison. From what I read in: Paralegal Certification Norwegian law allows him to enjoy these great conditions. It's just a hotel, not a prison.

 

AXELBROOK

1:14 PM ET

August 18, 2011

Who knows, whoever won had a

Who knows, whoever won had a lot of work to do.rio virgin I think a majority of his first two years will be foriegn policy because the Bush economic plan doesn't expire until after 2010..

 

YANA

12:25 AM ET

August 22, 2011

Awesome

An invaluable resource and great addition to my favorites. English bulldogs for saleThe new features are well received on this end and will surely help the community share and progress more rapidly.

 

HAROUTNCC

1:27 AM ET

August 22, 2011

relationship between ascendant far-right extremism and political

An essential precondition for that rise of fascism would be a cultural climate saturated with apocalyptic forebodings and desires imminent or eventual renewal captured such works as Spengler’s Decline from the West and H.G. Wells’ The form of Items to Come. It articulated, fomented, and channeled inchoate but extraordinarily widespread longings for any new kind of political system, somanabolic, a brand new elite, a brand new kind of individual, a brand new relationship between your individual and society, for any more planned economy, for any revolutionary alternation in the values of contemporary life, for any new connection with time itself.

The mobilizing myth which may be treated ideal-typically because the definitional core of fascism is the fact that with the intervention of the heroic elite the entire national community is capable of doing resurrecting itself Phoenix-like in the ashes from the decadent old order ('palingenetic ultra-nationalism'). It is primarily the myth which informs the obsessive preoccupation with national/ethnic decadence and regeneration inside a post-liberal new order that is now widely acknowledged to become the hall-mark of fascism.

 

JAMESMICHEAL

4:09 PM ET

August 23, 2011

If any of these groups

If any of these groups achieves any semblence of political power in goverment - and they fight hard to gain it from the school boards up to the president - then it may well be the end of the US as we know it waystoearnmoneyonline.The widespread assumption that economic hardship is the main factor responsible for the current surge in popularity of the new radical right across Europe ignores the fact that it made notable progress at a time of economic prosperity and also overlooks the structural factors explaining its success.

 

FREESPIRIT

1:52 PM ET

August 24, 2011

Relies

Some pretty interesting replies to a serious subject. Jewellery Shops Tattoo Removal No Win No Fee Solicitors

 

GUITAR

9:57 AM ET

August 26, 2011

Is it true that blogs are

Is it true that blogs are just forum discussions with rss that would enable the user to watch what they wanted to watch more convieniently? Is that all the differences?. walmart scholarship

 

WILLIAMK

9:57 AM ET

August 30, 2011

Younger or not

From reading the Telegraph today it looks like this Breivik compiled a 1,518-page manifesto where he suggested that one of two English extremists who attended a founding meeting of the Knights Templar in London in April 2002 might have been a member of the < EDL. “I wonder sometimes if one of the EDL founders was one of the co-founders of PCCTS,” he wrote. “I guess I’ll never know for sure.”

 

WILLIAMK

9:58 AM ET

August 30, 2011

Younger ot not

From reading the Telegraph today it looks like this Breivik compiled a 1,518-page manifesto where he suggested that one of two English extremists who attended a founding meeting of the Knights Templar in London in April 2002 might have been a member of the forfait iphone EDL. “I wonder sometimes if one of the EDL founders was one of the co-founders of PCCTS,” he wrote. “I guess I’ll never know for sure.”

 

JOEKING

6:09 AM ET

August 31, 2011

Not just Europe

The rise of radical right doesn't just happen in the Europe. This worrying trend also happens in other Countries. I heard other country such as Thailand also has the same issue. The problem can be because of poor communication, poor of natural anti inflammatory foods consumption. Each of the parties fights for their own right.

I believe that this problem can be solved easily if every person involved is willing to sit, talk and find the win-win solution.