A Dundee councillor has described supporters of a far-right group putting up stickers around Dundee as “knuckle-draggers”.
A sticker in support of National Action was spotted on the bus stop outside the post office on Ward Road this week.
It bears the anti-immigration message: “Britain is ours! The rest must go”.
National Action is a neo-Nazi youth group that has connections with fascist supporters in Greece.
Its members demonstrated in Newcastle in January ahead of Holocaust Memorial Day and also marched in Liverpool last year.
The organisation’s Scottish website declares the UK requires immediate “national socialism”: “Britain has become a nation of weak cowards who are hypersensitive and scared to say anything.
“Lying through fear is now considered normal we have allowed hysterical twits to control how everything is done while our people limp towards rivers of blood. Where are the men who will tell the truth? Where are the men who will stand up and fight?
“National Action believes this country needs a kick in the head a good slap so we can get it together.
“Fresh perspective through a fiery youth culture is the only thing that will reanimate society. We need National Socialism now.”
However, there is apparently little support for the group in Dundee. The organisation’s logo was torn off within hours of the sticker going up and Maryfield councillor Ken Lynn said he doubted there was any real support for fascism in Dundee.
He said: “I’ve never even heard of this group but I’m sorry to hear people are putting up stickers to do with right-wing extremism, particularly directed towards immigrants.
“I suspect the level of support for this in Dundee is close to zero.”
Mr Lynn added: “I don’t think there is any upsurge in right-wing extremism in Dundee community relations are good.
“I saw the calibre of support they will get when I attended the counter-demonstration to the Scottish Defence League when they were in Dundee two to three years ago the word to describe them is knuckle-draggers.”
Last June, members of National Action filmed themselves spraying graffiti on a Jewish monument in Cannon Hill Park in Birmingham. They also hung a Nazi flag from it.
The Campaign Against Anti- Semitism has warned the organisation is “an anti-semitic neo-Nazi organisation which is trying to propagate fascist ideology and sees as its role models some of the most hideous figures in history”.