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Former Royal Courts Official Reveals Active Neo-Nazi Occult Groups Still Operating in Britain

The Duran · How Occultists and Bankers Manufactured WW2 Germany w/ Matthew Ehret · July 5, 2026
Former Royal Courts Official Reveals Active Neo-Nazi Occult Groups Still Operating in Britain
The Duran
The Duran
How Occultists and Bankers Manufactured WW2 Germany w/ Matthew Ehret
"When I was working at the royal courts of justice, um I was the person in the royal courts of justice who used to have to get the read the reports about various archal groups that still function in Britain. And I remember reading them all and I remember reading about the very strange things that some of these people got up to and being very surprised that the police who knew exactly who these people were. I mean literally knew exactly who these people were weren't interfering in any way with some of the things that they were doing which were clearly criminal activities just to say."
Alexander Mercouris reveals firsthand knowledge of contemporary neo-Nazi occult groups operating in Britain with apparent police protection. He states these groups, many led by former British army officers, fuse 1930s German ideology with occult practices and engage in known criminal activity without law enforcement intervention. This disclosure comes from his direct professional experience handling intelligence reports at the Royal Courts of Justice.

About this episode

The Duran hosts Alexander Mercouris and a co-host interview historian Matthew Ehret about the rehabilitation of Nazi ideology in conspiracy-minded communities and the deep historical connections between occultism, intelligence agencies, and political power from the late 19th century through today. Ehret discusses his new documentary 'Black Sun Rising' and accompanying 200-page report examining how figures like Nick Fuentes and films like 'Europa' are reframing Hitler as heroic while portraying Stalin and Russia as villains. The conversation traces intellectual and occult movements from the 1870s onward, examining how Bismarck's rational, peace-oriented German leadership was displaced by mystical nationalist movements including Theosophy, New Templarism, and various occult orders. Ehret and Mercouris explore how British intelligence, particularly through figures like Aleister Crowley, weaponized occult networks for espionage and political manipulation, including alleged involvement in the Lusitania sinking. Mercouris reveals firsthand knowledge from his time at the Royal Courts of Justice about contemporary neo-Nazi occult groups operating in Britain with police awareness but without intervention, often led by former army officers. The discussion extends to post-Vietnam occult activity, connecting CIA Operation Phoenix commander Colonel Michael Aquino to both the Church of Satan and later US Army Intelligence programs that incorporated occult ideology into elite military training. Ehret raises concerns about Palantir's growing control over Western military AI and surveillance, noting CEO Alex Karp hired the grandson of British fascist leader Oswald Mosley after reciting a 1939 Mosley speech from memory. Throughout, both emphasize how trauma, elitism, and flights from reality enable occult ideologies to penetrate power structures, with direct continuities between early 20th century movements and contemporary tech and military leadership.

Key takeaways

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