Guardian OpEd: Australia's far-right fringe groups must not be allowed to become mainstream
It was a pitiful sight. In Brisbane last Friday, the far-right Australia First party announced that it would rally on the streets in solidarity with Greeces neo-Nazi aligned political organisation, Golden Dawn. In the end, less than 10 supporters arrived and faced off with around 200 unionists and members of the Antifa group shouting "immigrants are welcome, Nazis are not!.
Golden Dawn are one of the most aggressive and successful fascist parties in Europe, surging into the Greek parliament and assaulting immigrants and minorities. Theyre a sign of the times across Europe in the 21st century, with far-rightists becoming more mainstream as a reaction to the extreme austerity policies imposed by the European Union and global organisations in the wake of the financial crisis.
Not long ago, it was politically acceptable to blame Jewish people for economic uncertainty; today its migrants (often from a Muslim background) and asylum seekers. In Britain, the English Defence League (EDL) and some members of the popular UK Independence party (Ukip) are already manipulating public insecurity and targeting the vulnerable.
The rhetoric by Golden Dawn and similar groups has shifted their target away from Judaism and towards Islam in recent decades for pragmatic reasons. But for others, he says, "antipathy towards Muslims is driven by genuine paranoia regarding Islam. In either case, both tendencies understand that Islamophobia sells: Muslims have been portrayed by important segments of the mass media and politics as a threat to Australian values and customs.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/may/06/australias-far-right-fringe-groups-must-not-be-allowed-to-become-mainstream
I hope Australia is able to nip the growth of the far-right but that has been difficult to do elsewhere.