Trump’s Far-right Embrace
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/29/briefing/nick-fuentes-trump.html Version 0 of 1. Donald Trump claimed he did not know who Nick Fuentes was before sitting down to dinner with him and other guests at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate last week. But Fuentes is certainly well known to the groups that track racist and antisemitic trends in American society. While the Justice Department has described Fuentes in court papers as a white supremacist, that barely begins to fully capture the range of inflammatory views he has expressed denigrating Black people, Jews, women, L.G.B.T.Q. Americans, Muslims and immigrants. At age 24, Fuentes has become a star on the far right for a font of extremist statements that would have disqualified him from meeting with any other modern president. He has used a racist slur for Black people; called homosexuality “disgusting”; asserted that the Republican Party was “run by Jews, atheists and homosexuals”; said it would be better if women could not vote; compared himself to Hitler and hoped for “a total Aryan victory”; declared that “the First Amendment was not written for Muslims”; and maintained that Jim Crow segregation “was better for them, it’s better for us, it’s better in general.” Fuentes first came to prominence in 2017 when he attended the ultraright rally in Charlottesville, Va., after which Trump asserted that there were “very fine people on both sides” even as he denounced neo-Nazis. Fuentes dropped out of Boston University after saying he had received threats stemming from his attendance at the rally and began hosting a livestream show, “America First,” that same year, generating an audience of followers called Groypers, named for a cartoon frog. He founded the America First Political Action Conference in 2020 and hosted far-right Republicans in the House including Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Paul Gosar of Arizona. Fuentes rejects the term white supremacist because it is an “anti-white slur,” but embraces the language of white racism and antisemitism and calls himself a “reactionary” and a “misogynist.” Trump often claims not to know much about extremists whose support he accepts, as he did with the former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke, the Proud Boys and followers of QAnon. But even if it were true in this case, Fuentes was brought to the dinner by Kanye West, the rapper now known as Ye, who was invited by Trump at the very moment West was under fire for antisemitic comments of his own. And even afterward, Trump did not condemn Fuentes, leaving white nationalists to view the dinner as validation. While news organizations are naturally reluctant to amplify hateful statements, it is important to understand just what we’re talking about when we discuss someone welcomed to the table of a former president seeking to return to the White House. So here is a summary compiled with the help of my colleague Ian Prasad Philbrick from research by the Anti-Defamation League, the Southern Poverty Law Center and other organizations and news outlets. Fuentes did not respond to requests for an interview passed along through a lawyer. Fuentes regularly invokes fears of a “white genocide” and echoes replacement theory, which holds that elites seek to “replace” white Americans with immigrants and other people of color. The theory has inspired a number of mass shootings in recent years, including at a Pittsburgh synagogue, a Walmart in El Paso and a Buffalo supermarket. “Our civilization is being dismantled, our people are being genocided, and conservatives can’t think past what will play well with liberal media in the next election,” Fuentes once tweeted. He has also said, “The Founders never intended for America to be a refugee camp for nonwhite people.” And on Alex Jones’s Infowars last year, he said, “I don’t see Jews as Europeans and I don’t see them as part of Western civilization, particularly because they are not Christians.” Fuentes has advanced Holocaust denial, or what he calls Holocaust “revision,” most memorably in a video riff in which he compared Nazi death camps to Cookie Monster baking cookies, suggesting it was not possible to have killed six million Jews during World War II. He later said the video was only a “lampoon,” while saying he does acknowledge the Holocaust, and he has said he uses “irony” to discuss taboo subjects. While again saying he was only kidding, Fuentes appeared to endorse violence against women, telling one listener on his livestream who asked how to punish a wife “for getting out of line” that he should hit her. “Why don’t you take your hand and give her a vicious slap right across her face, right across her ignorant face?” he said. “Why don’t you give her a vicious and forceful backhanded slap with your knuckles right across her face, disrespectfully, and make it hurt?” He then disavowed violence and claimed he was joking, saying he would never strike a woman “unless she deserved it.” Fuentes has praised the fall of the American-backed government in Afghanistan because the Taliban “is a conservative, religious force” while “the U.S. is godless and liberal,” and cheered on President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, saying, “Can we give a round of applause for Russia?” He has said that the crusades and the inquisitions were “pretty good stuff” and that he wanted the “people that run CNN to be arrested and deported or hanged.” As for the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, when he and other Trump supporters rallied outside the building, Fuentes has called it “awesome” and “lighthearted mischief.” On the anniversary of the riot, he revered it as “part of our new heritage,” adding that it should be a holiday. “This is a historic moment for us,” he said. “We should celebrate that it happened, absolutely.” Related: Some Jewish Republicans who were among Trump’s staunchest supporters are backing away over concerns he is legitimizing antisemitism. Protests in China The protests against Covid lockdowns across China came after months of economic pain. Some young people described how the demonstrations became a “tipping point.” The unrest in the world’s biggest manufacturing nation adds uncertainty to a global economy already burdened by inflation and the war in Ukraine. China is turning to repression and surveillance to stop the protests. In Beijing, many who gathered had never demonstrated and were unsure how far to go. The White House reacted cautiously, affirming “the right to peacefully protest” without criticizing China’s government. International Villagers near the recaptured Ukrainian city of Kherson unearthed the bodies of six men killed execution-style, evidence of possible Russian war crimes. Antiwar activists are fleeing Russia to claim asylum in the U.S., but many end up in immigration prisons. Some Biden administration officials are pushing to send armed foreign forces to stabilize Haiti. Business Elon Musk accused Apple of threatening to pull Twitter from its App Store. The cryptocurrency lender BlockFi, which had financial ties to the collapsed exchange FTX, filed for bankruptcy. President Biden urged Congress to intervene in a labor dispute between rail companies and their unionized workers, an effort to avert a possible strike. Other Big Stories The world’s largest active volcano, Mauna Loa in Hawaii, erupted for the first time in decades. It posed no immediate risk to local communities. Representative A. Donald McEachin, a Virginia Democrat who was overwhelmingly re-elected this month, died at 61 after fighting colorectal cancer. Five Connecticut officers were charged with misdemeanors after a Black man was paralyzed while they transported him in a police van. Green Sprouts recalled thousands of bottles and cups for toddlers over a possible risk of lead poisoning. Opinions Unconditional love defines parenthood. 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(Experts broke down Brazil’s chances if an injury to their star, Neymar, persists.) Censor: China’s match broadcasts are limiting close-up shots of the crowds of maskless fans, the type of gatherings that conflict with its own strict Covid rules. America’s big moment: The U.S. faces Iran at 2 p.m. Eastern today, a showdown between teams representing geopolitical foes. The math is simple: If the Americans win, they advance. “Play with no fear”: The former U.S. star Clint Dempsey offered advice to the young players on the verge of history. How do you clean a colossal, more than 500-year-old statue? Very carefully. Six times a year, Eleonora Pucci, the in-house restorer of the Galleria dell’Accademia, takes on the daunting task of tidying Michelangelo’s David. It begins with a photographic close-up to track how the statue is faring, and to verify how much dust and microscopic debris has accumulated. Then, standing atop scaffolding, Pucci dusts the statue with a synthetic brush and sucks up any particles with a specially designed vacuum strapped to her back. “To be able to contribute, even in a small way, to the conservation of David’s beauty,” Pucci said, makes hers “the best job in the world.” What to Cook Turn your last leftover turkey into barbecue sandwiches with pickles and slaw. What to Read “Stella Maris,” Cormac McCarthy’s second novel this year, is a small and frequently elegiac novel, our book critic writes. On Broadway In “KPOP,” the worldwide sensation meets musical theater. Late Night The hosts joked about Trump’s dinner with Fuentes. Now Time to Play The pangram from yesterday’s Spelling Bee was excelling. Here is today’s puzzle. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Energies (five letters). And here’s today’s Wordle. After, use our bot to get better. Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. P.S. This Giving Tuesday, consider donating to The Times’s Neediest Cases Fund. Here’s today’s front page. “The Daily” is about the Supreme Court. Matthew Cullen, Lauren Hard, Lauren Jackson, Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com. Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. |