Conspiracy Theories and the Cultic Milieu of Neo-Nazism Dr Paul Jackson Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Northampton
[email protected] What is the appeal of neo-Nazism? After all, its political agenda is hostile and radically out of step with the norms of mainstream society, its vision for an alternate type of modern world is racist and extreme, and, perhaps most unappealing of all, even if one sympathises with its core ideas, it is also clear that it is never likely to succeed in the ultimate ambition of installing new states akin to Hitler’s Germany. Yet, despite these objections, and many others that can all too easily be identified, small numbers of people continue to develop political organisations, magazines, websites, the White Power music scene, and other types of cultural production and social networks that are steeped in romanticisation of the Nazi era, and call for its return. Many are attracted for easily explicable reasons, such as searching for a sense of community or engaging in youthful rebellion that passes, and do not believe in the movement’s core ideas. However, for others, those who do ‘believe’, what is the allure? Does its evocations on religious themes, and engagement in conspiracy theories help to explain its appeal? For those ‘outside’ this radically unconventional milieu and who want to make sense of it, at first it is all too easy to focus on the messages of hatred, the overt racism, and the initially bizarre, counter-intuitive ‘histories’ of events like the Holocaust and to dismiss such neo-Nazi cultures as wilfully offensive, and driven solely by ‘hate’.