This is an adapted excerpt from the Nov. 9 episode of “Velshi.”
On Feb. 18, 1915, President Woodrow Wilson screened a film for senior government officials in the East Room of the White House. It was called “Birth of a Nation,” a three-hour piece of propaganda that glorified the Ku Klux Klan and portrayed emancipated Black Americans as unworthy of freedom.
Today’s Republican Party has moved beyond the dog whistle, openly aligning with forces that once existed only in the darkest corners of the internet.
It marked a chilling inflection point in the U.S., when white nationalism stepped out of the relative shadows and into the center of government.
If that sounds familiar to you, it’s because we are watching it happen again.
On Nov. 4, Democrats across the country secured victories in several high-profile elections by embracing their diverse wings and bringing voters they had lost to Donald Trump back into the fold, particularly Hispanic voters, young men and those without college degrees.
As Democrats broadened their coalition, the Republican Party moved farther toward the fringe of the extreme right-wing, toward something more tribalistic and dangerous.
Republicans have become increasingly defined by white Christian nationalism, exclusion and resentment of the nation’s pluralism — and they’re no longer feeling the need to disguise any of it.
Today’s Republican Party has moved beyond the dog whistle, openly aligning with forces that once existed only in the darkest corners of the internet.
That much was on display when Tucker Carlson, one of the most recognizable figures in conservative media, hosted a friendly, two-hour conversation with Nick Fuentes, a Holocaust denier who praises Adolf Hitler, spews open antisemitism and calls for a white Christian America.
Perhaps it is not all that surprising that Carlson did that. But what came next marks a notable rupture in today’s conservative movement. The Heritage Foundation, the most powerful conservative think tank in Washington and the one that gave us Project 2025, came out and defended Carlson’s interview.
These are not fringe bloggers, nor anonymous trolls. The Republican Party’s main policy shop validated the casual platforming of a neo-Nazi.
The Heritage Foundation’s position sparked a revolt inside the institution, with staff threatening to resign and donors expressing outrage. Only then did the Heritage Foundation’s president, Kevin Roberts, issue an apology of sorts, telling staffers in a leaked town hall that it was a mistake to defend the interview, while also claiming he “didn’t know much” about Fuentes before he’d spoken out in defense of Carlson’s platforming of him.
But this drift toward white Christian nationalism didn’t happen overnight. The pipeline has been under construction for years.
It used to start with conspiracy theories bubbling up on extremist forums like 4chan or 8chan. Then, they migrated into “edgy” far-right talk radio shows; voices like Rush Limbaugh helped mainstream them. From there, Fox News could cover them with just enough distance to claim “we’re only reporting.”
This pipeline functioned as a permission structure, a gradual way to launder fringe ideology into mainstream conservative politics. Meanwhile, Trump’s rise had already cultivated a significant following in those dark corners.
By 2016, he said out loud what Republicans had spent years hinting at. He called immigrants “rapists” and “murderers,” advocated for a ban on immigration from certain Muslim countries, and defended white supremacists — and he won.
It wasn’t a “drift” toward extremism as much as it was a strategic alliance. The conservative movement rapidly coalescing around Trump heard the lesson clearly: the path to power runs through the fringe.
Fuentes is simply the logical endpoint of that lesson. He doesn’t use that nifty term that Breitbart uses, “globalists,” he just says “Jews.” He doesn’t allude to white replacement; he openly calls for white rule. And now, instead of recoiling, important parts of the conservative movement are courting him.
While the Democratic Party is finding its footing, Republicans are starting to feel the pressure of their alliance with white nationalism. Traditional conservatives are horrified that neo-Nazism, anti-semitism and Islamophobia are becoming normalized, while MAGA influencers attack those very traditional conservatives as “cowards” for refusing to embrace it fully.
Trump’s ascent, aided by institutions like the Heritage Foundation, shows what happens when bigotry is granted legitimacy at the highest levels of government.








