This new court case in the UK, convicting three men of Nazi speech, may sound familiar yet foreign to Americans witnessing Republican antics lately.
A nine-week trial at Sheffield crown court heard how the trio idolised Hitler and the Nazis, used racist slurs, glorified mass murderers and encouraged violence against anyone deemed an enemy.

Notably, all that sounds just like the Young Republicans making headlines this past week, as defended suspiciously by Vice President JD Vance.

Also related, the Republican house leader Johnson held a press conference for a swastika found prominently displayed in a Republican office to announce his party defended that evil ideology:
Johnson was addressing an incident where a staffer of Republican Representative Dave Taylor appeared to have a swastika in the background of a video call. …when addressing the principles of the Republican Party, Johnson said, “We fought the Nazis. We’ve defended that evil ideology.”
And also related, President Trump called D-Day “not a pleasant day” for Chancellor Metz, the leader of Germany.
…when Merz brought up 6 June as D-Day, Trump responded that it was “not a pleasant day” for the chancellor.
The Chancellor rejected Trump immediately, stating the exact opposite, that D-Day meant the liberation of his country from Nazis.