
"They're always coming up with, No, it's not the Jews. No, it's not women. No, it's not blacks. It's actually really complicated. No, it fucking isn't at all. Jews are running society, women need to shut the fuck up, blacks need to be imprisoned for the most part, and we would live in paradise. It's that simple."
"Then there is the comparatively sane character that Nick Fuentes plays on the podcast circuit. This version of Nick Fuentes is a serious Catholic. He's clearly read lots of books. He's earnest. He doesn't joke or curse very much. His vision of the country has much more to do with preserving what he describes as a white suburban American way of lifethink Little League baseball and hot dogs on the Fourth of Julythan with a hostile, theocratic takeover of the federal government, Hughes continued before showing a clip of Fuentes's friendly, sanitizing sit-down with Tucker Carlson:"
"We don't want to harm anybody. We don't want to kill anybody. We don't want to harm anybody. We just want to put America first."
Nick Fuentes operates two distinct public personas. On Rumble he expresses explicit antisemitic, racist, and misogynistic views, advocating imprisonment of Black people and asserting Jewish control of society. On mainstream MAGA podcasts he adopts a restrained, earnest Catholic persona focused on preserving a white suburban American way of life, emphasizing family traditions and 'America First' rhetoric while avoiding profanity and overt calls to violence. That dual strategy garners sympathy from broader audiences while keeping his Groyper base energized, enabling continued influence and the spread of extremist ideas without immediate accountability.
Read at www.mediaite.com
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