Shiloh Hendrix, a white Minnesota woman, went viral after repeatedly calling a child on a playground the N-word. The financial windfall she then received — reportedly over $700,000 — from crowdfunding donors, many of whom apparently saw in the unrepentant racist a fearless hero, is a despicable and miserable commentary on the current state of America’s soul.
But it isn’t shocking. Far-right racism and white grievance culture have been ascendant and increasingly mainstreamed for at least a decade. Their most influential avatar — President Donald Trump — is once again in power. (It doesn’t get more mainstream than the presidency.)
Never Trumper ex-Republicans and ex-libertarians loudly warned of the rising influence and genuine threat posed by what they now call the ‘woke right.’
But to many of those I call “MAGA centrists” — ostensibly nonconservatives who blame the left for making them either Trump supporters or very Trump-sympathetic — unabashed right-wing racism is a terrible, but entirely new, phenomenon. And wouldn’t you know it, they say “wokeness” is to blame. They’ve even coined a name for Hendrix and her donors’ style of racism: “the woke right.”
In the MAGA centrists’ telling, the woke left is obsessed with identity politics and clings to a perpetual victim mentality, a desire to cancel its adversaries and an adherence to bonkers conspiracy theories, and it rewrites historical facts to suit its political agenda. The woke right, they say, is merely an unfortunate mirror reaction to that.
An article by River Page published this week in The Free Press — among the most influential Trump-friendly sites that insists it’s nonpartisan despite ample evidence to the contrary — argued that “the excesses of the left — canceling all those innocent Americans — has triggered an equal and opposite reaction on the right, which has become more and more extreme in railing against cancel culture.”
Page added, “Basically: The left cried wolf, and now the wolf is here on your phone, calling a little boy in Minnesota the N-word on camera — and there’s a new, identity politics-obsessed far right waiting in the wings to reward her for it.”
This argument, to put it politely, combines an outrageous rewriting of history with a monomaniacal worldview that assumes the left is all-powerful and the far right has no agency.
This isn’t the first time The Free Press has put the responsibility of overt right-wing racism at the feet of the woke left.
In February, amid a spate of what looked like Nazi-esque salutes from powerful MAGA figures including Steve Bannon and Elon Musk, The Free Press published an essay by Richard Hanania, who previously wrote vile, racist content under a pseudonym for the alt-right’s flagship website. Explaining his past association with this particular racist, antisemitic, Trump-supporting movement, he wrote, “To understand where this comes from you need to go back to the 2010s. Back then, online rightists reacted to the Great Awokening by leaning into performative racism, sexism, and homophobia through edgy memes and jokes.”
Once again, the identity politics and victim grievance culture of right-wing racists, sexists and homophobes are waved away as unthreatening and understandable (though unpleasant) responses to left-wing wokeness. As far as other traits ascribed to the woke right by the MAGA centrists — rewriting history, dividing people by their identity groups and pushing conspiracy theories — I can think of a few people who fit that bill who can’t be dismissed as insignificant internet trolls.
How about Tucker Carlson repeatedly pushing the racist and antisemitic “great replacement” theory on his top-rated Fox News show?
How about Vice President JD Vance, who as a candidate last year chose to amplify what he knew was a racist lie that Haitian immigrants in Ohio were kidnapping their neighbors’ pets and eating them?
How about Trump, in his first term, telling U.S.-born members of Congress — who happen to be women of color — to “go back where they came from?” Or his more recent claim that immigrants are “vermin” and “poisoning the blood” of America?








