The danger of violent jihadism persists, but the growing menace is from racist extremists – even if some in the UK government can’t admit it

Perhaps it was the tweed jacket and cravat. Or maybe the medieval title: Heinrich XIII, Prince of Reuß. Either way, the man at the head of a suspected plot to overthrow the German government, exposed in a series of raids on Wednesday, was easy to dismiss as a joke. The country’s late night TV talkshows went right ahead, mocking the 71-year-old aristocrat and his deluded dreams, along with his wardrobe.

A week earlier, the sartorial derision was aimed at Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, his face entirely obscured by a ski mask, praising Hitler and the Nazis on the set of Infowars as a guest of the bankrupted conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.

Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Russia-Ukraine war at a glance: what we know on day 736

Ukraine’s business how they use cruise missiles, says UK; Moscow warned against…

Biden’s team hopes for repeat of his 2012 performance as Trump debate nears

The vice-presidential candidate who debated Paul Ryan helped turn the trajectory of…

Belgian police arrest seven people over terror attack plot

Prosecutors say all suspects belong to group of strong supporters of Islamic…

Dea-John Reid’s mother says ‘justice system has let me down’

Trial told teenager found guilty of manslaughter was part of a group…