In the world of white nationalism, National Action has been fairly ineffective. It made the headlines two years ago when a protest in Liverpool culminated in the neo-Nazis huddling behind the shutters of a left luggage shop for their own safety. One wonders if Oswald Mosley (or their parents) would be proud.

Then, last month, National Action became the first far-right extremist group to be proscribed in the UK after officials assessed it to be “concerned in terrorism”. It’s a bold move from the government, but I’m skeptical that such attempts at censorship can achieve anything meaningful in the age of the internet. The answer lies in education, not legislation.