White Supremacist Nick Fuentes Gets Warm Welcome On Right-Wing ‘Hodgetwins’ Podcast

In a May 31 post on X (formerly Twitter), right-wing Internet personalities Kevin and Keith Hodge released a softball interview with white supremacist Nick Fuentes. During the interview, the Hodges allowed Fuentes to deny being a white supremacist, and appeared receptive to his racist and antisemitic conspiracies.

Keith Hodge (who wore a “F*ck Off We’re Full” t-shirt), asked Fuentes if he’s a white supremacist. Fuentes, who openly admires Hitler and called for the execution of “perfidious Jews,” insisted that he isn’t, and said he believes that “everybody’s equal before God” and has “friends from every race, every background.”

But Fuentes also pushed the falsehood that white people are facing “genocide” in majority-white countries.

“White people are not having kids,” he explained. “The white population in America and Europe is shrinking. In Europe and America it’s becoming a country where it’s completely multiracial. And in 100 years, there’s not gonna be white countries. There’s gonna be no Germany, no Italy, no England.”

Fuentes declared that “that’s a form of a genocide,” and that if it were “happening in any other country you would say ‘This is a horrible situation.'”

Kevin Hodge (who wore a “When I Die Don’t Let Me Vote Democrat” t-shirt) called this a “scary proposition.” He added that, “if this country was majority-Black I don’t even think we would have a United States. They would destroy every right we have. They would vote away every right we have.”

Keith Hodge, meanwhile, remarked that “diversity is not a strength.”

From the May 31, 2024 episode of Twins Pod

Later, Fuentes complained about the online backlash that ex-Daily Wire host Candace Owens received for posting the phrase “Christ is king” — which is used often, but not exclusively, by Fuentes and his allies. Owens was accused of antisemitism over that and other remarks, including a claim about a Jewish “gang” in Hollywood.

“When you say ‘Christ is king,’ it implies that Jesus, His authority extends to the world. And when they think you’re a Christian over there and you’re just praying and looking at the afterlife, whatever. No problem” Fuentes said.

“But if you say ‘America’s a Christian country, Jesus has kingship over America and Earth,’ well, then it becomes a problem,” he continued. “Because then you might say, ‘Well why do we have all these people that don’t believe in Jesus running Hollywood?’ Like maybe that’s why we get a lot of degenerate filth in movies?

Keith Hodge seemed to wholeheartedly agree with this analysis, telling Fuentes that Hollywood and “Jewish people, who’s in leadership positions, have destroyed the Black community.” He also claimed that the Black community was better off years ago when America was “systemically racist.”

Kevin added that “since the civil rights movement it’s just like everything’s been downhill for Blacks.”

Fuentes chimed in to claim that “Jewish people” were the ones “behind” the civil rights movement, and that their support for civil rights was motivated by self-interest. According to Fuentes, “the more tolerant that America is, the more liberal, the more open it is, [the] safer they are.”

“If it’s a country that’s all about Europeans and Christians, well, Jews are neither European nor are they Christian,” he said.

“They’re not racially or ethnically European. They’re not religiously Christian. So they sort of used Black civil rights, they used women’s suffrage, they used the anti-establishment clause [sic] basically to undermine American civil society to make it a place that is more hospitable to their own people. And they freely admit this.”

From the May 31, 2024 episode of Twins Pod