|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
Order Jamie Glazov’s new book, ‘United in Hate: The Left’s Romance with Tyranny, Terror, and Hamas’: HERE.
[Visit AdamMilstein.org]
The death of conservative icon Charlie Kirk has prompted more than mourning. It has triggered a profound reckoning about the future of the American conservative movement, one that played out in real time at Turning Point USA’s recent AmericaFest convention.
Just three months after Kirk’s assassination, the organization he co-founded became the venue for an intense debate over a fundamental question: Should conservatism remain a coalition with clear moral boundaries, or should it become a broader movement that tolerates racists, antisemites, and conspiracy theorists in the name of “free speech” and “not canceling anyone”?
Ben Shapiro and Vivek Ramaswamy argued unapologetically that there is no place in conservatism for figures who traffic in antisemitism, racial hatred, or dangerous conspiracies. People like Nick Fuentes, Candace Owens, and Tucker Carlson, or those who excuse and legitimize them. On the other side were those who insisted that even open bigots belong in this broader coalition, warning that drawing lines would fracture the movement.
A movement without moral boundaries is hollow. Incorporating figures who reject the core values of America is both unethical and politically disastrous.
Shapiro put it bluntly from the Turning Point stage: “The conservative movement is also in danger from charlatans who claim to speak in the name of principle but actually traffic in conspiracism and dishonesty, who offer nothing but ire and despair, who seek to undermine fundamental principles of conservatism by championing aggravation and grievance. These people are frauds, and they are grifters, and they do not deserve your time.”
The Nick Fuentes Problem and the Heritage Warning
Nick Fuentes is not a misunderstood provocateur. He is an open racist, Holocaust denier, and antisemite who promotes propaganda rooted in hatred and conspiracy. His worldview is fundamentally opposed to the principles of America: equality under the law, pluralism, individual liberty, and constitutional democracy.
When Tucker Carlson gave Fuentes a platform in October 2025, it triggered a crisis at the Heritage Foundation. Heritage president Kevin Roberts defended Carlson, believing he was standing for free speech and against “cancel culture.” Instead, he triggered the very fracture he claimed to want to avoid. Multiple trustees resigned, staff revolted, and an antisemitism task force severed ties with the organization. The controversy overshadowed Heritage’s policy work and damaged its credibility as a serious institution. This is what happens when institutions prioritize tribal loyalty over principle, the damage is not merely reputational, it’s structural.
When conservatives like Ben Shapiro draw these boundaries, the attacks rarely engage the substance of the argument. Instead, they descend into identity politics, accusations that Shapiro’s position is driven by his Jewish identity, or that he and others like Bari Weiss are “Israel-firsters” with divided loyalties.
This is one of the oldest antisemitic tropes in history, repackaged for the digital age and it should alarm anyone who cares about a healthy conservative movement.
Online Fantasy vs. Political Reality
What makes this moment especially revealing is how disconnected online outrage is from political reality. A recent Turning Point USA poll of AmericaFest convention attendees found that over 85% consider Israel an ally of the United States. That is an overwhelming consensus.
Yet if you spent your time only on certain corners of X, you might think Israel is wildly unpopular among young conservatives. That perception is a manufactured reality.
Foreign adversaries like Russia, Qatar, and China, have learned a hard truth: conservatives remain one of Israel’s strongest bases of support. So, they target that support relentlessly. Through bot networks, coordinated disinformation campaigns, and amplification of extremist voices, they seek to fracture the right by pushing antisemitism into conservative spaces and reframing it as “anti-establishment” or “America First.”
Figures like Fuentes, Owens, and Carlson serve as integral pawns in this ecosystem of deception
Electoral Math Doesn’t Lie
President Trump did not return to the White House in 2024 by mobilizing extremists. He won because of a measurable shift among moderates, particularly suburban women, Latino voters, and a growing share of Black voters. According to Pew Research, Trump drew nearly even with Kamala Harris among Hispanic voters, losing by only 3 percentage points.
Voters remain pragmatic. They care about stability, equal opportunity, and decency.
This is where defenders of figures like Fuentes, Owens, and their ilk fundamentally misread the political map. These voices shrink the electorate rather than expand it.
Shapiro captured this dynamic when he mocked the endless conspiracism that now passes for courage: “‘Just asking questions’, something my 5-year-old does… When grown men and women spend their days ‘just asking questions’ without seeking real answers, they’re seeding distrust.”
Suburban women do not see this racist or antisemitic rhetoric as edgy or brave. They see instability. Latino voters, many of whom are deeply religious, family-oriented, and patriotic, do not view racial grievance politics as “America First.”
There is no hidden army of voters waiting to be activated by embracing extremists. There is, however, a large bloc of persuadable Americans who will not tolerate ugliness masquerading as authenticity.
Every time conservative leaders are evasive about antisemitism, they make it harder to hold these voters and easier for Democrats to caricature the entire movement as intolerant.
President Trump himself has been unequivocal on this point. When asked by The New York Times whether antisemites belong in his coalition, he replied plainly: “I think we don’t need them. I think we don’t like them.” That clarity reflects an understanding that movements win by drawing lines, not erasing them.
Big Tents Need Boundaries
Serious movements draw lines. Winning coalitions requires trust. And trust cannot coexist with hatred
We have seen what happens when identity politics consumes a movement. The left allowed grievance, racial essentialism, and purity tests to hollow out liberalism, replacing genuine progress with intolerance disguised as virtue. Conservatives capitalized on these political errors throughout the 2024 campaign.
Now some on the right are flirting with the same mistake.
The paradox of the “big tent” is that it only remains standing if it has sturdy poles and clear boundaries. A tent with no structure collapses under its own weight. Similarly, a political coalition that refuses to exclude anyone, no matter how toxic, will eventually repel the very voters it needs to win.
The Turning Point poll also showed that a majority of attendees believe “radical Islam” is the greatest threat facing the West. Israel is a key strategic ally in this fight. Maintaining support for Israel is both sound foreign policy and good politics.
True conservatism is about preserving American values, democratic institutions, Western civilization, and embodying the moral clarity that allows a pluralistic society to thrive.
The future of conservatism will be shaped by leaders who understand that strength comes from principle. A big tent is only meaningful if it stands for something.
And a movement that cannot say no to antisemites will eventually lose the right to say it stands for America.
The choice is ours. Will we rise to meet it?
Adam Milstein is an Israeli American “strategic venture philanthropist.” He can be reached via email, X and Facebook.

Now that Quatarlson has burnished his Jew hating credentials with America he can now feel comfortable about dipping his wick into the wicked witch of Somalia. Father Coughlin indeed.
Tucker and Owens have learned the most basic rule:
No one ever got less famous or lost money attacking and blaming Jews and Israel for all of the world’s problems.
I think both Shapiros are kooks – Both Benny and the crank in Pennsylvania.
All groups have faults and blind spots.
No group should be considered untouchable.
The question is whether criticism is given in a loving way or a hateful way.
There is a big difference.
Shrieking every time someone looks at you cross eyed is not the way to go through life. Even Dean Wormer would agree with that. The sad part is the Boy who cried Wolf syndrome. When the complaining occurs with every minor incursion, sadly, when a major incursion occurs people tend to look the other way – thinking of the hideous events on the campuses of our major indoctrination centers a few months ago. Now that was worthy of intense attention but so much attention had been given for nothing so many times before than many looked the other way.
Look at the situation the professional african-american activisss have produced. Nobody with any sense pays attention to their constant bleatings.,
Most here are sick of ALL groups who resort to this.
“Many say that Shapiro goes out of his way to censure discussion about Israel.”
MANY SAY THAT: leftist rhetorical trope
We see you.
You seem like one of the most defensive and insecure posters I’ve seen.
And you never seem to refute anything.
We Americans see you too!
With me it is very personal. My dad was a pastor, but it wasn’t till I was 17 that I was confronted with the need to have my OWN relationship with God. I laid awake one night after hearing friend’s testimonies (during the Jesus Movement) & I read a lot of the Bible…(much of what I had heard my whole life) but this time it felt more real and by morning, when I asked Jesus to come into my life, I also received a supernatural love for Israel and Jewish people even though at that point in my life, I had actually never even met a Jewish person. I don’t know how God is going to work things out, but I totally believe that when he makes a covenant with a people for whatever reason He doesn’t go back on that covenant.
Ancient Israel or 1948 Israel? One doesn’t exist and the other is created.
Neither Ben Shapiro or Ramswarmy are conservative. Nor do they speak for Constitionalists like myself. They’re not even close.
and one is Jewish and the other is not even White!
Ben is not a conservative nor is he an American
Tucker is very good at Islamopandering
Here’s my theory. What if these extreme influencers have the goal of tanking the right. The left then wins and their solid alliance with Islam, open borders etc. wins too.
So its deliberate sabotage . And its working.
I, for one, 4will never vote for Vance. He is a Carlson buddy and an overt anti-Semite. I morally cannot. And I’m not alone. When he loses, we have another Democrat administration. Should he win, his hate and damage continues. Its a lose lose scenario.
“First comes Saturday, then comes Sunday.” Except when there are not many Jews around, and infidel women are easy rape or grooming targets.
The difference of opinion among conservatives regarding Israel between the Evangelical Protestants (Christian Zionism) and Catholics (Replacement Theology) has always been around, but it is current being exploited as a wedge issue. Who is the political operative on the Left who is pushing this?