Yes, I think the terms Nazi is overused in the extreme. Nazis existed at a particular time and place, and do not currently exist. The term Nazi has become an adjetive, it is unfortunate that the term has made it into popular language.
I understand what he meant by calling "Westerners" Christians is the fact that the dominant cultures in the "West" has decended from a "Christian" past. I really don´t think most Europeans are particularly religious, or Christian. The fact of the matter is for a much longer period of time Europe was "Pagan", much longer than it ever was Christian.
In a sense, I see the current "Christian" countries as an evolution of the Roman Empire, rather than any religion. This not to say I don´t think there are sincere Christians, as I´m sure there are......but the identification as "Christian" is takek many times for political of social reasons, rather than a sincere spiritual quest.
I wonder, would Jesus would recognize what has been passing as "Christian" for the last couple thousand years?
I couldn´t agree more.
Contrary to what AE observes in Germany, I believe the Neo-Nazi subculture (justt like all other forms of skinhead subcultures) are dying out. They´re a bit a thing of the ´90s. It was the time of the great skinhead revival. Nowadays skinheads are taken over by chavs...Besides, the neo-nazi were mostly trying to find their pagan roots, and they were mostly against Christianity as a Jewish thing.
Sure there are groups of neo-nazists/skinheads in Europe (and the USA) but they´re smaller in number than 10 years ago. Seems people of today prefer Emo or tracksuits