Swedish party leader: The Jews declared war on Germany, the Holocaust a lie

In Sweden he is ready to race in elections. The Nordic Resistance movement, in addition to opposing immigrants, offers shocking support to Adolf Hitler's policies and blaming the Jews. Party leader Simon Lindberg is ready to run in the general election. The Nordic Resistance movement (NRM) held a rally in Stockholm on Saturday, becoming [...]
Party leader Simon Lindberg is ready to run in the general election.
The Nordic Resistance movement (NRM) held a rally in Stockholm on Saturday, facing protesters, who viewed their members as neonists. The pan-nordic group registered as a political party in Sweden in 2015 and is now preparing for its first general election in two weeks.
Lindberg described the MKR's final goal as “the security of our people”. The phrase is an apparent appearance for the so-called slogan 14 words by David Lane the infamous white and neo-Nazi Supremeist from the United States.
“We want to retake the place from traitors in parliament”, Lindbergh told Maria Finosina of RT-of, claiming that “20 to 30 percent of residents in Sweden are not Europeans.
The Suedez will soon become minority. It's already too late to stop immigration. We have to kill them”, He added.
Although you do not like being called Neonazi, they do not hide their sympathy for the policies of the German National Socialist Workers Party (NSDAP), known as Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party.
Calling Nazi leader “a very good person for the German people”, Lindberg claimed Hitler “He freed Germany from globalists and bankers who control Sweden today”.
He did what was necessary to ensure the freedom of his people” Lindberg continued. “We are national Socialists, like Hitler and we do everything we need for our nation”.
Germany's notorious Fuhrer is surrounded by “a million lies”, which many people “not so [well] think”, Lindberg stated. Other highly controversial statements by MKR leader include labelling Holocaust “Possibly the greatest lie in history”, as well as a strange statement that “The Jews declared war on Germany”.
The Scandinavian country, which has a long tradition of welcoming refugees, has seen an increase in the sense of extreme right and anti-imigration, driven by increased violence. In recent years dozens of Swedes were injured or lost their lives in the suburbs dominated by immigrant communities. About 400,000 people have submitted asylum applications in Sweden since 2012.
The crime and immigration issue has become the central topic ahead of the 9 September elections, where the ARM wants to present 24 candidates, hoping to pass the four per cent threshold for entry into parliament.











