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Honestly with Bari Weiss

World War II and the Rise of Anti-History

Honestly with Bari Weiss

The Free Press

News, Society & Culture

4.6 • 7.8K Ratings

🗓️ 10 September 2024

⏱️ 81 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Tucker Carlson is perhaps the country’s most influential conservative commentator; his eponymous podcast is routinely among the most downloaded shows on the internet. Despite his endless fulminations against the mainstream media, Carlson has an impeccable mainstream media pedigree. He’s hit for the cycle on cable news, having hosted shows on Fox, MSNBC, and CNN. After he was fired from Fox News in 2023, under circumstances that are still hotly disputed, Carlson quickly reconstituted his career on his own—free of corporate shackles, with no institutional guardrails, and with a professed willingness to explore topics that his former mainstream media colleagues wouldn’t touch. Last week on his show, he did just that, airing an interview with a man most people in the mainstream won’t touch: a podcaster named Darryl Cooper, who Carlson called “the most important historian in the United States.” In reality, Cooper is an amateur historian with no publishing record—no books, no academic articles. He produces a popular history podcast called Martyr Made, in which he does deep dives into subjects like the Israel-Palestine conflict, the cult of Reverend Jim Jones, and the trials of Jeffrey Epstein. He has previously described his personal politics as those of a “non-racist fascist.” On Carlson’s show, Cooper demonstrated some of those fascist tendencies when he identified Winston Churchill—not Adolf Hitler—as the “chief villain” of World War II. He wasn’t a hero at all, Cooper argued, but a “psychopath” who forced Nazi Germany into a war that it didn’t want. And what of the Holocaust? Cooper doesn’t speak of Jewish victims, but vaguely of “prisoners of war" who the Nazis “just threw. . . into camps, and millions of people ended up dead.” In September 1941, a mere week after Nazi troops occupied the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, that city’s Jews were ordered to congregate for “resettlement.” Under threat of severe punishment, they obliged. . . and were loaded into trucks to be transported a short distance to Babi Yar, a ravine just north of the city. In a two-day orgy of violence, 33,000 Jews ended up dead. Innocents, not prisoners of war; children forced to lie on top of those pushed into the pit before them, then executed with a bullet in the back of the head. This is how they ended up dead. Tucker Carlson, who has the ear of millions of conservatives, including Donald Trump, and who secured a prime time speaking spot at the Republican National Convention, said nothing in response to Cooper’s revisionism. No pushback. Not an arched eyebrow. Just unalloyed praise for an extremist autodidact, America’s “best” historian. Cooper defended himself on Twitter by assuring his critics that Hitler was indeed desperate to make peace and was also willing to “work with the other powers to reach an acceptable solution to the Jewish problem.” Jewish problem was not in quotes. When another user pointed this out, Cooper responded: “Was there not a problem involving the Jews in Europe at the time?” Hitler apologia and antisemitism packaged as brave historical inquiry is not new. We’ve heard versions of these arguments from extremists on the left and right for decades. But why is there a sudden resurgence of these odious ideas on the American right? Today, we talk to Victor Davis Hanson to help us answer this question. Hanson is a classicist and historian, the author of two dozen books, including the critically acclaimed The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won. And for years, Hanson was a weekly guest on Tucker Carlson’s television show. We discuss his relationship with Carlson, the accuracy and derivation of Darryl Cooper’s claims about the Second World War, and why so-called “anti-elitism” often drifts into antisemitism. If you want to learn more, read Bari Weiss on the rise of anti-history here. If you liked what you heard, the best way to support us is to go to thefp.com and become a subscriber. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, honestly, listeners, before we get to today's episode of Honestly, I have a really exciting announcement.

0:06.0

And that's a brand new podcast from the free press.

0:10.0

It's called Raising Parents, and it's hosted by the one and only Emily Auster.

0:15.9

If you don't know Emily, she's the most famous and perhaps the only economist whose specialty is parenting.

0:25.0

She's fearless, she's independent, you might remember her as the woman who advocated against school shutdowns

0:28.0

before that became conventional wisdom.

0:31.0

And she does something radical in her work. She provides the best data and the best

0:35.7

information and she empowers parents to make their own choices. The reason we made the

0:41.5

show is simple.

0:43.0

If you're a parent today, I suspect you're a little bit like me.

0:46.2

You're overwhelmed with a series of questions that there's not a clear idea about how to answer.

0:52.1

Questions like, are we too soft on kids these days? How do I raise

0:55.8

an independent child in an age of over protection? Why are so many teen girls unhappy and

1:01.8

anxious and how do we fix it? Why are so many teen girls unhappy and anxious?

1:02.9

And how do we fix it?

1:04.4

Why are boys being left behind?

1:06.0

Is marriage important for raising kids?

1:08.3

Do we have a moral obligation to have kids at all?

1:10.8

And what the hell are we supposed to do about the phones? Over eight episodes in this

1:16.1

amazing season, Emily speaks with over 50 of the world's best parenting experts,

1:23.0

journalists, doctors, psychologists, researchers,

1:26.0

and more, including Dr. Becky, Jonathan Haight,

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