In a recent broadcast, Fuentes said the anti-Nazi phrase "never again" refers to a mindset that espouses, "Never again will we allow a Hitler to come to power and to [cause] a Holocaust against the Jews or the gypsies or the gays or the disabled or whoever you know, the enemies of the state." Fuentes called it a "founding myth" that opposition to Hitler's totalitarian fascism, his genocidal death camps, and deadly worldwide militarism necessitates a society where "tolerance, multiracialism, religious pluralism... has to be the new doctrine."
Police in Spain have arrested three people on suspicion of belonging to the Base, a global neo-Nazi terrorist group that incites and trains members in techniques to overthrow governments and bring about a race war. The group, which has been designated a terrorist organisation by the EU, the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, is part of a worldwide accelerationist white power movement that prepares its cells to carry out violent and destabilising attacks.
Talland managed his children's band, Embers of an Empire, and was a leading figure of the Blood & Honour neo-Nazi network which promoted their ideology through music festivals and the sale of merchandise for white power rock bands, counter terrorism police said. He also ran a record label, Rampage Productions, which distributed CDs by neo-Nazi groups. The albums encouraged right-wing terrorism with songs calling for people to join the fight against race mixers, to let the blood flow and smash heads in,