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In a interview with The American Conservative’s Harrison Berger, Carlson ties the core of Western civilization to the Christian belief in the individual human soul, arguing that any politics built on hating entire groups—Muslims, Jews, or anyone else—betrays both Christianity and the West.
He critiques figures like Ben Shapiro and Jonathan Greenblatt, accusing them of inciting group-based anger. He firmly rejects what he terms “hate bait,” advocating for conservatives to assess people on an individual basis to maintain moral clarity and unity.
Muslim hate vs. anti‑Semitism: TPUSA speech and Christian basics
Harrison Berger draws a parallel between Carlson’s recent speech at TPUSA and an “MLK-style” appeal to evaluate individuals “as God would,” rather than as representatives of a group or tribe. Carlson mentions that his speech content “just kind of emerged” on stage, as he typically doesn’t prepare notes, instead sharing thoughts that have recently occupied his mind. Among these is the rise in rhetoric portraying all Muslims as adversaries. He questions, “How is hating all Muslims better than hating all Jews?” labeling both as forms of indiscriminate hatred that are “disgusting.”
Carlson emphasizes that Christians are not given any exception to despise entire groups. “Christians aren’t supposed to hate anybody,” he asserts, while acknowledging his personal experience of disliking certain individuals. He underlines that the measure should be individual behavior, not group affiliation. Once you begin to blame entire families, or hold “children responsible for the crimes of their parents,” you cross a boundary that undermines any sense of justice.
He transitions to discussing the frequent right-wing discourse on “Western civilization.” Carlson contends that the true essence of the West is not about the free market or economic metrics, but “the belief in the individual human soul,” a concept deeply rooted in Christianity. This belief prohibits collective punishment and group animosity, distinguishing the West from “non-Western societies” that focus more on clans and groups rather than individuals.
Hiroshima, Gaza and the erosion of moral boundaries
In conversation with Berger, Carlson mentions that his TPUSA remarks on the “erosion of moral boundaries” in warfare as “disgusting and immoral” elicited a strong reaction from Shapiro and similarly-minded conservatives. His point was straightforward: “If it’s bad to bomb children to death in Hiroshima, it’s equally bad to do it in Gaza.” For this view, he faced accusations of betrayal and worse.
He argues that the backlash from his critics reveals their lack of belief in individual souls. To excuse the mass killing of civilians, he contends, “you have to believe… they’re subhuman,” a notion that “comforts” them with the horrific images from Gaza, as long as it aligns with their narrative. This perspective, he asserts, is a “non-Western view” that fixates on group identity and deems whole populations guilty or disposable.
Carlson links this mindset with both anti‑Semites and ethno‑nationalist hawks. He notes that both anti‑Semites and ethno‑narcissists fixate on Jews in the same way; they only disagree over whether Jews are villains or heroes. What they share is an obsession with groups rather than persons. For Carlson, that is the opposite of what Christianity demands.
He also describes the personal fallout from his stance: lost friendships, subscription cancellations and a flood of attacks labeling him a “Nazi.” Instead of responding in kind, Carlson says he has started to pity some of his fiercest critics. He points to Shapiro’s own admissions about heightened security and says bluntly that if you “wear a bulletproof vest in private” and live in constant fear, “you live in hell.” In Carlson’s telling, people in that condition are not moral guides; they are warning signs of what unchecked hatred does to the soul.
Rejecting dual loyalty myths and the ‘hate bait’
Berger notes that anti‑Semites like Nick Fuentes and hardline Israel‑first figures like Mark Dubowitz both push dual‑loyalty narratives—Fuentes claiming Jews secretly care only about Israel, Dubowitz urging Jews to flee to Israel in response to Western antisemitism. Carlson agrees and says plainly that in practice they are making “the same arguments,” merely from different angles. Both crowd politics around a single group and tell everyone else to define themselves in relation to it.
As a non‑Jew, Carlson says he is “not obsessed with Jewishness” and refuses to make any group, Jewish or Muslim, the center of his moral universe. He emphasizes again that anti‑Semitism is “immoral” in Christian teaching, but adds that the principle is universal: the same rule applies to hatred of Muslims, whites, blacks, or any other category.
Carlson argues that public figures like Shapiro and Greenblatt are not simply reacting to hatred; they are, in many cases, trying to manage and weaponize it. By smearing critics as Nazis and bigots, he says, they hope to “control your emotions,” much like a dysfunctional spouse who deliberately provokes fights to gain leverage. The goal of this strategy is to increase anger and fear, not resolve it.
He calls this dynamic “hate bait” and warns his audience not to bite. The entire point, he says, is to entice conservatives into becoming the caricatures their enemies already describe—seething anti‑Semites, seething Muslim‑haters—and thereby justify more censorship and repression. “Why would I let that person set the terms for me?” he asks, referring to his most vocal critics.
Christianity vs. the identity trap
Carlson closes the interview by focusing on what this means for the future of the right. He says he has become “calmer” and “less angry” as he has consciously refused to let hatred take root, especially with “too many children” and responsibilities depending on him. In his experience, “haters” are “always destroyed by it,” whether their obsession is race, religion or politics. He is not willing, he says, to sacrifice his soul or his family to join that club.
He warns that both anti‑Semitism and across‑the‑board Muslim hate are being deliberately stoked as tools to “increase the hatred,” splinter conservatives and turn them against each other so entrenched elites can grab more power.. The antidote, in his view, is a return to Christian first principles: refuse to hate entire peoples, refuse collective guilt, and insist on seeing each person as an individual soul before God.
For Carlson, this is not a soft or sentimental stance; it is a hard boundary. Either conservatives reclaim that soul‑based understanding of the person, or they slide into the same identity‑driven politics they once opposed. His message is stark but hopeful: do not let your enemies, or your supposed allies, turn you into a hater; decide what is at the center of your life “as a free man,” judge people as individuals, and rebuild unity on that ground—or watch the movement, and the country, fracture along lines of fear and revenge.