Tucker Carlson lost his popular show on FOX News, but he now has a podcast on Elon Musk’s Twitter platform (X). Recently he invited a Holocaust Denier to appear on his show.
This is personal to me because every member of my extended family in Europe was murdered. As a child in Houston, I remember meeting people who had a blue tattoo on their arm–a string of numbers. They were survivors, and they told stories and wrote books about the atrocities they saw and experienced. In fact, there are countless videos taken by the Nazis to document the atrocities that Holocaust Deniers now claim are fiction.
It’s one of the strange ironies of our time that right wingers like Tucker Carlson now look sympathetically on fascists like Viktor Orban of Hungary and dictators like Putin. Carlson scored an exclusive interview with Putin and visited a supermarket to showcase the quality of life in Moscow. Trump praises Putin and the dictators of China and North Korea.
Who is Darryl Cooper? I looked him up on Google. Checked Wikipedia. I could find no evidence that he had gone to college. He is no historian.
Then I found historian Niall Ferguson’s commentary, which he called “The Return of Anti-History.”
He wrote:
According to Tucker Carlson, Darryl Cooper is “the most important popular historian working in the United States today.” I had never heard of Cooper until this week and was none the wiser when I went to look for his books. There are none.
According to Wikipedia, “he is author of Twitter — A How to Tips & Tricks Guide (2011) and the editor of Bush Yarns and Other Offences (2022).” These are scarcely works of history. It turns out that, as Carlson put it in his wildly popular conversation with Cooper, this historian works “in a different medium—on Substack, X, podcasts.”
The problem, as swiftly became apparent on Carlson’s podcast, is that you cannot do history that way. What we are dealing with in this conversation is the opposite of history: call it anti-history.
True history proceeds from an accumulation of evidence, some in the form of written records, some in other forms, to a reconstitution of past thought, in R.G. Collingwood’s phrase, and from there to a rendition of Leopold von Ranke’s was eigentlich gewesen: what essentially happened. By contrast, Darryl Cooper offers a series of wild assertions that are almost entirely divorced from historical evidence and can be of interest only to those so ignorant of the past that they mistake them for daring revisionism, as opposed to base neo-Nazism.
Michelle Goldberg, an opinion columnist for The New York Times, was taken aback by Carlson’s latest foray into historical revisionism.
She wrote:
This week Tucker Carlson, the former Fox News star who now hosts one of America’s top podcasts, had an apologist for Adolf Hitler on his show. Darryl Cooper, who runs a history podcast (and newsletter) called “Martyr Made,” considers Winston Churchill, not Hitler, the chief villain of World War II. In a social media post that he’s since deleted, Cooper argued that a Paris occupied by the Nazis was “infinitely preferable in virtually every way” to the city on display during the opening ceremony of the recent Summer Olympics, where a drag queen performance infuriated the right. On his show, Carlson introduced Cooper to listeners as “the most important popular historian working in the United States today.”
Over the course of a wide-ranging two-hour conversation, Cooper presented the mainstream history of World War II as a mythology shrouded in taboos intended to prop up a corrupt liberal political order. The idea that Nazi Germany represented the epitome of evil, argued Cooper, is such a “core part of the state religion” that we have “emotional triggers” preventing us from examining the past dispassionately.
This clever rhetorical formulation, familiar to various strands of right-wing propaganda, flatters listeners for their willingness to reject all they’ve learned from mainstream experts, making them feel brave and savvy for imbibing absurdities. Cooper proceeded, in a soft-spoken, faux-reasonable way, to lay out an alternative history in which Hitler tried mightily to avoid war with Western Europe, Churchill was a “psychopath” propped up by Zionist interests, and millions of people in concentration camps “ended up dead” because the overwhelmed Nazis didn’t have the resources to care for them. Elon Musk promoted the conversation as “very interesting” on his platform X, though he later deleted the tweet.
Some on the right found Carlson’s turn toward Holocaust skepticism surprising. “Didn’t expect Tucker Carlson to become an outlet for Nazi apologetics, but here we are,” Erick Erickson, the conservative radio host, wrote on X. But Carlson’s trajectory was entirely predictable. Nazi sympathy is the natural endpoint of a politics based on glib contrarianism, right-wing transgression and ethnic grievance.
There are few better trolls, after all, than Holocaust deniers, who love to pose as heterodox truth-seekers oppressed by Orwellian elites. (The wildly antisemitic Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust named its journal An Inconvenient History: A Quarterly Journal for Free Historical Inquiry.) Those who deny or downplay the Holocaust often excel at mimicking the forms and language of legitimate scholarship, using them to undermine rather than explore reality. They blitz their opponents with out-of-context historical detail and bad-faith questions, and they know how to use crude provocation to get attention.
Long before 4Chan existed, the disgraced Holocaust-denying author David Irving urged his followers, in an early 1990s speech, to break through the “appalling pseudo-religious atmosphere” surrounding World War II by being aggressively tasteless. “You’ve got to say things like: ‘More women died on the back seat of Senator Edward Kennedy’s car at Chappaquiddick than died in the gas chamber at Auschwitz,’” he said.
Until quite recently, American conservatives mostly maintained antibodies against Irving-style disinformation. Right-wing thought leaders generally shared the same broad historical understanding of World War II as the rest of society, felt patriotic pride at America’s role in it and viewed Hitler as metaphysically wicked. Rather than recognizing the way right-wing politics, taken to extremes, could shade into National Socialism, they would hurl Nazi comparisons at the left, as the conservative columnist Jonah Goldberg did in his 2008 book “Liberal Fascism.”
[Jonah] Goldberg’s approach was dishonest, but it was representative of a broad antifascist consensus in American politics. Cooper is, in fact, correct that abhorrence of Nazism has helped structure Western societies. If we could agree on nothing else, we could agree that part of the job of liberal democracy was to erect bulwarks against the emergence of Hitler-like figures.

And JD Vance refuses to condemn this conversation, instead choosing to hide behind free speech rights.
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“Goldberg’s approach was dishonest…”
Herein lies the problem. Honesty. It seems in short supply. It’s not just history either. A spokesman for the association of grocery stores claims barely above 1 percent for a profit margin and expects us to believe that. A government official testified that there are weapons of mass destruction in Iran. There are older examples.
when I was a boy, I naively told a parent of a friend that history taught Vietnam was a bad idea. She told me I must be influenced by communists. I told my professor of this conversation. He told me pointedly that I should “arm myself with the facts.”
That is, unfortunately, not sufficient. Somehow truth needs to be accompanied by loving kindness, a thing the likes of Tucker Carlson would find foreign.
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“part of the job of liberal democracy was to erect bulwarks against the emergence of Hitler-like figures.“
Bulwarks are more difficult to establish in a society with such unregulated access to technology. We are in the “information age,” but it also implies we are in the disinformation age. With social media and podcasts, anyone with an agenda or a gripe can acquire a huge bully pulpit designed to mislead and misinform. It is easy for unstable rich guys like Carlson and Musk capture the attention of a less than critically thinking public, particularly after fifty years of neoliberalism, a global pandemic and a doomsday climate crisis on our doorstep.
With only a handful of Holocaust survivors left, we become less connected to horrors of Nazi Germany. It is more important than ever that we get history and science from real experts instead of biased people with agendas and the means to buy their way into our consciousness. The same can be said for our schools. It is important that trained human teachers continue to instruct our young people instead of canned instruction from a bot. The right harps on how public education indoctrinates young people when it is the right wing extremists that repeatedly demonstrate their intention to indoctrinate our youth. We must keep teaching real with real books, real discussion and real opportunity to learn the truth.
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Correct. On all counts. We must face this assault on truth with the only weapon we have: truth.
Back after the pandemic , there was this one kid I befriended who had suffered from three. Outs with Covid. Her father was anti-vax. She knew the truth. She knew her father was wrong. But she had to wait until she grew up to exercise her judgement. It was sad.
As you pointed out, it is difficult to get truth in front Mt of people when lies are at or fingertips.
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but [this] also implies we are in the disinformation age
Beautifully observed, RT!!! Exactly
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Sick…demented….disgusting….
I just read that Pennsylvania is being viewed as the #1 battleground state by both the Harris and Trump campaigns.
I can see the state from my front porch. I’ll need to get over there to volunteer between now and November 5.
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I wish I could help. I could vote five times in Tennessee and trump would still take our electoral votes.
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It is a shame that anyone gives oxygen to the ignorant musings of Tucker Carlson.
As Ian Rankin’s John Rebus put it: “Got a face makes you want to smack it.” I always wanted to drive him to the West Side of Chicago and dump him there. He’d get a real education. If he survived.
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God a face that makes you want to smack it. Yup, that smarmy, self-satisfied look that comes from having everything handed to one and having what my grandma used to call “no raising.”
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I have had friends who were Holocaust victims–who were in the camps, and I have many more who lost a great many of their loved ones to the camps extermination squads. This history is close enough for us to reach out and touch it. TUCKER CARLSON (spell the first name with an F) is a lowlife, ignorant, hate-spewing, ignorant rabble-rousing POS. F this Fing Smarmy, Pampered, rich-boy Fhead.
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CX: to the campsa nd extermination squads
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cx: to the camps or extermination squads
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Bob, there will come a time when no one will have personal direct knowledge of the horrors of Hitler’s regime. People like Timucker Carlson will spread lies. Ignorant people won’t know what is true.
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My former hairstylist, her family are practicing Jews, is supporting Tucker the fascist. She just went to see him on his “tour” here. And proudly posted pictures standing just inside waiting for the show. I am stunned at the turn she has taken since Covid. Anti-vax, anti-democracy. It happened so quickly.
I have no words. And yes, she is my “former” stylist.
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so sad, this poison spreading through our body politic
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This experience is not unique in American society post Covid. The Zeitgeist has turned in a dark, conspiratorial direction.
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Ignorance has become hip.
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In mathematics, they call it the “lowest common denominator.” In human things, it’s when everyone pushing an argument shares a horizon made of ignorance, stupidity, dogmatism, vindictiveness, and a transactional-only (predatory capitalism) mindset. CBK
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See Heather Cox Richardson most recent email. Trump is getting crazier and nuttier as the days go by.
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Roy,
I posted HCR’s latest at 9 am EST. Its shocking and frightening.
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I grew up on a street that was predominantly Jewish. I was friends with the children of those who escaped and those who were not as fortunate. Blue numbered tattoos. They inspected every purchase for any hint of German manufacturing before committing to the sale.
My father literally opened the gates of Dachau after a brief skirmish. What he saw there and heard from the liberated prisoners horrified him. He devoted the rest of his life to helping people as a lawyer for NYC.
Close to the end of his life he started reading about Holocaust deniers. He told me to never miss an opportunity to relate his story to anybody. He could see the writing on the wall.
So I’m doing that, here. Now.
it’s so obvious that Carlson, Trump, Musk, etc are working against the best interests of our nation. Sowing, nurturing, and furthering seeds of distrust. If they were doing the same in, say, Russia; they’d either be in a cell in Siberia or dead.
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Thank you, Gitapik. My brother was part of the group that liberated Dachau. I am still shocked that people believe that what he saw never happened. Or that the people in the camps were “prisoners of war,” even the mothers and babies.
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Right. I’ve heard the same. And the irony of it is that, according to my dad, those very Allied forces thought that it WAS a POW camp that they were liberating. He said it completely caught them off guard.
IThe lies are intentional and damaging. The perpetrators are hiding behind the cloak of Freedom of Speech. But, much like Hitler’s use of the then fully developed and widespread “radio” technology to spread constant disinformation, Trump and Co are using the internet. It’s so transparent. As though it’s moving in slow motion but we still can’t stop it.
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This is an instance where our belief in free speech is exploited by those who don’t believe in free speech.
Yesterday Putin banned YouTube in Russia.
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Diane: FWIW, this is written just after the election, but I’m plugging it in here because I think it relevant to your post, which I missed the first time around and appreciate, especially in hindsight.
Below is an edited note to a friend who invited me to Thanksgiving dinner. I wrote this note entitled “Reservations” about the invitation, which I accepted anyway because she is such a good friend. Names changed to protect the sane.
Hello Lisa:
I’m appreciative of and committed to spending Thanksgiving with you, my friend Lisa. I do have two reservations:
First, if anyone is sick or has the flue of any kind, please understand that I do not want to be around any kind of illness. Besides just a general caution, I have NO ONE here who can help me if I need other-than-hospital help. And I have avoided covid so far and would like to keep it that way. So, my hibernation is not only a personal fluke–it’s a practical decision for me.
Second, I am absolutely LIVID about having had the guts ripped out of the country by a madman. I don’t think I will be very good company and don’t want to have to button my lip about it–it’s churning in me like a volcanic cauldron–I am trying to hold in my “biting off heads” mood.
I am presently watching Morning Joe on MSNBC and their critique OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY, of Joe Biden, and of Kamala Harris is stunningly vacuous and forgets that the democratic “elite” is another term for intelligence, understanding and reflective thought, and not necessarily of the charge of arrogance coming from Electoral Stupid’s accusations. It’s the politically ignorant (woefully) that makes up over half of the nation that has turned democracy into a suicide pack by not looking to make themselves “elite” aka: into qualified voters. Yes, there is such a thing.
Why go to college, read a book, or get into reasonable discussions when you can be stupid for free?
What’s “wrong” with the democratic party is this: we/they got politically educated, which is what free people are supposed to do in a democracy. Instead, the ignorant electorate where many adults live believed Trump’s lies and made-up stories about how he was persecuted by those awful democrats (thanks to Fox and Friends, TUCKER CARLSON, etc.).
One of the talking heads on Morning Joe said they had to learn how to win elections. Okay—let’s follow the Trump playbook and deliver a 24-7 firehose of lies appealing to the lowest and nastiest aspects of the uneducated human psyche exposing all sorts of mess, including ripping the infected scab off of our still-present national misogyny and racism.
Pretty simple, really. Let’s engage in ceaseless projection so that those who don’t understand or care to use the ins and outs of logical discourse are so confused that even Orwell wouldn’t recognize their situation.
Also, if Kamala had a prick, she’d be president now. And I had a brief exchange with Norma yesterday, who said this:
“My friend who lives in the South told me yesterday, that her sister passed a billboard with a giant size Trump Under which was written, “The word made flesh” . . . what has happened to America?
Stupid happened to America. I think she would understand this: We have used our freedom carelessly and with no attending responsibility, as if it were endless and free.
Anyway, there is some time between now and Thanksgiving, so maybe my insides will recover a bit; but I doubt it. So, if you still want me to be there, I’ll be a cheery as I can, but explosive somber is the mood, and I doubt I’ll be great company. Fortunately, it looks like the mass deportation, if not an outright lie, is a gross exaggeration. Catherine
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