Citation :
In 2008, Alleanza Nazionale, a fascist party in Italy, literally used a panel of Leonidas from Frank Miller’s 300 in one of their propaganda posters with the caption “Difendi i tuoi valori, la tua civilta, il tuo quartiere,” which means “Defend your values, your civilization, your district.” It was a clear and unambiguous attempt to equate modern-day fascists with the Spartans in Miller’s comic book. In the United Kingdom, members of the European Research Group (ERG), the extreme pro-Brexit faction of the Conservative Party, call themselves “the Spartans.” Peter Gainsford, whom I cited earlier in this article, points out in a blog post that some members of the same group also call themselves “the Grand Wizards,” indicating that they see the Spartans and the Ku Klux Klan as related entities. Here in the United States, Steve Bannon, the co-founder of the far-right media outlet Breitbart (which Bannon himself has described as a “sounding board for the alt-right”) and former Chief Strategist to President Donald Trump, is reportedly obsessed with ancient Sparta. Julia Jones, Steve Bannon’s former writing partner, said in an interview with The Daily Beast in 2017: “He [i.e. Steve Bannon] talked a lot about Sparta—how Sparta defeated Athens, he loved the story. The password on his [desktop] computer at his office at American Vantage Media in Santa Monica was ‘Sparta,’ in fact.” Meanwhile, as I discuss in this other article I wrote, the phrase “μολὼν λαβέ,” which, according to a well-known apocryphal legend, was supposedly spoken by Leonidas to Xerxes at Thermopylai, has become an extremely popular and widely-used political slogan among gun activists, white supremacists, and other members of the far right.
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