62 Group: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Communism in the United Kingdom]]
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Revision as of 23:21, 23 February 2024

The 62 Group was an antifa group in London set up in 1962, based on the earlier 43 Group. A notable member was Gerry Gable, who would later create the magazine Searchlight. Wikipedia claims that membership was only open to jews.

A less politically correct description: "The 62 Group was essentially an ethno-fascist movement: โ€œTo be a formal member you had to be jewish but they worked with people from all communities including many Irish and Black activistsโ€ It is in this context that 62 Group orchestrated and executed โ€˜direct actionโ€™ (premeditated, extreme violence), and encouraged ethnic minority groups to โ€œvent their angerโ€, against their targeted political opponents โ€“ people belonging to (or supporting) indigenous ethno-fascist groups within the British community. The 62 Group (mostly supporters of the Beginite Herut organisation, a political successor to the Irgun Zvai Leumi terrorist group) specialised in direct action, infiltration, agent provocateur work, entrapment, โ€˜dirty tricksโ€™ and 'black-bag' jobs (burglary). The UK-based 62 Group was a progeny of the earlier 43 Group โ€“ also an extremist ethno-fascist group who, according to Gable, were โ€œa group of volunteers who in โ€™43 volunteered to fight for a jewish homelandโ€".[1]

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Based.png This article is not based.
Its weak and faggy. Somebody copied it over from some woke SJW source, and now its namby-pamby wording is gaying up our program.

|Please help FasciPedia by strengthening this article up, get rid of the weak style. It should be written in a professional encyclopedia, style while still retaining the fascist point of view.