The left needs fascists like vampires need blood



The post-Enlightenment West prides itself on having left religious myths behind. Sophisticated people scoff at demons, devils, and other silly superstitions. But ideas that once wore robes and halos simply change costumes. The idea of absolute evil re-emerges in secular form, and fascism plays the part of the devil in our political imagination.

Once a movement or person becomes the secular Satan, debate ends and violence begins to look like the only remedy. That is why leftists now call ordinary conservative positions “fascist” — they build the moral case for political violence.

Publicly branding an opponent ‘fascist’ with the expectation that it justifies violence should be as unacceptable as calling for a race-based lynching.

Consider the common thought experiment: “Would you travel back in time to kill baby Hitler?” Many answer yes. The image of a helpless infant collides with the scale of evil Adolf Hitler later embodied. For some, the calculus seems to justify murder when it prevents mass atrocity. Hitler stops being a human in that mental model; he becomes pure malignancy, and ordinary moral rules fall away.

That same process unfolded on American streets and campus quads over the past eight years. In 2017 Richard Spencer, a white nationalist, received a shove and a punch while speaking publicly. Spencer committed no violence that day. He threatened no one. He merely exercised his right to speak.

Still, many on the left cheered the assault. The assault collapsed an important boundary: If someone looks or sounds like a “Nazi,” is it now permissible to punch him? The Supreme Court long ago protected ugly speech, even the American Nazi Party’s right to march through a town with a large population of Holocaust survivors.

Anti-fascism as civic religion

But popular sentiment has shifted: Physical force against those denounced as fascists won moral approval from many progressives.

From insults to legal penalties to physical attacks, the escalation followed a familiar arc. Speech codes function as secular blasphemy laws. Labels like “bigot,” “racist,” or “transphobe” once carried distinct meanings; applied relentlessly, they blurred into a single category: heretic.

When those tags lost bite, the left raised the stakes. “White supremacist” replaced “racist” for positions like ending illegal immigration or opposing radical medical interventions for children. When that failed to stanch conservative influence, progressives reached for the final word: fascist.

That choice carries theological force. In secular modernity, defeating Hitler and the Nazis became a foundational myth. Anti-fascism assumed the status of a civic religion: a liturgical memory, a ritual cast of villains, and a duty of perpetual vigilance.

Paul Gottfried and other thinkers note how anti-fascism functions as a moral system after World War II. Comparing any enemy leader to Hitler became morally decisive. Nationalism, family veneration, and cultural continuity assumed guilt by association. The strong gods, once banished, left a moral vacuum that anti-fascism now fills.

RELATED: Calling MAGA ‘fascist’ is the smear of the century

Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

We’re all ‘fascists’ now?

Yet, fascism as a coherent political doctrine remains a historical phenomenon tied to early 20th-century Italy and, in some respects, to German national socialism. Stretching the term until it fits every conservative position strips it of analytical meaning. Calling something “fascist” should require attention to ideology, not impulse. Treating the word as a universal moral obliterator turns politics into theology. You cannot bargain with demons; you must exterminate them.

The very online left sells a modern variant: “ontological evil.” Call someone ontologically evil and you deny that person’s capacity for change. Evil becomes an essential property, not a series of choices. A man deemed ontologically evil stops being a political adversary and becomes a predator to be neutralized. That rhetoric creates a moral climate in which killing a political opponent appears not merely excusable but necessary.

We hear that rhetoric applied to mainstream conservatives practically every day. News figures, pundits, and Democratic politicians label President Trump and his supporters “fascists” or, at the very least, “semi-fascist.” After Charlie Kirk’s murder, some commentators continued to call him a fascist. Those who declared him so while he lay dead turned vile accusation into a license for dehumanization. The slogans scrawled by the shooter evoked the same anti-fascist catechism.

When likely presidential candidates like California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) brand ordinary conservative beliefs — national sovereignty, for example — as “fascist,” they signal to zealots that violence is not just allowed but morally mandated.

RELATED: Gavin Newsom’s ‘fascist’ slur echoes in the streets

Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

That dynamic plays out in organization and funding as well. Networks of activists and groups that tolerate or endorse violent tactics receive resources and cover. Antifa and similar formations act as paramilitary foot soldiers who can intimidate, disrupt, and, when they choose, kill. They do so with the encouragement of influencers who frame opponents as existential threats. Label someone a fascist, and the path to extra-legal action opens.

Argument, not extermination

Americans must treat such rhetoric with the same moral opprobrium once reserved for lynch mobs. Publicly branding an opponent “fascist” with the expectation that it justifies violence should be as unacceptable as calling for a race-based lynching. When progressives use “fascist” to mark a target for death, they weaponize language to strip victims of human rights.

We must also restore analytic discipline. Accurate political language matters. Fascism, nazism, and other totalizing ideologies warrant denunciation and opposition, but we dilute our ability to resist genuine threats when we scream “fascist” at any conservative who supports border security or traditional marriage. If every disagreement becomes a call to arms, the political space collapses into a permanent state of evisceration disguised as moral clarity.

Finally, recognize what this rhetoric teaches would-be killers. If violence succeeds in silencing a critic, networks that cheer the act learn an obvious lesson: violence pays. The civic cost is enormous. The social fabric frays. The state loses its monopoly on legitimate force when vigilantes and ideologues decide they hold moral authority to execute enemies.

Treat accusations of “fascism” with the contempt they deserve. And make clear that no label grants anyone the right to take a life. If we let secular Satan labels justify bloodshed, we will learn in short order how quickly a republic can abandon its own laws and become hostage to its worst angels.

‘Blatant Disrespect:’ Catholic Advocacy Group Calls For Removal Of Apple TV Episode Mocking The Eucharist

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Screenshot-2025-06-10-at-2.52.45 PM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Screenshot-2025-06-10-at-2.52.45%5Cu202fPM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]CatholicVote confronted Apple’s outright mockery of the Eucharist in Your Friends and Neighbors, calling it 'blatant disrespect.'

Even When Blaspheming At The Olympics, Queer Activists Reinforce Christianity

In their attempts to slime what they see as their enemies, queer activists reinforce the realities they're trying to destroy.

WATCH: Woke church celebrates queer youth — ‘You are queer enough as you are’ — and then invokes the ‘queer ancestors’?!



As the woke mob grows ever louder and crazier, some Western churches are bending the knee and embracing values contrary to biblical principles, especially when those values earn them the checkmark of approval from the LGBTQ+ community.

Pat Gray and the “Unleashed” team turn their gaze toward the Pilgrim United Church of Christ in Carlsbad, California, where at a recent service, a “call to worship” involved rejecting all messages that spoke against the LGBTQ+ agenda.

WATCH: Woke Churches Abandon Faith for 'Pride' in BLASPHEMOUS Displayyoutu.be

Pat plays the clip of an adult church official and a child assistant standing in front of a rainbow Pride flag while reading the following blasphemous creed to the congregation:

Officiant: “In the image of God, You created everything and called it good.”

Child: “In abundant diversity, Your likeness is found in us.”

Officiant: “We reject all messages that belittle or degrade any among us.”

Child: “And so in faithfulness to God and one another we proclaim: Sacred are our bodies of every size and disability. Blessed are our sexualities, throwing us towards love of many kinds.”

Unsurprisingly, the creed also touched on gender and race.

“[God] created your body, so do whatever you want with it,” mocks Pat, who’s disgusted by the sacrilegious display.

In the same service, another pair got up on stage and proclaimed: “Help us mirror to one another that you are a God who makes no mistakes.”

Pat sees a glaring inconsistency.

“Right! He’s a God who makes no mistakes. ... If you’re a man, you’re a man; if you’re a woman, you’re a woman. He didn’t make a mistake, so what is the deal here?”

“For queer youth — you are beautiful and wonderfully made as you are. You are queer enough as you are. Your journey to discover who you are in your queerness is a gift to bear witness to and worthy of celebration. Keep going. Keep embracing yourself as you are in bloom. You are enough as you are, and you are a yes to God — always,” the duo continued.

If that wasn’t weird enough, the “queer ancestors” were addressed next.

“For queer ancestors — thank you for your relentless resistance so that advocacy, love, care, and justice could be manifested and continued in this moment.”

Unfortunately, this blasphemous madness isn’t isolated to the Pilgrim United Church. It’s something that is becoming quite common. To see what other woke churches are promoting, watch the clip above.

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Art professor fired from Minnesota university for showing 14th-century painting of Islam's founder Muhammad



An art professor was fired from an American university for showing a respectful Medieval painting of the 7th-century religious leader Muhammad.

Erika López Prater's termination by Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota, comes after a Muslim student complained, even though Prater had previously invited students with deep-seated religious beliefs or iconoclastic tendencies to approach her with concerns.

Blasphemy laws on campus

Unlike the images of Muhammad that the murdered French cartoonists at Charlie Hebdo published or the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons that sparked deadly Islamist violence worldwide in early 2006, the image Prater showed to her virtual class is neither parodic nor contextually offensive.

The New York Times reported that Prater showed her art class an image of a 14th-century painting from one of the oldest Islamic illustrated histories of the world, entitled, "A Compendium of Chronicles" by Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, himself a Muslim painting for a Muslim patron.

The painting, now housed at the University of Edinburgh, depicts the angel Gabriel conferring to Muhammad the first Quranic revelation.

Prater shared another illustration of Muhammad. This second image, wherein Muhammad is depicted with a halo and wearing a veil, was created in the 16th century by Mustafa ibn Vali.

Prater told the New York Times that she had anticipated there might be some controversy over her sharing a historic work of art with her art history class. Accordingly, she took precautions to make sure nobody would be caught off guard, giving students ample opportunity to leave the room in the event that they might be uncomfortable.

The professor allegedly also noted in her syllabus that such images would be included in the course.

When showing the image to her forewarned class on Oct. 6, 2022, Prater reportedly explained why she was showing the image and couched its display in a discussion of how different religions have depicted the divine.

After the lecture, one student was left enraged, notwithstanding Prater's many warnings and explanations.

Prater contacted Allison Baker, her department head, noting that a student expressed grievances about her lecture.

Baker wrote back, "It sounded like you did everything right. ... I believe in academic freedom so you have my support."

The administration's turned out to be vaporous.

Academic freedom with notable exceptions

The student who claimed to be offended was Aram Wedatalla, a Sudanese business student who heads the university's Muslim Student Association.

Wedatalla told the Oracle, the student paper, "As a Muslim, and a Black person, I don’t feel like I belong, and I don’t think I’ll ever belong in a community where they don’t value me as a member, and they don’t show the same respect that I show them."

Prater had written to Wedatalla on Oct. 8, apologizing for making her "uncomfortable" and causing her "emotional agitation."

The professor also reminded Wedatalla that she let the virtual class know ahead of time what images would be shown so that they could turn off their video, noting, "I also described every subsequent slide I showed with language to indicate when I was no longer showing an image of the Prophet Muhammad. I am sorry that despite my attempt to prevent a negative reaction, you still viewed and were troubled by this image."

Despite Prater's warnings in advance and apologies afterwards, Wedatalla waged a campaign against the professor, seeking punitive measures. Wedatalla's striving proved successful.

The university's president, Fayneese Miller, stated, "Respect for the observant Muslim students in that classroom should have superseded academic freedom."

In early November, the dean of students sent a campus-wide email signed by Dr. David Everett, associate vice president of "Inclusive Excellence," condemning the display of art in the art class, calling it "undeniably inconsiderate, disrespectful and Islamophobic."

At a Dec. 8 forum where Wedatalla tearfully implored the university to punish Prater for discussing a painting in an art class, Mark Berkson, a religion professor at the university said, "What does one do when the Islamic community itself is divided on an issue? Because there are many Muslim scholars and experts and art historians who do not believe that this was Islamophobic."

News Lines Magazine reported that Prater was not given a public platform or forum to discuss her lecture before or after her character assassination by the school's administrators.

The art professor told the Oracle, "My perspective and actions have been lamentably mischaracterized, my opportunities for due process have been thwarted, and Dr. Everett’s all-employee email accusation that 'undeniably… Islamophobic' actions undertaken in my class on Oct. 6 have been misapplied."

Prater was ultimately exited from her role and prevented from teaching at Hamline in the spring.

Everett's office claimed, "It was decided it was best that this faculty member was no longer part of the Hamline community."

PEN America, a writers' group that sometimes promotes free expression, released a statement on Dec. 23, denouncing the university's capitulation to iconoclasts.

Jeremy Young, senior manager of free expression and education at PEN America, wrote, "Not only is an art history professor well within their rights to show medieval and Renaissance Islamic artworks in class, but the professor apparently took added care to create a positive pedagogical experience for students – placing the images in historical context, allowing students to opt out of viewing them, and thoughtfully exploring the history and diversity of Islamic art and thought."

"Hamline University has committed one of the most egregious violations of academic freedom in recent memory," Young added.

Pro-choice Catholic group blasphemes in support of abortion, pushes pro-abortion message during prayer vigil



The 49th annual March for Life in Washington, D.C., is well under way, as thousands of pro-life advocates gather to show their support for ending legal abortion.

Considering that the catechism of the Catholic Church expressly prohibits and opposes abortion, the March for Life historically garners substantial support from many different Catholic organizations. One such institution, the Catholic University of America — located in the nation's capital — cancels classes so that students may show solidarity with the pro-life cause. And every year, Catholic groups across the country send buses full of people to Washington, where they gather to pray for the overturning of Roe v. Wade and march to protect the rights of the unborn.

However, it appears that not every nominally Catholic organization is interested in adhering to the Vatican's teachings on abortion. Catholics for Choice — a pro-abortion organization — openly defies established Catholic doctrine and advocates for a "full range of reproductive healthcare services, including safe and legal abortion."

This group's open defiance of the catechism was on full display Thursday night, as the organization projected a pro-abortion message onto the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception to protest the parish's pre-March for Life prayer vigil.

So I\u2019m outside the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in DC, and Catholics for Choice is here projecting messages onto the church in support of abortion rights.\n\nThe protest coincides with the basilica\u2019s \u201cprayer vigil for life,\u201d happening inside.pic.twitter.com/0y1M7X9ByC
— Jack Jenkins (@Jack Jenkins) 1642721480

The pro-choice organization's protest was met with a mix of online condemnation and applause, with leaders in the church labeling the sophomoric antics an "attempted desecration" and "diabolical."

The attempted desecration is enormous. Diabolical. Mother Mary, pray for them, now and at the hour of death. Amen.https://twitter.com/APdubs/status/1484339408169885704\u00a0\u2026
— Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone (@Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone) 1642735083

This year's March for Life is of particular importance to many attendees, as the Supreme Court will rule in the coming months on whether a Mississippi law preventing abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy is constitutional. Should the Supreme Court uphold the Mississippi state law, it may also overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case legalizing abortion.

Should Roe v. Wade get overturned, several states stand at the ready to introduce robust legal protections for the unborn.

Since 1973, there have been a total of 63,459,781 abortions in the United States, the overwhelming majority of which are sought for reasons unrelated to the mother's physical or mental health. As of 2016, there are 186 abortions performed for every 1,000 live births — about one in five children are aborted.

The March for Life is the largest pro-life rally in the United States, with thousands of attendees each year. With the Supreme Court approaching a verdict in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health, it's possible that the United States enters an era when abortion is not protected at the federal level — at which point, Catholics for Choice will still be blasphemous.

Swedish Police Hunt for Danes Who Burned Qur'an in No-Go Zone

Swedish police are hunting for members of an anti-Islam group from Denmark who are alleged to have burned a copy of the Quran in Stockholm's no-go Rinkeby suburb.