This isn't the Third Reich. This is Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists, in the 1930s.

To his circle of fervent recruits, he was “Jack King” – the Gestapo’s man in England.

But I guess UK media is too busy talking about other less relevant topics.
While people in the UK rallied to war against Hitler in 1940, the masterful Nazi agent named Oswald Mosley toured the country signing up those who could be trusted to show their loyalty to the Fatherland when the time came.
Mosley built up a coterie of committed and ruthless British Nazis ranging from provincial engineers, to an astrologer, to a Catholic priest.
In return, they provided him with some of the most sensitive secrets of Britain’s war machine, from details of the first jet fighter to the workings of radar countermeasures.
The Third Reich was particularly appreciative of the seven subversives – all but one of them British and led by a “crafty and dangerous” fascist named Marita Perigoe – who formed the inner circle of King’s network of homegrown Nazis.
It's my duty to report that Max Mosley’s half-forgotten past as a supporter of his father’s far-right fascist movement, and allegations about his “racist and thuggish past”, have been paraded over 11 pages of the Daily Mail and led to a bruising interview on Channel 4 News.
British fascism:

Oswald Mosley, centre, with members of the British Union of Fascists, including William Joyrce – AKA Lord Haw-Haw – on the left.
At a time when patriotism, nationalism and white supremacy are at the forefront of the political conversation in the UK, both these histories offer a reminder that fascism was never simply something to be fought abroad, but to be confronted on British shores.
Destructive fascists movements will take new forms, not directly comparable to those of the past.

But it's our duty to eradicate it before its too late.
Another classic photo of British fascism.

Italy's Duce Benito Mussolini (left) with Oswald Mosley (right) of the BUF during Mosley's visit to Italy in 1936
List of fascist movements in Britain:

* British Fascists (1923–1934)
* Imperial Fascist League (1929–1939)
* British Union of Fascists (1932–1940),
* British League of Ex-Servicemen and Women (1937-1948) * Union Movement (1948-1978).
List of fascist movements in Britain. Modern age:

* British Movement (1968–1983)
* National Front (1967–present),
* Britain First (2011–present)
* National Action (2013–2017)
British Fascism claims the legacy of Oliver Cromwell; Oswald Mosley claimed Cromwell brought about "the first fascist age in England".

It also claims that its corporatist economic policy is based upon England's historical medieval guild system.
This a flowchart showing the history of the early British fascist movement.

And this is why, kids, your corporate channels will never air my views. It's too dangerous to speak truth on British television.
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