Wednesday, April 13, 2011

What's The Difference Between Bravo And Alpha

LA RATA NEGRA, MASCOTA DEL NEOFASCISMO EUROPEO


IN SPAIN "The Old Mole" is the name of a leftist publication header widely known. Well, against leftist mole, the European far right also has a pet underground and counterculture: the black rat. Its origin lies in the "white May 1968: ie, in the counter which generated the revolcuión May 1968. This is his story.

Black rats born in 1968 in Assas Law School. After the revolt of May, neo-fascist sectors, supporting the government, took to the "reconquista" of universities. The fight that took place between leftists and right-wing elements was particularly harsh on the Assas Law School, where clashes between students of ideologies generated pitched battles.

In the course of the past, leftists insulting the neo-fascists calling them "rats." In parallel, a group of extreme right of the Faculty, the Groupe Union-Droite [GUD], drew up propaganda murals in one of his mimebros, Jacques Marchal (former member of the collective aggressive Occident), drew a black rat making ironic comments on the situation there, both favorable and unfavorable to the GUD. Was inspired by the creations of cartoonist Franco-Belgian Macherot Raymond (1924-2008): Anthracite and Chlorophil rodents. Anthracite was a French comic book character who inspired the "rat noir."

The humor shown by black rat GUD that attracted the attention of students, including some of his enemies. Moreover, right-wing groups began to take their identification with the black rodent that they had left and the result of all this was that "black rat" became the mascot of neo-fascist Assas.


latter quickly gained a popularity that went beyond the local and disseminated among the French neo-fascist youth to collect a considerable popularity, especially in France and Belgium, for what became an emblem of European neo-fascism, Celtic Cross by joining in many cases.

The Celtic cross and the black rat, two symbols of European fascism from the early seventies. The international spread of command was due mainly to the issue of separate underground magazines published in France and Italy: Alternative (Paris, 1973-1975), led by the very Marchal, and La voce della fogna.

However, Spain did not resonate well into the eighties, when the black rat was popularized by two publications: The Black Death (Madrid, 1985 - 1987?), published by the group anarcofascista Madrid Autonomous Bases [Fine Arts], and Sewell (Barcelona, \u200b\u200b1986-1988), edited by the group Europe.


This late release of the black rat as a pet of English fascism was illustrative of the scarce and limited renovation experienced the English extreme right in relation to the whole European fascism under Franco and the post-Franco




Posted by Old Europe .

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