Want to know what this is? Start here.
Hey there, I know it’s been a while. And I’m sorry about that. It’s not a lack of content - I have at least 15 essays for this site written in my head - but more a lack of time.
I could write about Candace Owens getting fired for saying Christ is King, the X Space with Nick and Jeremy Boreing, Nick’s return to X, my trip to AFPAC, the Jordan Peterson meltdown, or Nick ratioing Turning Point USA on simply by saying “hey.”
All of those are worthy topics, and I’m sure I’ll address them eventually.
But here’s where I’d like to start for this comeback: Why can’t I ask questions about the Holocaust?
I posted this on X the other day:
I got one of two responses to this tweet:
People saying they felt the same way. A lot of people said that.
People calling me and antisemite and telling me to kill myself. Some really big conservative and/or zionist accounts did that.
I’ve never actually really questioned the holocaust narrative. I’ve never said it didn’t happen, I’ve never questioned if the body count was any less than 6 million, I’ve never praised Hitler, I’ve never called for the eradication of the Jewish people, I’ve never said Israel has no right to exist, and I’ve said REPEATEDLY that I don’t care if people are Jewish because I refuse to judge people by their group identity. People are people, some good, some bad.
Literally, all I said was that the blowback to looking into the Holocaust made me want to look into it.
I was thinking of maybe watching a few videos on the forbidden websites, like Bitchute, maybe reading a few books on the banned list, and calling it a day.
It was kind of a throwaway line…that ended up demonstrating the type of blowback that made me curious about the event in the first place.
I hadn’t even done anything yet, so why did I have all these people telling me to kill myself?
I listen to far-left socialists almost every day, and no one cares about that. I deep dive into their content and manage to avoid being convinced by it because it’s obviously and clearly wrong. It’s possible to understand something without agreeing with it.
Why is it ok for me to look into far-left content, but it’s not ok for me to look into far right content?
And why am I getting more blowback about this from the conservative right than I am from the far left?
Why are people calling for my death merely for considering watching a video on Bitchute?
None of it makes sense.
Anyone should be allowed to ask any questions about any historical event that they like, and if the evidence is so overwhelming, it shouldn’t be a problem to demonstrate that.
And if they don’t want you to ask questions, then maybe that’s the exactly thing you need to ask questions about.
You know, when I started this site, it was mostly because I wanted to write about cancel culture, and what the establishment does to people like Nick Fuentes, overlapping it with some similar things that I’ve experienced them doing to me.
I just didn’t realize the extent of the problem when I embarked.
Life is so funny. You never know who will become your greatest teachers.
From Ron Unz, who is Jewish.
https://www.unz.com/runz/american-pravda-holocaust-denial/
https://www.unz.com/external/holocaust-denial-ebook/
No, there are no issues with asking those questions. It is just that between the lines of those questions lie millennia of xenophobia towards Jewish people. For example, I am from a third world country, I learned about holocaust through the internet and the evidence for it is overwhelming and fabricating it's creation was too big to do in the 1940s and kept secret to this day. If you believe in Holocaust denialism, then you should not believe ANYTHING before 1940s either which is impossible in the real world.