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Greater Britain Movement
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==Policies== The first issue of ''Spearhead'' stated that the new movement would adhere "without fear and without compromise to every tenet of the national socialist creed" albeit "in a manner more in touch with British affairs and much more in touch with British interests and aims".<ref>[[Ray Hill (British activist)|Ray Hill]] & Andrew Bell, ''The Other Face of Terror'', London: Grafton Books, 1988, p. 82</ref> However whilst leader of the GBM, Tyndall wrote his ''Six Principles of British Nationalism'' in which he broke from the Nazism of Jordan, and called for a parliamentary strategy towards a government that would be [[corporatism|corporatist]], racialist, and based on the principle of leadership. This state would be ratified by regular referendums, although [[liberal democracy]] would be brought to an end.<ref>J. Tyndall, [http://www.aryanunity.com/sixprincip.html ''The Six Principles of British Nationalism''], 1966</ref> The new movement also advocated laws banning marriage between people of different races and the use of medical procedures to prevent those with "hereditary defects" from having children: {{blockquote|For the protection of British blood, racial laws will be enacted forbidding marriage between Britons and non-Aryans. Medical measures will be taken to prevent procreation on the part of all those who have hereditary defects, either racial, mental, or physical. A pure, strong, healthy British race will be regarded as the principal guarantee of Britain's future.{{sfn|Walker|1977|p=47}}}} Tyndall's ideas have been characterised as an attempt to construct a specifically British national socialism, rather than following Jordan's route of simply transplanting the German version.<ref>[[Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke]], ''[[Black Sun (Goodrick-Clarke book)|Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity]]'', New York University Press, 2003, p. 38</ref> Such was Tyndall's desire to forge a specifically British form of Nazism that he was characterised by Jordan and other critics as a "[[John Bull]] in [[jackboot]]s".<ref>Cyprian Blamires, ''World Fascism: A Historical Encyclopedia, Volume 1'', ABC-CLIO, 2006, p. 289</ref>
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