
Podcasters and influencers on social media are normalizing antisemitic rhetoric to Gen Z.
Takeaways
- Old hatred is wearing new clothes, and it’s showing up in podcasts and influencer feeds.
- Gen Z conservatives are being courted by voices spreading conspiracy theories about Jews.
- Names like Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, and Nick Fuentes keep showing up in this conversation.
- Torah has always condemned this kind of hatred, calling it what it is: moral corruption.
- Friends of Israel have a real role to play in pushing back before this spreads further.
So here’s something worth sitting with for a minute. Antisemitism isn’t just showing up in the places we’d expect anymore. It’s showing up on podcasts, in comment sections, in the kind of content your nephew scrolls through at 1am.
And that’s what makes this version so slippery. It doesn’t always look like hatred at first glance. Sometimes it just looks like “asking questions.”
Why This Wave Feels Different
Researchers who study far-right youth networks have noticed a pattern. Platforms like Instagram, TikTok, and Telegram often work like a funnel. Moderate content pulls people in first, then the more extreme stuff shows up later, usually in smaller private channels.
A lot of this rhetoric hides behind coded language. Phrases about “global elites” or “Zionist control” sound abstract enough that people can deny what they’re really implying. That’s exactly what makes it hard to confront.

The Influencers Everyone’s Talking About
Three names keep coming up in this conversation: Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, and Nick Fuentes. Carlson’s interview with Fuentes stirred up a lot of concern, mostly because Fuentes has long been associated with open antisemitic rhetoric.
Critics say Carlson’s platform gives that kind of thinking a bigger audience than it would otherwise get. Whatever your take on any one of them individually, the bigger picture matters more. Young people are absorbing conspiracy and grievance packaged as “just telling the truth.”
📖 Ever wondered why antisemitic conspiracy theories spread to easily? This article breaks it down.

Gen Z Conservatives Are Caught in the Middle
Here’s a number that stood out to me. A recent poll found that somewhere between 20 and 25 percent of Gen Z conservatives hold views that lean anti-Israel or antisemitic, even among some who still say they support Israel.
That’s a minority. But a loud, online minority can shape a lot of the conversation happening around them. Young people are still figuring out what they believe, and right now a lot of that figuring out is happening in comment sections built to reward whoever’s the most provocative.

What Scripture Actually Says About This
The Bible is direct about this. Genesis 12:3 ties blessing to how nations treat Abraham’s descendants, and that promise still stands today.
Standing against hatred of the Jewish people isn’t optional for anyone who takes these words seriously. Spreading conspiracy theories about Jewish power has nothing to do with courage or truth-telling. It’s plain moral failure, dressed up as boldness.
Where Friends of Israel Come In
A lot of people who genuinely love Israel don’t realize how close this kind of content sits to their own feeds. It borrows the language of faith and conviction while working against everything those things are supposed to stand for.
Recognizing that gap is the first step. The second is being willing to say something when it shows up, even in spaces that feel friendly.
When Hate Gets Entertaining, It Gets Dangerous
That’s really the heart of it. When antisemitism starts showing up dressed as entertainment, it gets a lot easier to swallow and a lot harder to catch. Worth keeping an eye on, and worth talking about out loud.
Want to keep reading? Click here for a fascinating breakdown on the core Biblical beliefs behind Christian Zionism. Explore more on faith, values, and the Land of Israel at Sinai Project.
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