Far right
The term far right refers to ideologies and ideological movements perceived to be further to the right than the centrist right on the left-right spectrum. The extreme right may be used as a synonym or may be used to refer to an "extreme" subset of the far right. One criticism of such classifications is that the left-right spectrum is too simplistic and there being many very different "right-wing" ideologies outside of the "centrist" right. See also the article on Political spectrum. The term itself may be seen as negative, as implying extremism or abnormality. It is rarely used by the groups labelled as far right by outsiders. In practice, the term (and derivations such as "extreme right") seems to be mainly used by critics, who often seem to use it very narrowly as a synonym for "supremacism" and in particular for "White supremacism".
History
Far-right is in contemporary political discourses a pejorative or epithet used by Europhobes to describe any ethnic European person who in any way opposes their own ethnic cleansing or participates in "unapproved" aspects of culture; artistic, philosophical or religious; which fall outside of the paradym of liberalism and Marxian communism. Originally the phrase was used following the Masonic Revolution in France to describe representatives of the old order; namely legitimist monarchists and theocrats (sometimes called reactionaries).
Since the end of World War II, all ethnic European patriotisms, identitarianisms, nationalisms which actually aim at uplifting the European peoples or creating a healthy society which honours its traditions, sustains itself, creating something good to pass onto descendants and otherwise demonstrates any aspect of self-preservation of any level, is labeled with the demonism "far-right". It holds a prominent place in the syntax of the grand Europhobic canon, alongside other operant conditioning, neo-heresies such as "nazi", "racist", "fascist", "anti-semitic", "white supremacist", "sexist", "homophobic", "Islamophobic," and "wants to kill six million Jews".