Thursday, 14 August 2025

Tucker Carlson interviews Nick Fuentes


Tucker Carlson interviews Nick Fuentes - 27 October 2025.
NICK: "Zionist Jews like Dave Rubin, like Ben Shapiro, like Dennis Prager. It was these um the guys that were really controlling the media apparatus... Rupert Murdoch is an ally of Netanyahu, so he's aligned. Yeah. And he owns the whole News Corp empire...
Who is effectively opposing Neoconservative foreign policy, which has been the dominant foreign policy of the United States for my entire life, which has been so destructive?... Who are the voices who are sincere in their opposition to that and who have some ability to change the country's orientation on foreign policy? Those would include Marjorie Taylor Green, JD Vance, Matt Gates...

I don't really care what ADL thinks of me... My goal is America first. It's not about me. It's not about my personality. It's about winning for America...

We do need to be exclusive, not inclusive. We do need to be right-wing. We do need to be Christian. We do, on some level, need to be pro-white, not to the exclusion of everybody else, but recognizing that white people have a special heritage here as Americans... America first cannot backslide into this kind of inclusive populism message, which I perceived to be more like GOP slop...

Jewishness, Jewish identity, the Jewish religion... clearly the state of Israel and the Neocons are deeply motivated by that ethnic identity and their allegiance to Israel proceeds from that. You know, the plan of Greater Israel, the blood and soil nationalism of Israel, it stems from this ethno religion which is Judaism... As far as the Jews are concerned, I think that, like I said, you cannot actually divorce Israel and the Neocons, and all those things that you talk about, from Jewishness, ethnicity, religion, identity...

Israel is unlike every other country... because the Jewish people are in a diaspora all over the world... They're a stateless people, they're unassimilable. They've resisted assimilation for thousands of years... And now they have this territory in Israel. There is a deep religious affection for the state. It's bound up in their identity...

If you are a Jewish person in America... it's sort of a rational self-interest politically to say I'm a minority. I'm a religious ethnic minority. This is not really my home. My ancestral home is in Israel. There's like a natural affinity that Jews have for Israel. And I would say on top of that for the international Jewish community. They're extremely organized and many of them are critical of Israel or Israel's current government... But I guess what they have in common... is that they have this international community across borders, extremely organized that is putting the interests of themselves before the interests of their home country....

I don't think that's me being hateful. I don't think that's me being collectivist. I think that's understanding that identity politics, whether you love it or hate it, whatever you feel about it, it's a reality that we live in a world of Jews and Christians, of whites and blacks, these identities mean something to us and they mean things to each other, and we can't sort of wish them away. And it feels like white people and Christians are the only ones that do that."
TUCKER: "Well, there's no question about that, your last point, for sure. One of the reasons they do that is because they've been taught to hate themselves, of course, since the Second World War. Another reason is, however, the reality of a multiethnic country requires you to sort of set aside community or group interests in favor of corporate interests."

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