Friday, November 28, 2025

SICK DEMENTED DOG

 



The Mainstreaming of Extremism

 

The Mainstreaming of Extremism

This is how the normalization of hatred works. Not with a bang, but with a shrug.

Katie Phang

Nov 29

 

 

Over the Thanksgiving holiday, I was privileged to be able to travel to Europe with my family. We spent a few days in Amsterdam and I fell in love with the canals, the delicious food, and the kind people. Of course, we visited the Van Gogh Museum and I marveled at being able to see priceless works of art within just feet of where I stood and to learn about the amazing life of an artist whose genius was only realized after his death.

But the most powerful and memorable moment was when we visited the Anne Frank House. I thought it was important for my 11-year-old daughter to witness first-hand what another little girl, very close to her own age, experienced at the hands of the Nazis. To feel the cramped conditions of that Secret Annex, to listen to the voice of Anne’s father, Otto Frank, as he explained the crushing darkness of losing his entire family. To re-live the life of a brave little girl who may have passed 761 days in near-silence, but whose written words fought loudly to be heard for decades after her death.

Anne Frank’s life is one of the clearest moral markers in modern history. A young girl who was just 13 years old when she was forced into hiding because hate became law. A child whose voice survived when she tragically didn’t. Her diary is a testament to what happens when bigotry stops being fringe and becomes policy. Anne’s life is a reminder that the worst chapters of history begin not with gas chambers, but with rhetoric, with excuses, and with normalization.

And that is exactly why the current platforming and soft-pedaling of a white nationalist like Nick Fuentes by major conservative media figures should set off alarms for anyone paying attention.

Anne Frank was born in 1929 in Germany, a country sliding into authoritarianism. When the Nazi Regime made antisemitism an organizing principle of its government, her family fled to Amsterdam. For a few brief years, they thought they had dodged the extremism. But hate doesn’t respect borders, and by May of 1940, the Nazis had invaded the Netherlands and imported their ideology into the region.

By 1942, the signs were unmistakable: Jews were banned from public life, forced out of schools, stripped of all of their rights, and increasingly “othered”. When a deportation notice arrived for Anne’s sister, Margot, the entire family went into hiding in the Secret Annex behind Otto Frank’s company. Eight people shared just a few cramped rooms. They lived under constant threat, dependent on the courage of others, their own discipline, and the sheer will to survive the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam.

Anne wrote in her diary because it was the only freedom she had left. She dreamt of becoming a journalist one day. Her diary captured not only the daily strain and stress of hiding, but the rapid moral decay outside of the walls of their self-imposed prison. She documented the kind of danger that grows slowly at first: a society that accepts hate as a political identity that then becomes a government that codifies bigotry into laws.

The Secret Annex was discovered in August 1944 after informants tipped off the Nazis. This was just two months after the successful landing by Allied Forces at Normandy. I visited those incredible beaches last year; if only the soldiers that fell that day knew the desperate hope those trapped under the rule of the Nazis had for their success – as captured in Anne’s diary.

Anne and her sister were first sent to Auschwitz, but then the two were transferred to another Nazi concentration camp, Bergen-Belsen, in 1945. Bergen-Belsen would be their death beds. Otto Frank was the sole survivor of the Frank family, and he published her diary because he understood its purpose: to warn the world of the dangers of looking away, or even worse, collaborating or sympathizing. And today, we need that warning more than ever.

Let’s be clear: Nick Fuentes is not a “provocateur.” He is not “edgy.” He is not “contrarian.” Fuentes is a 27-year old, self-professed white supremacist, misogynist, Holocaust denier, anti-Semite, and a man who openly praises the ideology that murdered Anne Frank and millions of others deemed inferior. His beliefs are not ambiguous; they are explicit embraced and proudly broadcast. Fuentes posts conspiracy theories on social media like “white genocide and Jewish subversion” to his more than 1 million followers on the cesspool of X.

Fuentes has said that Hitler was “really fucking cool” and has denied that the Holocaust ever happened. But, in the same breath, he has compared the genocide of millions of Jews in concentration camps to the baking of cookies. And for years, even the farthest right corners of conservative media kept him at arm’s length. But now, the wall has cracked and those cracks are fracturing fast directly from the top. In recent months, public figures like Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly have treated Fuentes not as a toxic, far-right extremist, but as someone whose presence is negotiable under the guise of “public debate.”

Sidenote: I’m often asked where I go to do research for my reporting. One of the main research tools I use is called Ground News. Ground News shows me how stories are being covered from different political perspectives, and it highlights “blindspots” where only left-wing or right-wing media is covering a story.

Ground News has been a great sponsor of my YouTube channel, and they’re now sponsoring this post as well. I worked out a deal with them: if you go to ground.news/phang, you can get 40% off Ground News’ top-tier Vantage plan, which gives you unlimited access to all the research tools I use.

Ground News is subscriber-funded, so they don’t rely on ads that could introduce bias. By subscribing, you support both our channel and their independent team working to keep the media transparent.

Now back to where I left off.

Just last month, Carlson and Fuentes hung out like old buddies on Carlson’s podcast for more than 2 hours. That interview has now been viewed by more than 6.5 million people and counting on YouTube. Carlson’s idea- and image-laundering of Fuentes included portraying him as being just another voice that deserves to be heard because the world couldn’t possibly cancel Fuentes for having a different point of view. Just like the canonization of Charlie Kirk and the reframing of many of his odious ideas as being acceptable in the arena of “political debate,” the negative reactions to Nick Fuentes’ even more odious views are now being framed as “overblown” by folks like Tucker Carlson.

Kelly herself entertained conversations with Carlson and Ben Shapiro that treat Fuentes’ extremism as a potentially political inconvenience rather than a moral disqualifier. Her recent defense of Carlson’s sit-down with Fuentes, as well as her defense of Fuentes’ right to say extremist things because of “open dialogue,” veer dangerously into the land of normalizing anti-Semitism and hate. Fuentes, who would once have been radioactive, is being publicly shuffled toward respectability, all with the help of Carlson and Kelly, who provide the permission structure for people not only to listen to Fuentes, but to consider his raging anti-Semitism to be some version of legitimate policy.

And don’t forget about Convicted Felon Donald Trump’s infamous 2022 dinner at Mar-a-Lago with not only Nick Fuentes, but Kanye West, both of whom are in a race to the bottom of the barrel when it comes to who can be the most anti-Semitic. Trump breaking bread with Fuentes and West is yet another example of the normalization of hatred.

So this isn’t about one pundit or one interview. It’s about the signal being sent to the millions of viewers and followers of Carlson and Kelly. When major conservative voices minimize Fuentes’ disgusting ideology, they shift the boundary of what counts as acceptable. They turn Holocaust denial into a topic of conversation instead of a red line that must never be crossed. They turn antisemitism and white supremacy into a matter of opinion instead of a proven existential threat.

Extremism doesn’t rise because zealots get louder. It rises because powerful people who moonlight as thought leaders decide to play footsies with dangerous ideas. Because gatekeepers stop guarding the gate and the people with platforms act as if their responsibility is optional.

Anne Frank’s story is often wrapped in sentimentality, but the reality of her murder is harsher. Anne Frank didn’t die because her world was filled with monsters. She died because enough ordinary people decided that the monsters weren’t their problem. They looked away. They adjusted their discomfort in ways that allowed the unacceptable to become the normal.

Today’s political climate may not be 1930s Europe, but it’s getting damn close because some of the mechanics are becoming disturbingly familiar: the conspiracy theories, the dehumanizing language, the minimization of hate as “just politics.” The elevation of extremists as if they deserve to be taken seriously assisted by a far-right media ecosystem willing to normalize bigotry because it drives engagement and subscribers and followers.

There is a direct line between dismissing extremist rhetoric and emboldening extremist behavior. Nick Fuentes knows this and his supporters know this. And the public figures who treat him as a political curiosity should know it, too.

The rise of Nick Fuentes tells us something troubling about where the American Right is heading. When someone who denies the Holocaust and praises Hitler is treated as someone worth platforming versus unequivocally condemning, the line between mainstream conservatism and white supremacist ideology becomes dangerously thin, if not erased. The responsibility to draw that line clearly and forcefully belongs to everyone with a platform, especially those whose voices shape public opinion.

Anne Frank wrote that she believed people were “really good at heart.” She wrote it at a time when there was zero evidence of decency left for that kind of optimism. It wasn’t naïveté on her part; it was a clear challenge to us all. If Anne’s story teaches us anything, it’s that we don’t get to be passive bystanders to the normalization of hate. We don’t get to treat extremism as a ratings opportunity. And we don’t get to forget what happens when society decides that the worst ideas deserve a seat at the table.

History has already shown us where this road ends.

 

PUTIN'S PUPPET

 






GRIFTER GRABS GIFTS


 



MAGA BENEFITS


 






EPSTEIN - NEVER LET THIS PIG FORGET


 




Thursday, November 27, 2025

A Pardoned Turkey, an Unpardonable Man

 

A Pardoned Turkey, an Unpardonable Man

Nov. 27, 2025

A live turkey and an American flag.

 

By Frank Bruni and Bret Stephens

Mr. Bruni is a contributing Opinion writer. Mr. Stephens is an Opinion columnist.

Bret Stephens: Hi, Frank. There are a few turkeys we need to dig into, politically speaking, before we get to the actual one. Let me start with an appetizer: What do you think of Sean Duffy, the secretary of transportation, urging people to dress up for air travel?

Frank Bruni: I didn’t see that question coming! But good on you — it’s perfectly timed for the frenzied flying and crowded airports of the long Thanksgiving weekend. I must say, I don’t hate Duffy’s appeal for fewer track suits, less open-toe footwear. As long as we don’t veer into any elitist, priggish dress code, asking passengers to show minimal sartorial respect (and let’s keep hygiene in mind, too!) when jamming into a tight space with other humans doesn’t seem so very evil. You?

Bret: I was astounded by a statistic that went with Duffy’s plea: a 400 percent increase in “in-flight outbursts” since 2019, including 13,800 “unruly passenger incidents” since 2021. I realize there was a lot of pent-up rage that went with the pandemic, but that should have cooled off by now, don’t you think?

Frank: I think Americans are increasingly unfamiliar with — and uninterested in — the ideal, importance and rites of civility. The pandemic merely accelerated that.

Bret: “Manners are of more importance than laws. Upon them, in a great measure, the laws depend. The law touches us but here and there, and now and then. Manners are what vex or soothe, corrupt or purify, exalt or debase, barbarize or refine us. … According to their quality, they aid morals, they supply them, or they totally destroy them.”

Sorry, but I can’t pass up the temptation to quote Edmund Burke. Ireland’s greatest son would have understood the moment we’re in.

Frank: No apology necessary. I love it when you whisper sweet 18th-century philosophers in my ear. What you see in planes and airports is what you see in Congress and in the Trump administration. I’m not being glib. Too many of us are focused solely on getting what we want, and our preferred vent for frustration is demonizing and screeching at people who dare to get in our way. Is it such a leap from airborne outbursts to Secretary of Defense — excuse me, Secretary of War — Pete Hegseth trying to, I don’t know, court-martial Senator Mark Kelly, who’s a real American hero?

Bottom of Form

Bret: Hegseth — and Donald Trump, for that matter — are reminders that, even if “clothes make the man,” as the saying goes, short-fingered vulgarians will always be themselves. As for Senator Kelly, insisting that unlawful orders must not be obeyed makes him a patriot. If Major Hegseth wants to go after him, I’d say bring it on. It will go about as well for the War Department as the indictments of James Comey and Letitia James did for the Justice Department.

Frank: Kelly, Comey, James and too many others — they’re victims of the malignant belief among Trump and his co-conspirators that intimidation is the primary instrument of power and that the desire for vengeance is something to be quenched, like thirst. I can’t tell you, Bret, how much the sheer ugliness of it gnaws at me. I think part of what drives Robert F. Kennedy Jr., our esteemed secretary of illness — pardon me, health — to trash the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and elevate junk medicine over the real thing is that those behaviors flex his muscle and make him look fearsome in a way that boring, responsible stewardship wouldn’t. What’s power, after all, without the mischief and menace?

Bret: This has always been the Trumpian M.O.: the desperate, and unwittingly revealing, need to show that they’re the bigger man. Did Arnold Palmer ever feel such a compulsion? I doubt it.

The larger problem, though, is that a politics of politicized justice, of pursuing petty vendettas, winds up being self-defeating. The lesson of the efforts to prosecute Trump in the last administration is that trying to jail your political enemies winds up making them stronger. That’s exactly what this administration is going to wind up doing: strengthening its opponents. Which, perversely, may not be the worst thing. …

Frank: Not the worst thing at all. Let’s be clear about something, though: This notion, so popular with Trump and his abettors, that his politicized Department of Justice is simply a mirror of President Joe Biden’s and that the prosecutions he’s demanding echo the prosecutions of him is the epitome of a false equivalence and pure bunk. Yeah, the indictment and conviction of Trump for falsifying business records, in the case brought by Alvin Bragg in Manhattan, went overboard. But the other cases? They were solid. And they were righteous.

Bret: The only solid case I saw was the classified documents case.

Frank: Wait, wait — what about Georgia? There was audiotape. Trump is on the phone with Brad Raffensperger, the top election official in Georgia, telling him to go find and count 11,780 nonexistent votes. How is that not wrong and rank?

Bret: Wrong and rank don’t equal criminal. Fanni Willis, the hapless prosecutor, couldn’t make a case out of it, and now a judge has dismissed it for good. Generally speaking, the idea of trying to criminalize your political opponents is a bad one, except in some of the most egregious cases — most of which seem to take place in New Jersey.

Frank: Paging Robert Menendez!

Bret: You can trace Trump’s political resurrection, in early 2023 when the political smart set thought Ron DeSantis was the likely Republican nominee, almost to the moment the criminal indictments started to be brought against him. Do Democrats still think that treating Trump like an outlaw can hurt him or was ever going to — given that his whole political persona is based on its outlaw appeal?

Frank: I agree that the prosecutions ended up helping him, in part because Bragg’s was the first (and, in the end, only) one to come to trial. But in the same way that wrong and rank may not equal criminal, politically unwise does not equal unwarranted. Democrats weren’t going after Trump on a whim. It wasn’t persecution.

Bret: What’s going to wind up damaging Trump and other Republicans isn’t the illegality. It’s the incompetence. That’s where Democrats need to keep a laser focus. Is the cost of living going down? Are college graduates finding it easier to get a first job? Is the national debt under control? Do you feel prouder to be an American? Is the surrender plan that Trump has arranged for Ukraine a good idea that will bring lasting peace?

Frank: You have rhetorical questions, I have practical answers! No, no, no, no and no.

Bret: There’s a leadership issue with Democrats right now. I don’t envy Chuck Schumer, trying to hold together a Senate caucus that includes the “fight club” of colleagues like Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, versus the “don’t do stupid stuff club” of people like Jeanne Shaheen and John Fetterman. What’s your advice to our friend from Brooklyn?

Frank: Poor Chuck. He’s a very, very smart man with an unrivaled work ethic who wants more than anyone — trust me — for Democrats to reclaim the Senate majority. My advice to him and to that “fight club” of senators unhappy with him is the same: The other side within your party has some points and some wisdom. This isn’t a binary. Meet in the middle; the middle is underrated. If you let this disagreement get too noisy and nasty, you all lose. And so, God help us, does America.

Bret: The middle is two things, I think. First, it’s tonal. The tone of nonstop, sky-is-falling, democracy-is-ending hysteria that typifies a lot of liberal discourse isn’t helping. Second, it’s about policy. Democrats need to reclaim the dead center of American politics. In some ways, that’s going to require a considerable shift to the right. Like on tariffs, for instance, or on education. If Democrats really want to fight, picking a fight with entrenched teachers’ unions that are doing more to help themselves than to educate public school kids — whose reading and math scores keep falling — would be a good place to start.

Frank: You know I’m with you on the dangers of Democrats tacking too far left and on the verdant, fertile political pastureland of the center. If the party has any doubts about that verdure and fertility, just look at Trump’s sudden desire to get somewhere closer to the center by now reportedly considering the extension of the Affordable Care Act enhanced subsidies that his own legislation eliminated.

Bret: Here is where my inner conservative makes an appearance: Extending the subsidies when we are $38 trillion in debt is a bad idea! As policy. As politics, it’s surely good for Democrats.

Frank: I’m just noting Trump’s belated, baby-steps centrism.

Bret: Frank, I have to leave this conversation and get back to being a useful member of my family. Last question: Read anything good lately?

Frank: I loved a recent article in The New Yorker by Zach Helfand about the glow-up and metastasis of special-access airport lounges. Could anything be more America circa late 2025? (Well, apart from air rage and unruly passengers?) There’s the economic tiering of those lounges, the indulgence, the insistence that even air travel — which is supposed to be hellish, as a matter of character building — be bubble-wrapped and lubricated with bubbly drinks. Many affluent Americans no longer believe in civic institutions or community groups. But they believe in the free mediocre sushi and abundant charging stations of the airport lounge.

Bret: Oh, Frank. You just need to switch to a better airline, with better lounges and sushi. In the meantime, hope you have a great, joyous, politics-free Thanksgiving.

Frank: Same to you, my friend. Turkey, here I come!

Bret: That’s Eric Adams’s line, too, I’ll bet.

 

LIES AND MORE LIES FROM SUNDOWNING OLD TRUMP






 


DEMENTED AND DERANGED


 



GRASSLEY IS A CRIMINAL, A JAN 6TH CONSPIRATOR AND A SENILE OLD FOOL....

 






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