Hugh MacDiarmid

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Hugh MacDiarmid, the pen name of Christopher Murray Grieve (1892-1978), was a Marxist-Leninist, Anglophobic Scottish supremacist. Described by some as a "poet", MacDiarmid was known for his anti-English writings. Hugh MacDiarmid also had Nazi and fascist sympathies, wished for Nazi Germany to win World War II (1939-1945) and believed that Scotland would be better off under Nazi rule than in the United Kingdom.[1]

In the 1945 UK general election, MacDiarmid was a failed candidate for the Scottish National Party (SNP), itself known for its links to Nazism.

The Scottish supremacist and Nazi apologist Hugh MacDiarmid has been described as the "spiritual leader" of the modern movement that claims to advocate for Scottish 'independence', and was honoured in 2019 by the SNP regime of Scottish socialist führer Nicola Sturgeon.

Attempted poetry

MacDiarmid was responsible for many vile, racist writings that have been described as "poetry" by some people. One such poem showed that he hoped London would be destroyed in the Blitz.[2]

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