Nick Fuentes
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And because of their unique heritage and story, which is that they're a stateless people, they're unassimilable, they resist assimilation for thousands of years.
And I think that's a good thing.
And now they have this territory in Israel.
There's a deep religious affection for the state.
It's bound up in their identity, the story of the exodus from Egypt, the promise of the land, all these things.
So let's say in the United States, for example, somebody like a Sheldon Adelson, he's not Israeli.
Is he an ideological neocon?
Does he believe in the promise of democratic globalism?
I don't think necessarily.
his heart is in Israel and it's because he is a proud Jewish person.
And I guess what I'm saying is that if you are a Jewish person in America, you're sort of, and again, it's not because they're born, but it's sort of a rational self-interest politically to say,
I'm a minority.
I'm a religious ethnic minority.
This is not really my home.
My ancestral home is in Israel.
There's like a natural affinity that Jews have for Israel.
And I would say on top of that, for the international Jewish community, they're extremely organized.
And many of them are critical of Israel or Israel's current government or the project of Israel.
But I guess what they have in common, unlike let's say like Singapore, for example, is that they have this international community across borders, extremely organized, that is putting the interests of themselves before the interests of their home country.
And there's like there's no other country that has a similar arrangement like that.