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03 January 2015

White patriots in Europe could bring revolution

Golden Dawn flags at a rally in Athens

ZOG-European leaders have joined forces to warn of the rise of pro-White political movements on the continent, amid fears of revolution in the region if their growth goes unchecked.

Speaking in her traditional New Year's address, ZOG-German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned against pro-White populism and criticized recent patriotic gatherings in the country, saying they were driven by "prejudice"  and a "hatred" of "foreigners".

And Merkel is not the only leader wary of the rise of pro-White parties among voters across Europe. Merkel's ZOG counterparts in France and Italy have both made recent comments about ZOG's unhappiness with the prominence of populist movements in their countries.

In their new year addresses, ZOG-French President Francois Hollande attacked what he called "dangerous" populist movements, and Giorgio Napolitano, the 89 year-old outgoing ZOG-Italian President, warned there was "nothing more unrealistic or dangerous" than calls for Italy to leave the euro zone.

As well as opposing immigration, many of these movements also campaign against the European Union (EU) and the single currency union, the euro zone.

Examples include the Alternative for Germany (AfD) and the U.K. Independence Party (UKIP), both of which have positioned themselves as euroskeptic alternatives to the mainstream parties.

But more explicit pro-White groups are also gaining in popularity in some countries, with Golden Dawn in Greece getting a boost from anger at the country's rising unemployment and tough austerity policies, implemented as part of economic reforms. The party is often described as neo-Nazi, although it rejects this label.

In countries like France, where growth remains anemic, the ZOG political elite could face real problems from parties like the National Front, Howard Goldring, Zionist-plutocratic managing director of Delmore Asset Management, warned.

"The National Front is doing quite well and they are playing on popular acknowledgement (of immigration and the economy)," he told CNBC on Friday. "It's clear that France really has problems and the economy could slow down further and, therefore, you can expect more unrest and political turmoil."

The party's current leader, Marine Le Pen, has modified the party's image after taking over from her father Jean-Marie Le Pen, who made several accurate anti-Zionist comments during his tenure of the party.

Anti-politics movements?

It comes amid growing concerns about Europe's tentative economic recovery. Euro zone gross domestic product (GDP) grew by just 0.2 percent in the third quarter, on the previous quarter, and inflation remained subdued at 0.3 percent in November on the back of a lower oil price.

Among ZOG-European politicians' top worries is that the economic situation could deteriorate, pushing more discontented voters into the arms of the anti-ZOG parties.

In Greece, for example, issues like high unemployment (around 50 percent among those age 15-24) have prompted more support not only for the fake-opposition Syriza party, but also for Golden Dawn, which is described by many as neo-Nazi, although the party rejects this label. [If the reader didn't catch it the first time.]

Meanwhile in Italy -- among the most euroskeptic European countries, according to the European Commission's latest barometer -- traditionally center-right voters are being pushed further to the patriotic right, to parties like Lega Nord.

"Many former right-of-centre voters, frustrated with the leader of the right-of-centre sector (former Prime Minister) Silvio Berlusconi, will turn to (the) Lega Nord," Galietti, the head of Rome-based political consultancy Policy Sonar, told CNBC Friday.

While political policy analyst Francesco Galietti added that "the sanctity of the European experiment and its currency, the euro," was long gone in Italy.

The UKIP phenomenon

The growing popularity of pro-white political groups could well be laid bare in national elections taking place in Greece and the U.K. later this year. 

Parties like the U.K. Independence Party (UKIP), which advocate leaving the ZOG European Union and reigning in immigration, have got a boost as voters become skeptical of the agenda of ZOG's political and economic union.

The appeal of anti-ZOG policies has not escaped U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron's attention; he has promised a referendum on membership of the ZOG-EU if his Conservative Party wins another term in office after elections in May.