Today, Explained

Hasan Piker vs. The Establishment

35 min
Jun 13, 2026about 1 month ago
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Summary

This episode examines the controversy surrounding leftist Twitch streamer Hasan Piker's growing influence within Democratic circles post-2024 election. It features interviews with John Cohen from Third Way, a centrist Democratic think tank opposing Piker's involvement with the party, and Piker himself responding to allegations of anti-Semitism, misogyny, and incitement to violence.

Insights
  • Centrist Democrats are strategically positioning themselves against progressive influencers they view as liabilities, using mainstream media platforms to amplify concerns about brand damage and electoral viability
  • The debate reveals a fundamental tension within the Democratic Party between authenticity-driven digital media strategies and traditional political messaging, with competing visions for party direction
  • Accusations of anti-Semitism and violent rhetoric are being weaponized in intra-party conflicts, with disputed interpretations of statements and context becoming central to legitimacy arguments
  • Streaming media creates accountability gaps where controversial figures can build massive audiences without traditional editorial oversight, complicating party alignment decisions
  • The Israel-Palestine issue has become a defining generational and ideological dividing line within Democratic politics, with younger voters and digital-native audiences holding significantly different positions than party establishment
Trends
Centrist think tanks increasing direct media campaigns against progressive influencers to shape party direction and candidate selectionStreaming platforms becoming primary political organizing and messaging channels for younger demographics, forcing traditional parties to engage with creators outside institutional controlIntra-party conflict shifting from policy debates to character and credibility attacks, with fact-checking and context disputes becoming political toolsDemocratic Party fracturing along digital-native vs. traditional media lines, with different communication strategies and authenticity standardsIsrael-Palestine becoming a primary litmus test for Democratic Party loyalty and coalition membership, replacing traditional economic policy debatesProgressive groups demonstrating limited electoral success in competitive districts despite growing digital influence and cultural prominenceControversy monetization in streaming creating perverse incentives where inflammatory statements drive engagement and revenue regardless of political consequences
Topics
Democratic Party Strategy and Coalition BuildingStreaming Media and Digital Political OrganizingAnti-Semitism Accusations and Context DisputesIsrael-Palestine Policy and Democratic Party AlignmentAuthenticity vs. Institutional Messaging in Digital MediaProgressive vs. Centrist Democratic FactionsElectoral Performance of Progressive CandidatesContent Moderation and Accountability in StreamingYoung Male Voter Engagement StrategiesPolitical Violence Rhetoric and ResponsibilityMisogyny and Offensive Language in Political CommentaryHarm Reduction Voting and Lesser-Evil PoliticsMedia Ecosystem and Political InfluenceThird Way Think Tank InfluenceTwitch Platform Politics
Companies
Third Way
Centrist Democratic think tank leading opposition to Hasan Piker's influence within the party; published WSJ op-ed cr...
Pod Save America
Prominent Democratic media platform that featured Hasan Piker at a conference, triggering Third Way's public criticis...
Twitch
Streaming platform where Hasan Piker broadcasts; temporarily suspended him for violent rhetoric; primary venue for hi...
Wall Street Journal
Published Third Way's opinion piece criticizing Democratic coziness with Hasan Piker in its opinion section
Our Revolution
Left-wing political group associated with Bernie Sanders; cited as having zero successful red-to-blue congressional s...
Justice Democrats
Progressive political organization associated with AOC and Bernie Sanders; cited as having zero successful red-to-blu...
New Democrats
House Democratic coalition credited with flipping 50 congressional seats from red to blue since 2018, contrasted with...
CNN
Referenced in context of Mike Johnson's Medicare fraud discussion with Caitlin Collins, which Piker was responding to...
People
John Cohen
Co-authored WSJ op-ed criticizing Democratic alignment with Hasan Piker; argues Piker's extremism damages Democratic ...
Hasan Piker
Subject of episode; leftist streamer facing criticism from centrist Democrats over anti-Semitic statements, misogyny,...
Astead Herndon
Moderates interviews with John Cohen and Hasan Piker; asks probing questions about anti-Semitism accusations, context...
Bernie Sanders
Referenced as political figure associated with progressive groups and Hasan Piker's political movement; invoked in el...
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Referenced as progressive political figure associated with Justice Democrats and similar political movements to Hasan...
Kamala Harris
Criticized by Hasan Piker for being equivalent to Trump on Gaza policy; represents Democratic establishment position ...
Donald Trump
Referenced as existential political threat that Democrats should focus on defeating; invoked in discussions of party ...
Nick Fuentes
Compared to Hasan Piker by Third Way as example of extremist rhetoric; represents right-wing anti-Semitism comparison...
Candace Owens
Cited by Third Way as far-right anti-Semite for comparison to Hasan Piker; represents conservative extremism parallel
Rick Scott
Subject of Hasan Piker's controversial statement about Medicare fraud; cited as example of hyperbolic rhetoric that g...
Quotes
"The question is, should Democrats be supporting him? Should Democrats campaign with him? Should Democrats seek his endorsement? Should Democrats cozy up to him? And the answer is definitively no."
John Cohen, Third WayEarly in episode
"If Democrats are going to beat MAGA and expand the map in the House, the Senate and the White House, the only way to do that is to offer an alternative to the extremism of Trumpism, not to mirror it."
John Cohen, Third WayMid-interview
"I'm a harm reduction voter. I'm a lesser evil voter. And therefore, I would vote for Hamas over Israel every single time."
Hasan PikerPiker interview section
"The entire point I'm making there is to cause you to second guess when we have this back and forth conversation, as I'm sure many people who will be tuning in to listen to this conversation will maybe think about this perspective differently than they ever have."
Hasan PikerDiscussing provocative statements
"Your booze mean nothing when I've seen what makes you cheer. And guess what? The people also feel the exact same way."
Hasan PikerFinal response to Third Way criticism
Full Transcript
After the 2024 election, leftist Twitch streamer Hassan Piker has blown up in popularity, becoming a go-to voice for the Democratic Party on questions about the new internet, how to reach young men, and even the political costs of the Biden White House's policy on Gaza. But Piker's glow-up has angered a section of Democrats who are growing louder in voice, and they argue that Piker's traffic and anti-Semitism encourages violence and engages in open misogyny. Now Piker is controversial, no doubt, but is he toxic? And how much of this blowback is tied to Piker the person versus the leftist politics he stands for? This week, we'll talk to a centrist Democratic think tank that's been leading the anti-Hassan Piker charge, and then we'll talk to the streamer himself. Let's dig in. So in March, a Democratic group called Third Way published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal's opinion section saying Democrats are too cozy with Hassan Piker. Now Third Way isn't just any group. It's probably the premier centrist think tank in Washington, and it holds a lot of sway with the party's moderate elected officials. So I wanted to talk to Third Way, not just about their argument in this article, but about their motivations and their goals. So I connected with John Cohen. He's the president of Third Way and the co-author of the piece in the journal. Support for today's show comes from BetterHelp. Summer is here, which means travel is picking up, the kids are out of school, and fun is in the air. But juggling it can be a lot. So if you're feeling overwhelmed, counting down the days until school returns, or just worried you're missing critical days of sunshine, BetterHelp is here. BetterHelp can match you with a licensed therapist who can help you through it all. You can fill out a short questionnaire to identify your preferences, or if it's not the right fit, you can switch at any time. You don't have to say yes to everything this summer. You can find support in therapy. Sign up and get 10% off at betterhelp.com slash americaactually. That's better, H-E-L-P.com slash americaactually. Thank you so much for joining us. I appreciate it. Delighted to be here. So to begin quickly, let's hear your case. Third Way has argued that Democrats are too cozy with Hasan Piker. Why? Look, bottom line is it's a free country, and I believe in free speech. So Hasan Piker should be free to have his own show, to stream, to say, and do whatever he wants. That's not the question. The question is, should Democrats be supporting him? Should Democrats campaign with him? Should Democrats seek his endorsement? Should Democrats cozy up to him? And the answer is definitively no. Not just because the things he says are profoundly offensive, and I will run through those in a moment, but because he is such an extremist that it will only do damage to Democrats and the Democratic brand and hurt their chances of beating right-wing populism and expanding the map across the country. Hasan Piker, by his own words, is anti-American. He is bigoted. He's anti-Semitic, and he is deeply misogynistic. What was the impetus to publish this piece in March? Why this year? Trump is president. Democrats have very little power in Washington. What made you all publish this now? We publish this for a specific reason and a broad reason. The broad reason is that if Democrats are going to not just be Trump and Trumpism, but mug a long run, we need to be able to build majorities in lots of red and purple places. Right now, the Democratic Party is perceived as more extreme than mainstream in many places, and a majority of Democratic voters want the party to move towards the center. If the party aligns with folks who are this extreme and cozy's up to them, it's going to make it much harder, not easier for Democrats to not just flip the house and get the White House back, but beat Vance and Moga and Rubio and the rest of them long run. The specific impetus was that the pod save folks, very prominent Democrats, had featured Hasan Piker at a conference where they are officially elevating him and aligning him with Democrats. Okay, let's dump into the article. The article opens up by likening Hasan to far right anti-Semites like Nick Fuentes and Candace Owens. Part of the piece reads, quote, left-wing anti-Semites are savvier than the Nazi endorsers on the right who marched in Charlottesville, Virginia and set for dinner with the president. This was the first sentence that kind of jumped out to me in the piece because it does seem like savvier is doing some work here. There are material differences between Piker and Fuentes. At least some. Piker has voted for Democrats. Harrison 2024, Biden in 2020. He has openly opposed Trump. While Fuentes has openly praised Hitler, dying with Trump kind of as the piece referenced, does that make them categorically different or just packaged differently? How is that not a material difference, just savvy as the piece? Hasan Piker is dangerously close to Nick Fuentes in the level of bigotry and racism and misogyny that he espouses. I mean, it's just staggering. Let me just free your listeners. They really need to understand who this guy is. This is what Hasan Piker said about Miley Cyrus. I want to say thank you to Miley Cyrus for showing off her camel toe with the VMAs the other night. I always knew Hannah Montana was a little fucking slut. Don't even try to hide it. Come on, Astead. Why are we defending this? I guess I'm not really defending it. I'm really just asking about the specific thing that I asked about. I know, but that's horrific, horrific. Why should this guy be anywhere near the Democratic Party? I just want to re-level that. I'm not here for the Hasan Piker is a good person or not question. I'm here for the claims that the article is making. And I guess I wanted to just ask my question again. Sure. The U.S. and Candace Owens are Trump supporters who have at times said nice things about Hitler. Hasan Piker has not done that, has voted for Democrats, has advocated against Trump. And I'm saying, does that make him savvier? Or does that make him different? Got it. So Hasan Piker says, if you're someone who says, I want there, if I'm a liberal Zionist, it's like saying you're a liberal Nazi. That is anti-Semitic to its core to say that someone who believes in the existence of Israel is the same as a Nazi. I can't really see the difference between that and Nick Fuentes. On his voting for Democrats, this is what he said about Kamala Harris. He said Democrats, if they were in charge now, would be doing 100% the exact same thing. Same thing he means as Trump. One to one, make no fucking mistake. Anyone who tries to tell you Kamala Harris would be different is a fucking delusional moron. So no, he's not for Democrats. He's for China and Russia. He has said that America deserved 9-11. America is, quote, truly the fourth right with Newt. So I just, it's not a bargain with you. It's that I reject the whole premise. This guy is like Nick Fuentes. And we shouldn't be close to him. And the article also says this language can be get violence. Last year, an alleged murderer seemingly inspired by left-wing rhetoric killed two people for the crime of being Jewish at the Capitol Jewish Museum. Democrats must understand that accepting anti-Semitic figures like Mr. Piker into the mainstream puts Jewish lives in danger. Now I think certainly unequivocally, anti-Semitism is on the rise that represents a violent threat to many Americans. I think we can both acknowledge that. But the CNNP's link there connecting Piker to the violence doesn't even mention his name. So I kind of was wondering where that connection came from. Do we have evidence that Piker's rhetoric has led to violence directly? There is no question that bigoted extremist rhetoric, including anti-Semitic rhetoric on the right and the left, absolutely encourages violence. There's a ton, ton written and thought about this. That's incredibly clear. And also, so we're clear, Piker is someone who actively encourages violence. So let me give you a quote from Hassan Piker. This is about people who own property, kill them, kill those motherfuckers and murder those motherfuckers in the street. Let the streets let the streak soak in their fucking red capitalist blood, dude. Okay, we're moving on. The moderate democratic base is heavily working class people of color. It doesn't really exist without that kind of diverse base. I wondered about where this priority comes from. If third way's point is that Democrats are struggling in places to win over more moderate voters, how do you know that though moderates in question kind of at the base of the party share this priority? Do they care about Hassan Piker? Let's take African American voters who want to win. We just held a major conference in South Carolina. Those folks want to win. They don't want a party that is deeply connected to and associated with hateful bigoted extremists like Hassan Piker. That is their priority is winning, beating back Trumpism and expanding the map. They know in their bones that to do that, you don't become a mirror image of the other party, the right wing that is extremist and bigoted. We don't need two extremist parties in this country. If Democrats are going to beat MAGA and expand the map in the House, the Senate and the White House, the only way to do that is to offer an alternative to the extremism of Trumpism, not to mirror it. How do you know that? I understand you're making a point about the clearly offensive things that he has said throughout his time in public life. But there is clearly an audience for Hassan Piker's political message. So I'm saying if Cal would you separate those two things? How do you deal with the reality that Democrats have changed on terms of America's relationship to Israel? That things like Medicare for all are increasingly popular. Things like abolishize are growing in popularity. So I'm saying that is, I think, a more full representation of the stuff he talks about politically. How are you dealing with that shift among the Democratic base, even if you're making the argument that he himself is offensive? So in 2025, in the off year elections, Mondani, a Democratic socialist, won in New York. And Sheryl and Spanberger won in New Jersey and Virginia. They were both moderates. Where was turnout higher? New York, Virginia or New Jersey? That feels like an unfair question from a local to the state-wide elected. Come on. We're talking about a mayor's raise versus a governor's raise. That's a trick question. That's not a trick question. It was higher in Virginia and New Jersey. So this idea. I mean, Mondani's favorability rating is much higher than Sheryl's or Spanberger's. You can pick a number and make this argument that either way. I'll give you another example. So since 2018, a central task has been to flip red congressional seats to blue. That's a central task in the Trump era. Crucial, crucial task. House new Democrats have backed candidates and invested in candidates who flip 50 seats. Our revolution, and Justice Democrats, two of the most prominent left-wing groups associated with Piker and Bernie and AOC, etc., have flipped literally zero. Zero. Okay. Well, that tells you where voters are at. Voters are saying, I want the moderate candidate with the moderate vision. That's how they flip 50 seats. But I don't want a voter with a left-wing vision. Is it true that there are deep left places in the United States where you can make even more blue? Of course there are. But that's not the central political challenge of our time. If you want to beat MAGA's to make blue places blue or it's to flip red places to blue. And the track record there is unequivocal. These folks have tried over and over and over since 2018. They only make blue places bluer. So I reject the premise of your question. It is true that Mondani can be popular in a deep blue place. And it's also true that lots and lots of moderates can get elected in purple and red places. Those things are simultaneously true. They don't just prove each other. Yeah, yeah. I agree with that. I mean, I think that particularly to your point about like the left coalitions not necessarily succeeding in red to blue places, I think that's unequivocally true. Their goal seems to be a little different. Their goal is to somewhat change the Democratic Party and the way that MAGA and Trump others had a specific goal of changing the Republican Party through primaries, through pushing candidates that believe a specific vision. It seems like we're talking about kind of two different things. But I mean, let's ask a question. If the existential threat politically of our time is MAGA and Trump, the job is to beat them to win the White House to flip the Senate and to flip the House. That's the job. Why would you then try to make blue places bluer? That's a serious distraction if you believe that MAGA is an existential threat to our democracy and our way of life. Donald Trump is president right now, not because of progressive. So really, you know, like the existential threat of Donald Trump, that goal, Democrats failed it. Like he won again. It is all I'm saying. Like it doesn't seem to me that the question is about the existential threat of MAGA. It feels to me that really where the left and others are trying to do is say in the rubble, that is this Donald Trump reality. How is the kind of Democratic Party moving forward? It actually seemed like you were kind of leaning in that question too. In terms of shaping the Democratic Party's future also. So I feel like this red to blue point is kind of a diversion from what you all are both doing, which is pushing the Democratic Party. I don't think it's a diversion at all, meaning this instead. If you're offering a vision for the future of the Democratic Party, right, that vision cannot just be your dreams of what you want to have happen. It has to be grounded in political reality, right? Your vision has to have at least 50% of what you're offering has to be concrete proof that you can over and over and over again expand this deep blue formula to places that are red and purple. Because if you can't do that, all you're saying is we can hold a small slice of the country and make it even bluer, but we have no formula to actually flip the rest of the country. That's a non-starter is a political vision. That's where it connects, which is let's have great ideas. I agree with you. Great debate about left-wing ideas. Half of what you offer is a political movement has to be a formula for flipping the country, your direction, and these guys have utterly failed at that. Let's ask where we wanted to land. We're going to talk to Piker as we mentioned about these controversial statements, about the distinction between antisemitism and anti-zionism, and what he thinks about his responsibility to the audience. I think one thing that's important that we haven't really talked about is this is different than kind of a traditional media person or endorser because these Twitch streamers make a lot of money from controversy and there's not really a gut check on accountability. So all I'm saying is we're going to ask about all that. Is there anything that you think he hasn't answered or is a question that you want to put in front of him from third way? My question to Hassan Piker is, is he ever going to apologize sincerely and profusely and go on an actual apology tour for the dozens and dozens and dozens of bigoted offensive misogynistic things he said or is he just going to keep standing by all of them? Just again, I want to come back. Here's what we are asking of Democrats. Don't campaign with the guy. Don't platform him. Don't cozy up to him. That's all we're saying. And like, you know, again, like, I mean, Hassan Piker is so profoundly offensive that Graham Platner wouldn't campaign with him. And that's really saying something right now. I'll let you get the last word on that. Thank you, Jonathan, for coming going. Thanks for having me. Up next with Hassan Piker has to say in response. Dell PCs with Intel inside are built for the moments you plan and the ones you don't. For the time you forgot your charger at the gate. Passengers, we are now on our initial ascent. Or when you're bouncing between projects like a ping pong ball. We build PCs with long lasting battery life so you're not scrambling for a charger. And built in intelligence so you can stay focused on whatever you're doing. Dell Technologies, built for you. Dell.co.uk forward slash Dell PCs. Hassan Piker, thank you for joining America, actually. Thank you for having me. I wanted to talk to you because as you know, we talked to the president of Third Way, the centrist democratic group that has argued that Democrats are too cozy with you. And we dug into their argument and it seemed both substantive and personal. They say that your brand of politics is bad for the Democratic party, which we'll dig into later, but they also argue that just the scope of things that you have said are too offensive and that you have not apologized for them. Racist thing, anti-Semitic thing, sexist things. I wanted to start with some of those statements that get quoted a lot. I know that some of which they quoted were not taken in context, but a couple others seemed as if there were some merit to them. So I'm going to play the first one. I want to say thank you to Miley Cyrus for showing off her camel toe at the VMAs the other night. I always knew Hannah Montana was a little slut. Don't even try to hide it. Look. Okay, so that was one of them. I want to say, how should we think about these past statements? Do you stand by them while you apologize? Oh my God, it's so cringe. That is an unearthed attempt at a satirical pop culture slash dating advice show that I was trying to do that was like bro-focused. And of course, I've apologized for it. I mean, it's nasty. It obviously doesn't reflect my current values and it hasn't reflected my values since like, I would say 2014. What would you ascribe that to? Like what was the shift in values? Is that just growing up or is that like something happened that make you think, let me pivot away from this kind of. No, it was a desperate attempt to try to be funny. And I was much younger back then too. It was far too misogynistic, which is why we deleted it almost on release. But then nothing gets deleted on the internet, of course. Yeah, I mean, so third-party argument was that you have not apologized. You're saying you have. Oh, of course. And not only that, but also a big part of my politics and a big part of my worldview revolves around rehabilitation, both in the criminal justice system, but also the draconian attitude that I think a lot of Americans have towards rehabilitation in the social crimes division. And I use examples such as that one that you just showed as a way to say, look, like I had misogynistic opinions in the past. I've had transphobic opinions in the past and I've worked through them, understanding that it causes harm to others and it also is not reflective of who I am as a person. I mean, that's one of the statements, but there's a couple others and I do want to play another that is more recent. This comes from the question the third way was raising about anti-Semitism, which seems central to the reasons that the UK recently barred you from entry. You have said that the masses a thousand times better than the Israeli state and doubled down on it later, saying that you would vote for them over Israel every time. You once referred to ultra-Orthodox Jews as inbred, but the one that they focused on most specifically was a time on stream when you were arguing with the Jewish man and said this statement. You want every single Palestinian to be executed ruthlessly in the streets so that you can build another fucking theme park on Gaza. You fucking, baying pig. You fucking bloodthirsty, violent pig dog. Now I wanted to ask about that because they brought up that specific slur as something that you also have not apologized for. In the aggregate, how is this not add up to someone who has trafficked in anti-Semitic tropes? Yeah, and I didn't even know that this is like in any way, shape, or form anti-Semitic. The utilization of the term pig dog is what is in contention, right? Yeah, I didn't realize that that, I don't even think anyone else realized that this was actually an anti-Semitic statement. I've only heard about it being referred to as like capitalist big dog and red alert. It's a common thing that socialists have deployed against capitalists and fascists. But that common thing could be based in a history that has anti-Semitic ties to it, right? I didn't know that. Well to the same question becomes the same, they were asking specifically about apology. Is there one for this statement? Oh, for utilization of the term pig dog? Yeah, I mean, of course, it's a look, I don't think they're being sincere when they say this stuff. But yeah, of course, I'm not, I never want to offend entire swaths of the population unless they're fascists. The third statement they talked about that we want to ask about again before we get to the kind of broader questions is that you had advocated for violence. Now I pushed back against some of their claims specific to anti-Semitism because I don't think that really added up. But there was a moment in a 2025 live stream when you said- If you cared about Medicare fraud or Medicaid fraud, you would kill Rick Scott. That comment got you temporarily pulled from Twitch, but you've since said it was a figure of speech. I still wanted to ask though, based on their argument in a country with real political violence, is that irresponsible? Yeah, that was, that also was directly clipped out of context. I was actually referencing Mike Johnson talking to Caitlin Collins on CNN. He was bringing up the fact that they were not actually taking people off of Medicare or not trying to erode Medicare expenditure, but instead combating Medicare fraud. And I said, if you, Mike Johnson, actually cared about Medicare fraud, you would- And I used hyperbolic language there and I shouldn't have. No, the whole point of that was, and I followed it up in the longer conversation. It's pretty obvious. I'm talking about Rick Scott committing at the time award-winning amounts of Medicare fraud. I asked because I think they were trying to make a larger argument about the responsibility or lack of responsibility to your audience, which is a big one. As that has grown over the years, how have you thought about the balance between filling the hours of day that streaming requires and not leaning in to the most controversial or most bombastic version of yourself? Do you think about that? I do, absolutely. I mean, I think the fact that over the course of 10,000 hours, the only choice quotes that they can find are from like 2013 or something that like, I don't think anybody knew was an anti-Semitic slur at all. Rick Scott was 20, 25, you know? Rick Scott is a more recent example and I think that once again is, I've been visited by the Secret Service before. Secret Service didn't show up for that one. The FBI did not show up for that one because it's pretty obvious what I'm saying. I'm not talking about advocating to assassinate an American politician. There is always going to be opportunities for groups to create and manufacture outrage, manufacture controversy around everything that I'm saying. The medium that I occupy makes it virtually impossible to be controversy ridden, right? I mean, to be... Controversy free. Yeah, controversy free, sorry. Have you changed how you go about those eight hours as the focus on you has gotten bigger? Absolutely, but I think it was post-October 7. It wasn't recent. Okay. Post-October 7, I very quickly found out that there were numerous advocacy organizations and numerous groups on the Internet that were volunteering to do this thing. They set up a website called Hamas Abbey, I think on October 14th, 2023. It's incredible. October 7 happens. It's horrifying. The world is in crisis. Israel very quickly goes into Gaza, starts murdering Palestinians by the hundreds, by the thousands. And there were people on the Internet whose first goal in that moment was to set up a website to log every single thing that I have said about Israel from October 8th and onward. And that's when I realized I have to be unbelievably careful, which is precisely the reason why since October 8th, 2023, I've talked for thousands of hours on this issue. And there's like three things that they can point to. And one of them is me referring to ultra far-right ethno-nationalists and fascists as Inbred, which is something that I deploy against all matter of races and white nationalists in general because that revolves around purity politics, like genetic purity politics at the end of the day. And I think that's a normal pejorative to deploy against neo-Nazis and far-right settlers as well. I guess I do want to do clarify one big point, though. I do think that the double down you made on Pod Save America. I'm a harm reduction voter. I'm a lesser evil voter. And therefore, I would vote for Hamas over Israel every single time. Is to some people enough of an offense to ignore the rest of, I think, the context you are trying to lay out. I want to give you another opportunity. I've already tripled down on it. Yeah, yeah, I'm like, you're about to triple down on it. No, no, I'm about to quadruple down. Because I tripled down on it. I tripled down on it on LBC. I think the quadrupling and tripling down on it is also part of the process. I'm aware that this is something that most people have never encountered. This is not a statement that they would ever hear in polite society. And that's kind of the purpose of it. It's intentionally provocative. It is intentionally provocative, but I don't think it's inappropriate. If the point of the statement is to underscore the violent atrocities that the Israeli government has committed, particularly over the last three years, I think that people understand that. But doesn't that flatten the atrocities Hamas has committed on some of the same people? I think that that flattening actually does a disservice to the Palestinian resistance fronts in its entirety because there is no flattening. When I say Israel is a thousand times worse, I mean it because the reality of the matter is in the Western world, once any non-state actor is designated as a terrorist organization, there is a good deal of racialized animosity demonstrated towards these sorts of groups as well. And I think that it's important for people to understand these are normal human beings at the end of the day that have suffered tremendous loss over the course of- I guess people maybe not care about the discrimination Hamas faces. No, no, but it's very important to understand that because it's not Hamas. Hamas is not an alien entity. These are Palestinians, right? Of course it's important to understand how they arrived at militant resistance, why they're doing it, and how their methods have also evolved, and how such heinous acts of violence even take place. A lot of people want to just believe that Hamas did this because they're violent, barbaric anti-Semites. I don't think that's the case. Actually, I know that that's not the case. This is like, are there anti-Semitic people in that- I'm about to say, there's certainly more. Of course. I'm like, we're not about to say that Hamas is a movement with some anti-Semitism makes sense. Of course. Now, of course, of course there's anti-Semitic people within the Palestinian resistance. There's anti-Semitic people in America. There's anti-Semitic people everywhere. The anger or the goals of Hamas is to make the occupation as costly as possible while also simultaneously trying to negotiate with Israel at a time when Palestinians had been completely written off from the conversation and that it was all but over, that the ethnic cleansing was an inevitability. I guess I just want to say that I don't think people who are maybe more good faith upset by this would not be upset by the statement of we need to understand the conditions that have led Hamas to resistance. But that seems distinct from saying I would vote for that. And that also seems like at minimum, it underscores why there is a website set up or why there is something that tries to link you to a group that you're linking yourself to in terms of at least trying to understand that perspective. I guess I'm saying I don't think the argument you're making here saying we should learn the structural conditions that have led to this moment is exactly the same as folks being upset at I will vote for Hamas over the Israeli government. I am at the end of the day someone who is engaging in, and this is a Marxist term that a lot of people get mad at because they don't understand that propaganda is supposed to be a neutral term in its inception, but this is agitative propaganda. The entire point I'm making there is to cause you to second guess when we have this back and forth conversation, as I'm sure many people who will be tuning in to listen to this conversation will maybe think about this perspective differently than they ever have. Part of the reason you blew up particularly post-2024 election, at least in more mainstream democratic world, is that it was helpful for the party to try to understand the new media ecosystem and kind of how to reach young men, which became a topic a lot of folks were coming to you for. I wanted to just summarize, like in your opinion, what's the chief reason that liberals have failed to really take off in places like Twitch or in streaming culture more broadly? The reality is Republicans get to portray themselves as authentic. On the internet, authenticity is everything. Republicans present themselves as authentic by being racist. That's it. Yeah, tell it like it is. Yeah, they tell it like it is. Exactly. Trump did that too. Yeah, to much success. Like kind of performatively offensive. Yes, being performatively offensive. Exactly. You can't really do that on the internet as a liberal. You're always going to come across as a little inauthentic. You're going to come across as like you're lecturing people. And that is a tough nut to crack on the independent media side. And sometimes when you do a pretty good job at identifying right wing misinformation and tackling it and combating it like I do, then Third Way comes after you and says, oh, well, you're not sufficiently woke, but you're also too woke at the same time. Yeah, I mean, they were kind of making the argument that you have succeeded by adopting some Republican-y tactics or that, you know. If that was the case, wouldn't Third Way love me? I'm saying there's... That's what they want to do. I guess what I really want to ask, to bring it back to the young men point, is there a way to be authentic to wide swaths of new emerging Americans without offending traditional black girls structures. You know, like I'm saying, sometimes those two things do feel a little in conflict about how you live in the culture of those people without reflecting values that I would like to think left or liberals don't like. Yeah. No, I'm unapologetically anti-right wing, anti-reactionary. I will always argue against white supremacy. And I make that very clear in my commentary. I've heard that. And now they're saying I'm actually too reactionary, which I find to be very strange because these groups are also the same people that are saying we should be a little bit more right-wing on culture issues. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. No, that's a fair thing to point out. It doesn't make any sense. It's just completely inconsistent. It is. It is. The two critiques are kind of in conflict. I guess I want to end with a couple of more quick ones. What's your message to the slice of Democrats, Third Way included, that have sought to marginalize you in the last few months? Oh, it's awesome. Your booze mean nothing when I've seen what makes you cheer. And guess what? The people also feel the exact same way. It was awesome. I knew from the start people would come up to me and they'd be like, dude, they're on your ass right now. Are you okay? Like how are you feeling? I was like, first of all, it was a lot lonelier on October 8th, 2023, what I was saying, the exact same things that I'm saying right now. Okay. It doesn't feel so lonely anymore. And number two, if they want to position themselves on the 10% side of a 90-10 issue, that's going to be great for me. That's going to be great for the candidates that I'm actually promoting. Yeah. It really does keep coming back to me that you're kind of making the argument that Third Way's memo seeks to make, which is that like, you know, their focus on the wrong side of a cultural uniting issue, which is, you know, most people do think that Israel's committed a genocide. Most people do think. Yeah. And so I'm saying like, you're saying like, so they're positioning themselves on the wrong side of that thing is worse impact for Democrats than what you're saying. Yes. Changing the Democratic Party isn't a silly vanity project. Changing the Democratic Party to make sure that we have some real fighters, to make sure that they're going to fight for the American people rather than constantly tell them that better, better things are not possible. Israel actually create longstanding change in this country that will be good for the American working class. And it will certainly be the most effective way to combat fascism. I appreciate your time. Thank you for joining us. Thank you for having me. America actually will be in your feeds every Saturday with an interesting interview in culture or politics. You could also watch these episodes on the Vox YouTube channel. Just go to youtube.com slash Vox or click the link in the show notes. The best way to support this show is by becoming a Vox member. Members get a bonus segment on Patreon every week and they make our work possible. Go to Vox.com slash members to join. This show was edited by Kasha Brasalian, fact checked by Esther Gim and mixed by Shannon Mahoney. Christopher Snyder is our video editor and Kuhn Nui is our senior art director. Our executive producer is Christina Vallis and our theme music is from Breakmaster Cylinder. No support from Miranda Kennedy, David Taddashore and Nisha Chita. I'm Estet Herndon and this is America Actually. Dell PCs with Intel inside are built for the moments you plan and the ones you don't. For the time you forgot your charger at the gate. Passengers, we are now on our initial ascent. Or when you're bouncing between projects like a ping pong ball. We build PCs with long lasting battery life so you're not scrambling for a charger. And built in intelligence so you can stay focused on whatever you're doing. 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