The relatively new ideology of Christian Nationalism, recently cooked up by people like Nick Fuentes, Andrew Torba, and Milo Yiannopoulos, will now be a hard sell, after its figurehead rapper and fashion icon Kanye West appeared on Jones's show wearing what appeared to be a gimp mask and then proceeded to make increasingly odd comments, many of them about Hitler.
OK, the Hitler comments are a little weird, but it's the bag over his head that clinches it for me. Kanye is pretty much a loony by this stage. pic.twitter.com/jFqCoC55rh
— Colin Liddell (@cbliddell) December 1, 2022
It's pretty clear by now that Britain in 1941 basically tricked the Americans into fighting on its side in WWII. pic.twitter.com/iKuW7y8rtp
— Colin Liddell (@cbliddell) December 1, 2022
Kanye West: "Ben Shapiro can tell how much change is in your pocket, just by hearing it jingle"
— Christcuck Pastors (@Christcucks2) December 2, 2022
😂😂😂 pic.twitter.com/EX2KpynJxC
The truth is that Kanye's notions of radical love and inclusion, embracing even Adolf Hitler, were entirely consistent with Christian teachings. All he was doing was following its logic to its final, absurd point.
However, the idea that Christian Nationalism can work as a significant political force in America seems increasingly distant and remote. It is not clear yet what the metapolitical effect of all this will be.
Maybe Nick Fuentes can say something to fix all this:
However, the idea that Christian Nationalism can work as a significant political force in America seems increasingly distant and remote. It is not clear yet what the metapolitical effect of all this will be.
Maybe Nick Fuentes can say something to fix all this:
Meow pic.twitter.com/UOo3Aw5BW2
— Nicholas J. Fuentes (@derangedfaggot) December 2, 2022
Pure Kino. I want more. At least this sort of chaos will be funny.
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