Episode Description
Picking it back up with historian of fascism Craig Johnson with the question of why fascism can feel cool—especially online—and how we might interrupt that appeal without fighting on fascism’s terms. But fascism isn't just pretending to be cool: it’s popular, aesthetic, and subcultural, and it sells itself through speed, power, transgression, and a sense of newness.
There's a tactical dilemma: how to puncture influencers like Andrew Tate or Nick Fuentes without reinforcing their own status metrics (looks, dominance, sexual access). Craig feels, for instance, that jawline mockery backfires, and why we have to keep the critique on what actually matters: cruelty, exploitation, and fascist politics.
No one organizes alone: tactics are collective, context-dependent, and always strategic. We close on coalition-building and why real, lived diversity makes fascist lies harder to sell.
I end with a brief coda on talking with my kids about the attack on Caracas.
Notes:
How to Talk to Your Son About Fascism — Johnson
Fifteen Minutes of Fascism — Johnson's podcast
All theme music by the amazing www.kalliemarie.com.
Antifascist Dad: Urgent Conversations with Young People in Chaotic Times (North Atlantic Books, April 2026).
Preorder: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/807656/antifascist-dad-by-matthew-remski/
Instagram: @matthew_remski
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Bluesky: @matthewremski.bsky.social (Bluesky Social)
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AntifascistDad
Chapters
- (00:01:07) - Does Fascism Pretend to Be Cool?
- (00:10:23) - Andrew Tate and the Politics of Influence
- (00:18:17) - Does the Left Have a Natural Immunity to Fascism?
- (00:25:16) - Anti-Fascism: The Transgressive Value of Slog
- (00:29:19) - On the Strategy of Protest
- (00:32:48) - On Diversity and Anti-Fascism