Jorian Jenks was leading member of the British Union of Fascists, a pioneer of radical ecology and organic farming, and a founder of the Soil Association and Editor of its journal "Mother Earth" and is regarded by many as one of the principle architects of the Green Movement in Britain. As a keen and active supporter of Oswald Mosley's Blackshirt organisation, he wrote many articles for the movement's newspapers and journals.
In "Spring Comes Again" Jorian Jenks highlights the problems created by liberalism and the "free market" economy arguing that in reality it can only lead to exploitation and repression - a system devised to ensure that a minority are free to prey on the weaker members of society. Other topics include Marxism and the Class War, the Bureaucratic State, the Disintegration of Socialism, the Spirit of Fascism, the Corporate State, and Unity, Equity, Security - the watchwords of the Fascist Revolution.
During World War Two, for opposing another war with Germany, he was imprisoned by the British government without charge or trial spending some time in the infamous torture centre at Latchmere House in Surrey.