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Sasha Stone
Hi, this is free thinking through the fourth turning. I'm sasha stone. If Hitler had a podcast, who would even notice? Who would even care? If Hitler had a podcast, it would be the talk of the town. He would be loved by many, hated by more and ignored by none. Hitler would stand out because he's already been through all of this. He knows where it ends up. If Hitler had a podcast, he'd finally be cool. And Hitler was never cool. A mediocre artist with a thousand yard stare, he was repellent to most people. But in 2026America, where coolness is measured by offending the right people, Hitler would be hanging with the bros. He'd be on Joe Rogan, laughing about Erica Kirk's eyes and claiming Kanye might have been onto something way back when when he said the Jews were controlling everything. He'd be sitting across from Tim Dillon talking about genocide and Israel and the Jews. He'd fly up to Maine, have dinner with Tucker, maybe sit in the sauna, and then have a lengthy interview about how much they love dogs and then talk about how World War II was the fault of the Jews. Podcast listeners, a picture of Tucker with his arm around Adolf Hitler. He'd be at Theo Vaughn's Easter party with his arm around Brett Cooper and Candace Owens, smiling and happy on such a beautiful day. To be hated is to be cool. For podcast listeners, a picture of Brett Cooper, Candace Owens and Hitler. They're all cool. And you're not cool if you worry about Hitler having a podcast. You're only cool if you're okay with Hitler. If you laugh and giggle and say he really has a point, you know? The left went so overboard with language policing and censorship that now no one would know what to do if Hitler had a podcast. When Candace Owens spent weeks dragging Charlie Kirk's way widow Erica through the mud on her podcast to millions of clicks and views, it did seem like we hit rock bottom as a society. How did she get away with it for so long? How is it she was never shamed into silence? Because the most prominent podcasters, like Joe Rogan, Theo Vaughn, Dave Smith, Megyn Kelly, Tucker Carlson never said a word. They didn't want to be uncool, so she kept going. Candace has now convinced millions of her viewers that Israel, using Erica as bait, plotted to murder Charlie Kirk. If Hitler had a podcast, he'd jump on the trend too, because who would even stop him? By now? Podcast listeners, a picture of a Hitler podcast. What are they not telling us? He'd arrived just in time to present himself As a beacon of light to all of the lost men and boys whose lives have become meaningless. Women have overtaken society, the left destroyed culture and over policed thought and speech. And the only fun around here can be had with guys like Nick Fuentes.
Nick Fuentes
Honestly, if you weren't on your phone all the time, what would you even be doing? Can anybody answer me that? What even is there to do? People say, go touch grass. What actually does that mean? What are we supposed to do all the time? What am I supposed to do? Go eat at a restaurant and then what? Come home? I'm gonna get in my car, drive to a restaurant, eat at a restaurant and then go home. And then what? Go shopping? What am I gonna do? Go to the mall, Go park in the parking lot at the mall, Walk around the mall, look at the products, buy clothes. And then what? Go home? What is there even really to do? Go to a bar, Go to the club.
Charlie Kirk
When?
Nick Fuentes
On the weekend. And do what? Drink, Music's too loud, Stand around? I mean, what is there even really to do? People say go travel. They say, go to Italy, they say go to Japan. They say, and. And do what? Join all those other people on the other side of the world doing exactly the same thing that you're doing at home. Going out to eat, shopping, looking at the sites, the attractions. And then what?
Sasha Stone
Come home?
Nick Fuentes
Like, you know. So honestly, doom scrolling is the new meta. Doom scrolling is actually the best use of your time. People say, gaming, doom scrolling. They say you're wasting your life looking at your phone. It's like, well, at least my phone is interesting. What else would I be doing? Going and looking at stuff outside, what else would I be doing?
Sasha Stone
And if Hitler had a podcast, it would be called Work and Bread Landing. Somewhere between the Hassan piker left and the Fuentes right. The only requirement is that you hate Israel. And because of his loyalty to Israel, Donald Trump, they don't think of it as anti Semitism anymore because they think of it as anti Zionism or anti Israel. From Bridget Fedisy's walk INS welcome with guest Adam Louise Klein.
Adam Louise Klein
When you call people anti Semitic, it's like this game emerges where you're kind of. Since it's not directly talking about anti Zionism, you're like looking into their soul, right? They're like, I'm not anti Semitic. And you're like, I see inside of you. Like you have satanic Nazi inside of you.
Charlie Kirk
Right?
Adam Louise Klein
And that's going to create resentment.
Shabbos Kesenbaum
Yeah, of course.
Adam Louise Klein
Create resentment. And then you're going to get people who just want to break the taboo. Maybe they do want to be Nazis. And everyone's going to get fed up with Jews. Right? Which is the opposite of what we're, we're trying to achieve.
Shabbos Kesenbaum
And then I feel like this is the position that we're in at the moment where they're just, I was joking about this the other day in our dumpster fire writers room, where you start seeing like, let's just say Tucker for an example. You look at his episodes and it's all about his Israel, Israel, Israel. He's constantly talking about it. And then I'll be like, can't you see this hyper focus on Israel is crazy? But then you start going, I, I'm like, I start feeling crazy because I'm like, don't you see it's all about the Jews. Like, even in trying to defend it, you end up or point it out, you end up falling into a similar trap where you're like, but it's all about the Jews, can't you see? And then you end up feeling crazy. And I feel like there already is a. What bothers me more than kind of anything. And Nick Fuentes said this the other day on Twitter. He said, you're either Israel first or America first. And that is the line. And I'm like, this is a false dichotomy. But I do see media being like fracturing in that way. And that is very unnerving to me.
Adam Louise Klein
Yeah, I mean, I mean, it's very unnerving. And they are trying to break the Israel US Alliance.
Vivek Ramaswamy
Right.
Adam Louise Klein
And trying to sort of transcend.
Shabbos Kesenbaum
I think it's been pretty successful and
Adam Louise Klein
it's going pretty well for them. Yeah, but they're trying to transcend this sort of civilizational obligation that the west has felt that it had towards Jews since the Holocaust.
Sasha Stone
Right.
Adam Louise Klein
The west said, you know, we should protect Jews, we should defend Jews, we should support the state of Israel. Now, the success of people on the right like Nick Fuente, for me, it's really, it all comes from the left. It's all because of the left's like hegemonic cultural power in society, their ability to mainstream. Like the genocide libel. Israel committed a genocide in Gaza. Israeli soldiers are sadistic and are killing Palestinian children for fun.
Marco Rubio
Right.
Adam Louise Klein
Like all of these libels, which are new, but as you said, resonate with these older medieval kind of anti Jewish libels that became like the cultural zeitgeist. And then they just jumped on that to get more like conspiracy right wing anti Semitic ideas like, oh, the Israel Lobby pushed us into the Iraq war. The Israel lobby controls our government. And then creating this kind of story of Israel first versus America first when it's just, it's just an alliance, right? Like when you're allied with a country, right? You, you have certain obligations to them. You, you, you benefit from them, right? And that's all that's at stake. So I can't really take this policy debate about whether we should ally with Israel seriously because I know I' that it's downstream from, from the anti Zionist hate movement. So when everyone's talking about Israel, like I'm sick of talking about Israel, I want to talk about anti Zionism, right? Why is our attention always on Israel and not on this crazy hate movement? That's anti Zionism. It was crazy when students started talking about murdering Zionists on campus and started running around masks and smashing windows, right? It's crazy that there are these anti Zionist militias throughout the Middle east, right, who are dedicating their existence to annihilating isra. There's an entire state, Iran, whose central ideology is that they will nuke Israel at the end of time, right? And then the Mahdi, the Islamic Messiah will arrive. You know, that's crazy. Like that's what I want to talk about. And I want people to see anti Zionism. And I think the conversation will change, right? When we're looking at anti Zionism and not always scrutinizing Israel.
Sasha Stone
It's the policies, it's the genocide. Does it really matter? If Hitler had a podcast, he would tell them what they wanted and needed to hear, said Hitler in 1922. And it was precisely the same in the economic sphere. The vast process of industrialization of the peoples meant the confluence of great masses of workmen in the towns. Thus great hordes of people arose. And these, more's the pity, were not properly dealt with by those whose moral duty it was to concern themselves for their welfare. Parallel with this was a gradual money fication of the whole of the nation's labor strength. Share capital was in ascendant and thus, bit by bit, the stock exchange came to control the whole national economy. End quote. That's Anna Kasparian, that's Hassan Piker, and increasingly that's Tucker Carlson. Hitler would fit right in. That could explain why Nick Fuentes is now calling for unity among the left and the right. To bring the goyim together.
Nick Fuentes
Listen, we gotta bring the band back together. Too much division. Too much division. These republic cuck zio chills are bringing us all down. They're trying to divide us. We all need to come together. No more brother wars. Tucker, Candace, Megan, Kelly. Absolved. All is forgiven. There's no beef anymore. There is no beef. It's like Marcellus Wallace and Bruce Willis. It's like. It's like, look, it's over. There's no more beef. No more brother wars. Megan, Kelly, Candace. You are not my opinion, Tucker. You are not my ops. Nico. We have to unite. We have to unite the Goyan.
Sasha Stone
If Hitler had a podcast, we'd have no words left to describe him because we've run out fascists. That's the guy sitting in the White House who won an election in America twice. It's the only way Gen Z has ever heard the word used. Fascism is a white guy who doesn't do what we want him to do. What Hitler did in Germany or Mussolini in Italy is a foreign concept to people who can literally post images of Trump dead on the Internet and not be thrown in jail or shot on the spot. For podcast listeners, a tweet from Mark Hamill showing Trump lying in a grave if only he should live long enough to witness his inevitable devastating loss in the midterms of be held accountable for his unprecedented corruption, impeached, convicted and humiliated for his countless crimes long enough to realize he'd be disgraced in the history books forevermore. But words don't mean words anymore, podcast listeners. A tweet from James Lindsay woke left, hates Trump and Erica Kirk for being Nazis. Woke right, hates Trump and Erica Kirk for not being Nazis. On a tweet by defiant L of Kathy Griffin going after Erica Kirk calls Charlie a straight up Nazi. Genocide can mean anything now. As long as Israel is the aggressor. It doesn't count if Christians are being slaughtered in Africa or nearly 1 million dead in the Ukraine war, or even the 40,000 dead protesters in Iran. No genocide is now attached to one source, Israel. For podcast listeners, a tweet by Hasan Piker to Ben Shapiro saying, buddy, you love Israel's genocide so much you've lost more than half your audience. And a headline hundreds protest Israel's Genocide Pavilion at Venice Biennale and a tweet from Kenneth Roth. The New York Times won a Pulitzer Prize for news photography documenting Israel's starvation and destruction in Gaza. Key parts of Israel's genocide Nazi is thrown around so casually now that it almost sounds like a new type of drink at Starbucks. I'll have the half caf Nazi with cold foam and images of YouTube videos. Trump plan's Nazi rally, Trump's racist Nazi rally Normalizing Nazis. Elon Musk faces backlash over controversial Nazi salute gesture at Trump inauguration In Hitler's day, there was no Israel. But if Hitler had a podcast, he'd agree with Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly that it's the Jews who led us into war in Iran and that Trump is either being bribed by them or enslaved by them. Why do you think World War I and World War II were fought? Hitler explained it all years ago. A circle of Jews in America once drove this country into a war against all national interests simply and solely because of Jewish capitalist motives. And President Roosevelt, lacking capabilities of his own, has a support of said brain trust whose leading men I need not mention by name. They are only Jews. Through them, as in the year 1917, the United States was driven step by step into a war without reason and sense by a Jewish infected president and his completely Jewish cohorts against nations which have never harmed America and against people from whom America can never profit. End quote. If Hitler had a podcast, his warm message would resonate with the same people now. Being told by Nick Fuentes that we must do something about the global problem of Jewry.
Nick Fuentes
But I do believe that unless we confront world Jewry, I don't know that China is our biggest threat. I honestly do believe it is going to be an Israeli super state. Whatever Israel becomes after this conflict, I believe that might be the biggest threat to America. China has some long term problems baked in. Yes, they have this ship building capacity, yes, they have a more purchasing power, they have a a much larger industrial base and so on. But China's got some problems baked in. And at the end of the day we can share the world with China and China has not penetrated our system to the same extent as the Jews. And so I really believe that if your posture is we could be friends with Israel, we just need to kind of get them to back off a little bit so that we can focus on China directionally. I'm not against that, but I think you're putting the cart before the horse. I think we have to actually prioritize extricating our society from the influence of international Jewry first. Although that sounds crazy, I think first you gotta get these Jews out of AI. That's our number one national security threat. Yes, there's a race going on between Chinese AI and American AI, but American AI isn't even American because it's run by Sam Altman and it's run by all these people. I mean, our Silicon Valley is penetrated by unit 8200 by Mossad. It's not really ours. And you see this energy crisis. What happens when Israel controls that choke point, not Iran? What happens when Israel controls the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf rather than the Houthis and Iran? What then? Israel wants to colonize the islands in Greece. Israel wants to colonize Cyprus. Israel wants to colonize the Sinai. They want to build a base in Somaliland, in southern Yemen. They want to take control of Yemen. They want to create a Kurdish state or something. They want to control that whole swath. They want to control the Bosphorus Strait. They want to control the Aegean, the Eastern Med, the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, the Caspian Sea. They want it all. And they've got influence in Russia and they've got influence in the US and they have their fingerprints all over our defense industry, our AI industry.
Sasha Stone
But Hitler blamed the Jews. Before, it was cool. But of course, now in America, the rage is bubbling over and it's the perfect time for Hitler's return. Israelis are the Nazis now. Trump is Hitler on the left, but a slave to Israel on the right. We haven't seen anything like this in over 80 years. Here is Owen Schroyer.
Owen Shroyer
You go fight Iran. You go form an army and fight Iran. You go to Israel and fight us. We are American people. It's not our problem. And you're not going to convince us otherwise. We're done. Israel has been convincing us that their issues and their enemies in the Middle east are ours since the 80s. And all it's done is cost us trillions of dollars and tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of American lives. We are done. The deception is over. The game is over. And you're not going to insult us because we're done playing. You're not going to insult us because we're done with Israel's wars and done with you controlling the right wing geopolitical discourse. We're done and we're not going to be insulted. You've gone too far. Israel's time running, our foreign policy is over.
Sasha Stone
And don't forget to like, comment and subscribe. Radio days by 1933, more than 4.5 million Germans had access to a radio which became their primary means of news, entertainment and best of all, Nazi propaganda. Hitler could triple those views now if he had a podcast.
Narrator/Documentarian
The development of the Volksamfanger, which translates as the the people's Receiver, was initiated by Joseph Goebbels, the Ministry of Propaganda for the Nazi regime. His goal was to make radio technology accessible to the general population so that it could be Used as a means of disseminating Nazi propaganda, the Volksamfwanger was designed by engineer Otto Greising, and his receiver was chosen over those developed by the established electronics firms Blaupunkt and Telefunken. Known as the VE301, the first model was introduced to the public at the 10th Berlin Radio Show. The name VE301 was symbolic as it referenced January 30, 1933, the date on which Adolf Hitler was appointed the Chancellor of Germany. The design of the Volksmfango was simple and utilitarian, lacking many of the features found in more expensive radios. But this simplicity was intentional, as it kept production costs low and made the device easier to operate. Priced at just 76 reichmarks, the radio was half the cost of similar receivers, and this affordability ensured widespread distribution among the German public. The radio had a limited range of reception and was specifically tuned to the medium wave and long wave frequencies used by German broadcasters. This limitation ensured that listeners primarily received domestic broadcasts, therefore reducing the influence of foreign radio stations, many of which began broadcasting on shortwave. By 1939, approximately 70% of German households owned a radio. This allowed the Nazi regime to communicate directly with the public and reinforce its ideology and policies by broadcasting speeches by Hitler and other officials. Alongside nationalist news and music.
Sasha Stone
Goebbels was the main driver of propaganda. But In America in 2026, Goebbels could be anyone who works for Trump. And mass deportations are on par with the Nuremberg Laws that strip Jews of their rights as German citizens. With their hysteria cred maxed out, our establishment government would not know how to even recognize, much less deal with Hitler and his podcast. No one wants to be uncool and censor the hottest guy on the Internet. So Hitler's message would flourish. How do you think Hasan Piker became such a force on the left almost overnight? Ami Kozak on the Jeremy Boreing show, along with Shabbos Kesenbaum and Billy Hallowell on how to be a better consumer of podcasts.
Jordan Peterson
Jordan Peterson famously said, there's a fine line between order and chaos. And I used to think, okay, that's a nice academic, interesting, intellectually stimulating expression. But as we approach this sort of. He was kind of prophetic in predicting where we are today in 2015. 16. He was saying, you know, if you
Nick Fuentes
keep playing this group identity politics, you're
Jordan Peterson
gonna end up with a rise in the identitarian right, and you're not gonna like it, you know? But he used to say, you know, the fine line between order and chaos. And I know the line well, like, that's cute. Interesting, but it's so true. And what you described before was order, right to the extreme. You could call it the gatekeepers. They sort of kept everybody out and said only certain people had permission to report, to speak, to give their opinions in a sort of credentialism environment. And now it's the opposite, where you have the pendulum swung completely other way and you have a chaotic environment. And, you know, if I had a choice between the two, I guess I would choose to try to navigate the chaos because you get a fair amount of everything. You get amazing voices that are sort of emancipated, that can speak freely with. And everyone has the same access, the phone, the distribution mechanism is there and everybody can reach people.
Charlie Kirk
Well, but here's. Let me push back a bit, because if one must choose between elitism and populism, I think that's a false binary. I think you probably also think it's a false binary. Yes, there is a better way. Republicanism is the better way. But even if we're to say that, okay, we are stuck in this binary choice and we would choose populism, the marketplace of ideas, it isn't an actual marketplace of ideas if you have online anonymity the way that we have, if you have foreign bot operations, the way that we do manufactured social proof to the extent that we have it in enormous.
Nick Fuentes
Right. Right.
Jordan Peterson
So what I would say is, again, deferring to Jordan Peterson, with rights come responsibilities. So now that you have this freedom to broadcast and reach people, it's now incumbent upon the individuals consuming it to have some standards, have some responsibility, critical thinking, and have some discernment. And because there's no longer the person buttoned up in a suit at a desk telling you and giving you all of that at a certain standard that is presumed truthful, honest, with integrity. And whether it was or wasn't, now we know that it could just come from anywhere. And I've learned in consuming all this to have a diet that's pretty healthy and making sure that you know when you're looking at something and digesting something, is it candy, is it healthy? And balance it properly and know what you're consuming and know which is based in narrative and what's based in evidence, and who's nefarious, who's curious, who's just having fun, are you watching Joe Rogan, Theo Vaughn, Candace Tucker? These are all kind of different things. And I think you have to have discernment because it's easy to broad brush everything and categorize it falsely.
Sasha Stone
The path to Islam. Only recently has the right begun to lean in ever so slightly towards supporting Islam. Even those who were once stridently opposed have now begun to reconsider. Israel, after all, has manipulated them into seeing Islam as the enemy when the whole time it was worldwide Jewry seeking more power and control. Here is Ben Shapiro.
Ben Shapiro
This is again, one of the more astonishing aspects of the New Left is their sudden sympathy for radical Islam. Candace Owens, of course, has suggested that she was bamboozled by all of the opposition to Islam into saying that she opposed radical Islam. But now she understands that she was just bamboozled. The wool was pulled over her eyes. Tucker Carlson has been doing precisely the same thing, simping for Sharia law. And now Megyn Kelly is going to jump in on the act because of course, that's where the clicks are. Here was Megyn Kelly yesterday praising Tucker for gaining a younger Muslim audience and in the process trying to do the same herself. Because once again, no parade has ever begun with Megyn Kelly at the front and no parade has ever ended without Megyn Kelly at the front twirling a baton. There was Megyn Kelly chasing those clicks. Go get those clicks, girl.
Megyn Kelly
Like, he's gotten very, very popular lately. I read with Muslim viewers because he's been standing up for Islam. You know, and I have to tell you, Mark, it's been something I've noticed just since I've gotten a sort of more clear eyed on Israel that a lot of the anti Muslim rhetoric that's put out there originates with people who are very, very pro Israel who kind of need us to demonize them. And I've taken a look recently at my own rhetoric on this to say, like, have I been manipulated? I want to make sure I'm not getting manipulated. But I think he's having a lot of Muslim viewers flock to him. I know for a fact he has a lot of young men flocking to him. And so while he may have lost some contingent of the Fox News audience, that's very, very pro Israel and pro Trump. And you can't say anything about Trump. For every one of those who leaves, there is another newer, younger audience member who does want to hear these traditional lines challenged and hear just new independent thinking. I mean, I'm experiencing some of that myself. And tucker probably times 10.
Ben Shapiro
And she went on, by the way, to explain that actually her own misperceptions about Islam were probably driven by, wait for it, wait for it, the nefarious pro Israel people.
Sasha Stone
But as usual, Hitler was way ahead of the game. He might not have been all that much of a fan of the brown people over there, but even he recognized that a religion of men was to be respected. He had what might be called Muslim envy. From the Wall Street Journal. Why Hitler wished he was a Muslim. The Fuhrer admired Ataturk's subordination of religion to the state and his ruthless treatment of minorities. It's been our misfortune to have the wrong religion, Hitler complained to his pet architect, Albert Speer. Why did it have to be Christianity with its meekness and flabbiness? Islam was a mana religion, a religion of men and hygienic too. The soldiers of Islam received a warrior's heaven, a real earthly paradise with houris and wine flowing. This, Hitler argued, was much more suited to the Germanic temperament than the Jewish filth and priestly twaddle of Christianity. Hitler Youth. If Hitler had a podcast, he would appeal to the young because they don't know any better today than they did then. We were indoctrinated in very subtle fashion, so that by the time that I was 15, I had become a Nazi without ever really being aware that I was one. That is, I didn't know how I had become one. I knew that I was one. I had become convinced that Hitler was the savior of Germany.
Historian/Narrator
Beginning in the early 1930s through the end of the war in 1945, Nazis in Germany started indoctrinating millions of children with Nazi ideas through groups like the Hitler Youth. The Hitler Youth was the Nazi organized youth movement that was designed to shape the beliefs, actions and thinking of young germans from ages 10 to 18. After Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, the Hitler Youth and other similar groups had an important role to play in the Nazis plan to reshape German society. The Nazis used youth groups to teach loyalty to Adolf Hitler, hatred of Jews, and to prepare young people for war.
Sasha Stone
Hitler knows that lost men need strong leaders. And if those leaders have shrunk back into the darkness because things haven't worked out for them the way they wanted, they'll be ripe for the picking. Young men, white men especially, have been raised by an establishment that wanted them to take a step backward and elevate the marginalized. In Weimar Germany, women were rising as a political force at a time of intense sexual liberation, experimentation and gender fluidity. Just like now. Here's a video from.
Historian/Narrator
It's the 1920s, and for many women, especially young unmarried working ones living in big cities, the times are bringing greater financial independence Combined with more open attitudes and having grown up through the war, meaning many are used to greater social independence, there develops something of a new Type of woman 1918-1933 the German New Woman There is not perfect consensus on what exactly it means to be a new woman, but in general the two key points are that they work a white collar job that is in an office or as a sales assistant, and that they consume a lot. They go out more than before, buy more clothes, expressing their independence through how they look, buy more makeup and cheap jewellery revealing clothing and they dress and act more masculine than women in the past. They have short hair, they smoke, drink and go out unaccompanied. They act in more modern ways, coming across less interested in marriage and families and having a more liberal sexual attitude too.
Sasha Stone
This led to a crisis of masculinity much like the one we face today, which in turn caused pendulum shift in the opposite direction. The moral decay and foundational rot at the heart of America's collapsing cultural empire were on full display at the Met Gala, seemingly punctuating America's decline. Weimar style. Podcast listeners pictures of Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner and others at the Met Gala. Hitler reacted to that era with revulsion, presenting himself as a picture puritanical moralist who never sold the image of being a ladies man or even having a wife. Nick Fuentes claims to be a virgin in a society ruled by intolerable women who won't give him the time of day. A side by side one a New York Times headlined Nick Fuentes was Charlie Kirk's bitter enemy. Now he's becoming his successor. And one I wrote that said Meet the new podcaster topping the charts and winning over Gen Z and a picture of Hitler and a headline teen allegedly plotted to kill as many Jews as possible at Houston Synagogue. The left is leaning into violence, assassinations and targeted attacks on Jews spiking in recent years and if Hitler had a podcast he would adopt Hassan Piker's ideology that Hamas is the real hero in this story. Here is a clip from Hasan Piker on Pod Save America.
Hasan Piker
I think it connects to another comment of yours that's been circulating. This is one from January. Hamas is a thousand times better than a fascist settler colonial apartheid state.
Guest on Hasan Piker's show
I stand by that well.
Hasan Piker
So I will say this is the one that bothered me most when I first heard it and I remember. I remember having a reaction to it when I first saw it in January. Because I think even if you believe what happened in Gaza is genocide and what's happening in The west bank is apartheid. Those are different claims from, Hamas is a thousand times better. You say Hamas is a thousand times better. Do you actually mean that, or is that a rhetorical move or like a solidarity signal? Like what? What?
Guest on Hasan Piker's show
I mean, it's all of the above. I do mean it. I think it's a rhetorical move because it frustrates a lot of people. I've also said I'm a harm reduction voter. I'm a lesser evil voter, and therefore I would vote for Hamas over Israel every single time. Because I'm looking at the situation as a paramilitary organization that has, like, a political party as well, a politburo as well, that is entirely comprised, not as an alien force, but of orphaned children that have, you know, had their parents killed by an apartheid state that has been dominating the lives of Palestinians for 80 years at this point.
Hasan Piker
And I think that resistance movements that engage in, you know, mass slaughter or civilian targeting and all, like, they just have less success than resistance movements that are nonviolent. I mean, obviously in history. I know we've had a revolution here. I get it.
Guest on Hasan Piker's show
I wouldn't agree.
Hasan Piker
I get our revolution.
Adam Louise Klein
Yeah.
Hasan Piker
But I do think if you look back over the last hundred years, nonviolent movements have been more successful than armed resistance movements. That's just.
Guest on Hasan Piker's show
I think they were handy, but I think it was. It might have been Kwame Torre who said it. You know, you can only shame someone who has a conscience, and if your enemy has none, it's impossible to get them to react to your civil movement. Because the Palestinians have tried.
Sasha Stone
There was a time when podcasts felt like freedom. Anyone could say anything they wanted. But by the time it got to accusing a widow of having a hand in murdering her husband because Israel wanted to go to war with Iran, it seems they've jumped the shark. If Hitler had a podcast, he'd have to somehow top it. And that is how we got here, where all of them are competing for those eyeballs who have nothing better to do than to watch the world burn. Thankfully, on the right, there are leaders who offer an alternative vision for young Americans. Charlie Kirk was the most influential of them, guiding his young viewers toward faith, family, and purpose. Without him, so many seem to be adrift, following those who pander for their attention rather than those who guide them. Here is another clip from the Jeremy
Charlie Kirk
Boreing show, which is why I think the results last night in Ohio were so important, because it sort of underscores that this movement, if that's what we want to classify it as, they don't have strong political support in quote, unquote, the real world. It does not translate into people actually holding office. And this is something that we as conservatives. You mean veve winning in Ohio? Exactly. And this is something that we as conservatives can learn from the left because they actually mobilize. They get AOCs elected. They're doing a masterful job at bringing their ideologies into practical legislation. And this bizarre new movement, this. I don't know what to call it, woke.
Ben Shapiro
Right.
Charlie Kirk
Retard. Right. They're not actually able to translate this into power. And that's a good thing. But it's also, you know, it's a damning indictment in our political discourse that we have to talk about at Candace Owens. But look, she has more weekly listeners than there are Jews on planet Earth. So we're forced to talk about the Candaces and the Tucker Frankus.
Sasha Stone
Somehow one of the brightest lights turns out to be Marco Rubio, selling hope and the American dream. You've had a deep faith for God and country. At the end of the day, with
Marco Rubio
all that you'd to, like, keep going, you've been extremely busy. Go ahead.
Sasha Stone
I'm sorry.
Ben Shapiro
As we all know, I gotta ask
Sasha Stone
you, what is your hope for America at a time such as this?
Marco Rubio
My hope for America? And how do you personally deal with that? Yeah, look, I mean, my hope for America is what it's always been. I think it's the hope I hope we all share. We want it to continue to be the place where anyone from anywhere can achieve anything. Where you're not limited by the circumstances of your birth, by the color of your skin, by your ethnicity. But frankly, it's a place where you are able to overcome challenges and achieve your full potential. I think that should be the goal of every country in the world, frankly. But I think in the US we're not perfect. Our history is not one of perfection, but it's still better than anybody else's history. And ours is a story of perpetual improvement. Each generation has left the next generation of Americans freer, more prosperous, safer. And that is our goal as well. But it is a unique and exceptional country. And as we come upon this 250 year anniversary, I think we have a lot to learn and we be proud of in our history. It is one of perpetual and continuous improvement where each generation has done its part to bring us closer to fulfilling the vision that the founders of this country had upon its founding. So
Sasha Stone
there are no leaders on the left who even want to try to unite this broken and chaotic country. We either accept their mass delusion that Trump is Hitler or forget it. At least if Hitler had a podcast, maybe they would finally be able to to see that Trump never was. And as we head into America's 250th birthday, we're holding on by a thread. Whether they like it or not, Trump changed things and we're not changing back. Here is Vivek Ramaswamy.
Vivek Ramaswamy
But I wasn't born a billionaire. I wasn't born a millionaire. I wasn't born an anything heir. I was born an heir to nothing, actually, literally. But what I love and what I'm so grateful to is a country that allowed me to achieve those things. And God willing, being in a position to lead the state where I was born and raised, that story is only possible in the United States of America. And I am so grateful to this state and to this country for giving me those opportunities that I feel a moral duty to revive that American dream where we teach our kids that number one factor that determines what you achieve in life is you. That was the lesson of my upbringing. It's not the billionaires. It's not the white people, it's not the black people, it's not the patriarchy. It's not the Jews, it's not the foreigners. It's none of those things. It is you. That's what the American dream is built on. That's what I'm running this campaign on. It's a tough message at times to deliver. It's not one that lands well on every everyone's ears. But at a certain level, I don't care. That's the truth. And that's what I'm going to give you. And I'm going to give it to you because I'm grateful to this country. And I think that is what is going to be required to save this country. And, you know, I think the red team, blue team stuff, it's fine. You know, it's the way partisan politics works. But I think that there's a deeper project we're going to have to undertake in this country to revive the spirit of, of that American dream from a culture of victimhood, from the popularity of socialism in the many avatars in which it shows up today. That's hard work ahead and I believe biased, obviously. But I believe that my winning this election in Ohio will help us take a step forward as a country, as the former Rust Belt, as a state, in the direction of economic empowerment, in the direction of educational achievement, in the direction of, dare I say, reviving that American dream. That people like you and me have lived in this country. And if we do that in one little state in the heart of the country happens to be the sixth or seventh largest state in our economy, I think it'll be a good step for our country and I'm working on it every day.
Sasha Stone
It has to be up to the right, because if nothing else, they have the good sense to know Hitler when they see him. Thank you for listening to my podcast sashastone.com sorry this took so long. It wasn't my easiest podcast to put together, but I hope you enjoyed it. And if you like my work, you can always leave a tip on the tip jar, which is on the main page. Or you can think about becoming a paid subscriber. It really helps to keep the podcast going or leave a review and remember to thine own self be true.
Traditional Gospel Singer
Oh Cinnamon, where you gonna run to Cinnamon where you gonna run to? Where you gonna run to? All on that day will I run to the rock Please hide me around the rock Please hide me around the rock Please hide me Lord all on them day but the rock ride out I can't hide you the rock right out I can't hand you the rock right out I ain't gonna hide you down all on that day I saw said rock what's the matter with you rock? Don't you see I need to rock your blood Lord or on that day so I run to the river it was bleeding around to the sea it was bleeding around to the sea it was bleeding around them day so I run to the Lord please hurt me Lord don't you see me praying? Don't you see me down here praying but the Lord said go to the devil the Lord said go to the devil he said go to the devil devil or on that day I cry power power. It. Sam. It. Oh yeah. Oh I run to the river it was boiling around the sea it was balling around the sea it was balling all on the bay so I ran to the Lord I said lord help me please hide me please help me out on that day he said child where were you when you had all been praying? Said lord, Lord hear me praying Lord, Lord hear me praying Lord, Lord hear me praying all on that day said a man you ought to be praying Ought to be praying son of man ought to be praying all on that day I cry power. Sam.
Podcast: Free Thinking Through the Fourth Turning with Sasha Stone
Episode: If Hitler Had a Podcast
Date: May 8, 2026
Host: Sasha Stone
Source: sashastone.com
In "If Hitler Had a Podcast," Sasha Stone explores the provocative hypothetical of Adolf Hitler operating as a modern podcaster in contemporary America. Using this conceit, Stone critiques the current political and media environment, particularly the right's flirtation with taboo subjects, normalization of extreme rhetoric, and the left's complicity through overzealous language policing. The episode blends satirical commentary, real-world examples, and historical analogies to examine the rise of anti-Semitic, conspiratorial, and reactionary discourse in the podcast era, highlighting the power and perils of decentralized media.
"If Hitler had a podcast, he'd finally be cool. And Hitler was never cool." — Sasha Stone (00:23)
"To be hated is to be cool. And you're not cool if you worry about Hitler having a podcast. You're only cool if you're okay with Hitler." — Sasha Stone (01:20)
"How did she get away with it for so long? Because the most prominent podcasters...never said a word. They didn't want to be uncool, so she kept going." — Sasha Stone (02:30)
"Doomscrolling is actually the best use of your time...what else would I be doing?" — Nick Fuentes (04:39)
"Genocide libel...Israeli soldiers are sadistic and are killing Palestinian children for fun. All of these libels, which are new, resonate with these older medieval anti-Jewish libels." — Adam Louise Klein (08:08)
"Media being like fracturing in that way...This is a false dichotomy." — Shabbos Kesenbaum (06:47)
"Nazi is thrown around so casually...it almost sounds like a new type of drink at Starbucks. I'll have the half caf Nazi with cold foam." — Sasha Stone (13:34)
"Listen, we gotta bring the band back together. Too much division...We have to unite the Goyan." — Nick Fuentes (11:01)
"In Weimar Germany, women were rising as a political force at a time of intense sexual liberation, experimentation and gender fluidity. Just like now." — Sasha Stone (30:25)
"By 1939, approximately 70% of German households owned a radio. This allowed the Nazi regime to communicate directly with the public...broadcasting speeches by Hitler and other officials." — Narrator (20:25)
"There's a fine line between order and chaos...now you have a chaotic environment." — Jordan Peterson (22:43, 23:03) "The marketplace of ideas, it isn't an actual marketplace if you have online anonymity…the way that we do." — Charlie Kirk (23:53)
"Only recently has the right begun to lean in ever so slightly towards supporting Islam...it was worldwide Jewry seeking more power and control." — Sasha Stone (25:30)
"We were indoctrinated in very subtle fashion, so that by the time I was 15, I had become a Nazi...without ever really being aware that I was one." — Historian/Narrator (29:38)
"My hope for America...is to be the place where anyone from anywhere can achieve anything...ours is a story of perpetual improvement." — Marco Rubio (37:46) "That's what the American dream is built on. That's what I'm running this campaign on." — Vivek Ramaswamy (40:08)
Satirical Vision:
“If Hitler had a podcast, he'd finally be cool. And Hitler was never cool.”
— Sasha Stone (00:23)
On Modern Media Dynamics:
“To be hated is to be cool...you're not cool if you worry about Hitler having a podcast.”
— Sasha Stone (01:20)
On Nihilistic Youth:
“Doomscrolling is actually the best use of your time.”
— Nick Fuentes (04:39)
On Weaponizing Language:
"Nazi is thrown around so casually now that it almost sounds like a new type of drink at Starbucks.”
— Sasha Stone (13:34)
On Anti-Semitism Dressed as Anti-Zionism:
“All of these libels, which are new, resonate with these older medieval anti-Jewish libels that became the cultural zeitgeist.”
— Adam Louise Klein (08:09)
On Propaganda's Reach:
“By 1939, approximately 70% of German households owned a radio. This allowed the Nazi regime to communicate directly with the public.”
— Narrator (20:25)
On the American Dream:
“My hope for America...is...where you are able to overcome challenges and achieve your full potential...ours is a story of perpetual improvement.”
— Marco Rubio (37:46)
Sasha Stone’s episode is an alarming, sardonic meditation on how new media environments allow for the normalization and even celebration of extremist, hateful ideas under the guise of free speech and coolness. By drawing direct lines between the propaganda strategies of Nazi Germany and current podcasting culture—with its cults of personality and disregard for fact or consequence—Stone warns of the societal peril that comes from uncritical consumption and the abdication of moral gatekeeping. Yet, the episode ends on a note of measured hope, suggesting that the American dream can still be reclaimed through faith, discernment, and a return to a more unifying vision of national purpose.