Hate pastor & neo-Nazi influencer say maybe Hitler wasn't so bad after all - LGBTQ Nation
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Hate pastor & neo-Nazi influencer say maybe Hitler wasn't so bad after all - LGBTQ Nation
"In a recent broadcast, Fuentes said the anti-Nazi phrase "never again" refers to a mindset that espouses, "Never again will we allow a Hitler to come to power and to [cause] a Holocaust against the Jews or the gypsies or the gays or the disabled or whoever you know, the enemies of the state." Fuentes called it a "founding myth" that opposition to Hitler's totalitarian fascism, his genocidal death camps, and deadly worldwide militarism necessitates a society where "tolerance, multiracialism, religious pluralism... has to be the new doctrine.""
""What [believers of this 'myth'] work out, basically is we cannot have an exclusionary nationalism, cannot have the kind of unity that they had in Nazi Germany they say is what created that - the kind of pride in race nation, God - that kind of cohesion that leads necessarily to exclusion, necessarily to persecution," Fuentes told Webbon."
"Webbon called it "the post-war consensus" that "the answer to why America can't have nice things" is "because Hitler." In this case, "nice things" probably refers to Christian Nationalism."
Nick Fuentes appeared on Joel Webbon's show and argued that the anti-Nazi phrase 'never again' represents a mindset that unfairly prevents an exclusionary, unified nationalism. Fuentes labeled 'never again' a 'founding myth' claiming opposition to Hitler's fascism forces tolerance, multiracialism, and religious pluralism as doctrine. He suggested critics equate national cohesion and pride with inevitable persecution. Webbon called the post-war emphasis on condemning Hitler 'the post-war consensus' and blamed that consensus for preventing the U.S. from achieving 'nice things,' implying that cultural depictions of Hitler and fascism have been exaggerated to delegitimize Christian nationalist aims.
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