Unmasking MAGA, Part 1: The Fascists
They crave chaos, worship violence, and hijacked MAGA for their own agenda.
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We begin this series with the fascists because they’re no longer lurking in the shadows—they’re at the helm.
Donald Trump is back in the White House, not as a populist, but as a full-blown authoritarian doing his best to fulfill his promise to be a dictator “on day one.” His most dangerous ally, Stephen Miller, now commands the federal immigration apparatus with the explicit goal of disappearing people into mass detention and torture facilities like CECOT. And the billionaire who helped bankroll their return—Elon Musk—is not just amplifying fascist propaganda through X; he’s actively dismantling the federal government through DOGE, his so-called “Department of Government Efficiency.”
This is no longer theoretical. The fascist wing of the coalition is no longer just marching on the fringes—they’re writing policy, directing violence, and erasing rights in real time. They are the violent enforcers, the ideological purists, and the ones willing to go the furthest to consolidate power. And the rest of the coalition? They’re clinging to these extremists out of fear, convenience, or greed.
So we start here—because fascism is not the fringe. It’s the engine.
And if we want to take this monster apart, we start by breaking the hand on the wheel.
Who Are They?
Fascists aren’t just marching in the open. They’re smiling on TV, hiding behind flags, memes, and “law and order” rhetoric. But scratch the surface, and the authoritarian rot is right there.
What We Mean by “Fascist”
Before we dive in, we need to be clear:
When we talk about fascists in this series, we’re not just talking about Nazis.
We’re not just talking about Hitler, or Mussolini, or 20th-century Europe.
We’re talking about something deeper—and older.
Fascism isn’t just a time-bound movement. It’s a mindset.
A worldview obsessed with hierarchy, domination, purity, violence, and control.
It doesn’t need a uniform or a flag.
It only needs a belief that some people were born to rule, some to obey—and that the difference comes down to “blood and soil”.
Fascism is the nativist/ultranationalist pursuit of power through state violence against the “other”—sanctioned by propaganda that declares one’s ingroup superior above all others and destined to build/rebuild an empire.
By that definition, fascism didn’t arrive in America from overseas.
It was here from the beginning.
It’s in the slave patrols.
The Indian removals.
The lynch mobs.
The literacy tests.
The internment camps.
The red scares.
The voter purges.
The book bans.
This is not to say that America was or has ever been a fascist state.
It means fascism has always been one of its undercurrents—a force present from the beginning, sometimes suppressed, sometimes dominant, always ready to reemerge when the conditions are right.
American fascism doesn’t always call itself fascism.
Sometimes it calls itself Manifest Destiny.
Sometimes it calls itself patriotism.
Sometimes it wraps itself in the flag—and claims to defend freedom while burning it from the inside.
So when we say the fascists have always been here—we mean it.
They don’t come from outside the system.
They are the system—any time that system decides that justice is weakness, diversity is danger, and power is the only goal.
How to Identify Them
Don’t look for swastikas. Look for the mindset:
They divide the world into “us” and “them.”
They believe some people are more worthy of rights than others.
They excuse or promote violence to “restore order.”
That’s fascism. And here’s how it shows up across the spectrum:
The Neo-Nazis (Open Extremists)
The loudest, most visible fascists. They want a white ethnostate and an end to democracy.
March with groups like Blood Tribe, Patriot Front, or Atomwaffen Division
Spread Hitler worship, Holocaust denial, and calls for race war
Organize rallies that openly glorify Nazi ideology (Charlottesville was no anomaly)
Tells:
Use of Nazi numerology (14/88), SS runes, or stylized swastikas
Slogans like “You will not replace us” or “White Lives Matter”
Telegram channels filled with violence porn and genocidal fantasies
They’re loud—but they’re just the sharpened edge of something much bigger.
The Ideological Enablers (Irony Bros & Online Fascists)
They don’t wear armbands—they wear avatars. These are the meme warriors and podcast radicals who smuggle fascism through “jokes,” “contrarianism,” or “free speech absolutism.”
Lurk in 4chan /pol/, Discord, X, and the manosphere
Share Crusader memes, “trad wife” aesthetics, and “Western chauvinist” nostalgia
Promote white replacement theory and authoritarian “solutions”—but always with a wink
Tells:
Dog whistles like “globalist,” “ZOG,” or triple parentheses (((they)))
Obsession with strength, “order,” and civilization under attack
Denial of racism alongside endless posts about demographic decline
These are the gateway propagandists. They radicalize. They recruit. And they pretend it’s all just for the “lulz”.
The Respectable Fascists (Mainstream-Adjacent)
They’ll never call themselves fascists—but they’ll support every policy that brings fascism closer.
Defend January 6 rioters as “patriots”
Applaud book bans, protest crackdowns, and militarized policing
Parrot Tucker Carlson talking points about immigrants, crime, and “woke mobs”
Tells:
Rhetoric of “invasion,” “decay,” and needing a “strong hand”
Claims that democracy is broken or that America needs a return to “tradition”
Selective outrage: scream about drag queens, shrug off school shootings
They may look like your neighbor or coworker. But their worldview primes them to support violence and authoritarianism—as long as it targets the right people.
The Neo-Reactionaries (Techno-Authoritarians & Apocalyptic Thinkers)
Not all fascists scream in the streets. Some write blogs, run podcasts, or sit in Silicon Valley boardrooms. These are the theorists and ideologues who believe democracy is a failed operating system—one that should be replaced by monarchy, corporate rule, or AI-run authoritarianism.
Advocate for “exit over voice”—meaning the rich should simply opt out of democratic systems and rule their own fiefdoms
Promote “CEO governance” or “benevolent dictatorship” as a smarter, more efficient way to run society
Present hierarchy, surveillance, and state violence as features—not bugs—of a well-run civilization
Tells:
Use of terms like “Dark Enlightenment,” “cathedral,” “managerialism,” or “patchwork”
Obsession with civilization collapse and “rebuilding” a new world of techno-feudalism
Frequent admiration for authoritarian regimes—Putin, Orban, Lee Kuan Yew—as models for the future
They don’t burn books—they build platforms that de-rank dissent.
They don’t break windows—they write code that breaks democracy from the inside.
Neo-reactionaries reframe this worldview through code, capital, and abstraction—treating democracy as obsolete software and authoritarian hierarchy as a feature, not a bug. Their rhetoric is cleaner, but their endpoint is the same.
The Unifying Thread
Across the spectrum, they don’t all wear the same clothes or use the same language. But they believe:
Some lives are worth more than others
Democracy is disposable
Violence is acceptable if it protects “us” from “them”
They may call themselves “nationalists,” “constitutionalists,” or “traditionalists.” But if their values align with fascism, then that’s what they are.
American Fascism doesn’t knock. It walks in wearing a flag and talking about family values.
Origin Story
They didn’t infiltrate the movement.
They’ve been here since the beginning.
Fascists are not some foreign import.
They are America’s oldest enemy—from within. Long before anyone called themselves MAGA, these were the people shaping policy, writing laws, and spilling blood to preserve a racial and social hierarchy.
Their roots stretch back to:
Slaveholders who built an economy and a Constitution around human bondage
Confederates who seceded from the Union to protect white supremacy
The KKK, who rose to power not just with burning crosses, but by holding public office and writing terror into law
Jim Crow enforcers, who used courts, cops, and mobs to keep Black Americans subjugated
Segregationist politicians, who preached “law and order” as a cover for white control
These weren’t fringe actors—they were the system.
And each time fascism in America was pushed back, it morphed, rebranded, and found a new suit to wear.
From lynch mobs to Nixon’s Southern Strategy…
From Reagan’s “welfare queens” to Trump’s “build the wall”…
The thread is unbroken.
Their grip on power has shifted throughout our history: sometimes broken—like directly after the Civil War and the Civil Rights Movement; sometimes substantial—like during Jim Crow, or again, today.
The same applies to their party allegiance: for over a century, they operated from within the Democratic Party. For generations, white supremacists, segregationists, and anti-labor authoritarians held power under the banner of the Democratic South. They shaped American law from within—using the party of Andrew Jackson and Woodrow Wilson to uphold slavery, Jim Crow, and racial terror.
But then came the New Deal.
Labor solidarity began to blur racial lines.
Economic justice started to look like actual democracy.
And as the Democratic Party slowly moved toward civil rights and multiracial coalition-building, the fascists were left behind.
They didn’t disappear.
They switched sides.
Over the following decades—through Goldwater’s backlash, Nixon’s Southern Strategy, and Reagan’s culture war framing—the fascist base was absorbed into the Republican Party, where it found new slogans, new billionaires, and new permission.
That “permission” didn’t come in the form of slurs or uniforms.
It came in the form of coded language, policy euphemisms, and rhetorical dog whistles.
The Southern Strategy wasn’t about changing beliefs—it was about changing vocabulary.
Segregation became “states’ rights.”
White resentment became “taxpayer fairness.”
Racial control became “law and order.”
And over time, these ideas weren’t just accepted—they became default positions in mainstream politics.
Not hidden—but so diffused it’s hard to trace.
Something shifted when America elected its first Black president.
The fascists—who had lingered in dog whistles, policy euphemisms, and “respectable” reactionary circles—reawakened.
The masks began to slip.
The volume began to rise.
What started with birtherism soon exploded into full-blown white grievance.
And when Trump descended that golden escalator, the old-school fascists knew exactly what they were hearing:
Permission.
They surged back into the spotlight—not just as voters, but as candidates, influencers, pundits, sheriffs, school board members, and street-level enforcers.
But they weren’t alone.
Because just as the old fascists were crawling out of the shadows—
A new kind was stepping into the light.
The New Breed: Neo-Reactionaries
While old-school fascists mythologize the past, the Neo-Reactionaries are obsessed with engineering the future.
They don’t romanticize the 1950s.
They fantasize about rebooting civilization—through capital, code, and caste.
Born in Silicon Valley forums, elite universities, and VC-funded echo chambers, the NRx movement fuses fascist hierarchy with corporate infrastructure.
No democracy—only rule by the “competent.”
No equality—only biologically or economically defined rank.
No shared power—only centralized, top-down control, with no accountability to the public.
Their vision? A world of “Network City-States”—privatized micro-nations optimized for extraction, surveillance, and obedience.
Hyper-capitalist ethnostates, each with its own brand, its own ruling class, its own flavor of tyranny.
Where traditional fascists lead with myth and grievance, the NRx lead with architecture and code.
They aren’t storming the gates.
They’re engineering the systems that decide who gets through.
They still share the fascist obsession with dominance, purity, and control.
But they no longer need a single strongman.
They have algorithms. Platforms. Billionaire patrons.
And a worldview perfectly tailored for an era that confuses disruption with vision.
They are not the past reborn.
They are the future hijacked.
The Two-Headed Threat
So now we face not one fascist current—but two.
On one side: the old-school fascists, driven by bloodline, grievance, and nostalgia for a racial order they were promised would last forever.
On the other: the Neo-Reactionaries, driven by hierarchy, data, and a vision of the future with no room for dissent, equality, or democracy.
One wraps itself in flags.
The other wraps itself in code.
But make no mistake—
They are two sides of the same fascist coin.
And they are no longer fighting to return to the past.
They are fighting to replace the future.
Despite new factions and evolving forms, one tactic remains constant: voter suppression.
From poll taxes to gerrymandering
From white primaries to voter roll purges
From armed intimidation to disinformation and “election integrity” theater
Fascists have never trusted democracy to protect their rule—so they’ve always tried to rig or restrict it.
Today’s fascists aren’t some new extremist surge.
They are the direct descendants—ideologically, politically, and often literally—of those who spent centuries defending tyranny in the name of “tradition.”
This isn’t a deviation from America’s past.
It is America’s past—still fighting to control its future, through suppression, betrayal, and a relentless hunger to rule.
What Are Their Core Values?
Strip away the slogans. What’s left is a blueprint for tyranny.
Fascists don’t all use the same words. Some shout about “white pride.” Others hide behind “heritage,” “tradition,” or “family values.” But beneath the rebranding, the core beliefs are always the same—an authoritarian ideology that worships hierarchy, demands submission, and dehumanizes anyone outside the in-group.
Here’s what they believe, whether they admit it or not:
Hierarchy is Natural—and Necessary
They believe some people are just born to rule, and others to obey. Usually, this means white men at the top, everyone else below.
Women should be subordinate.
Black and brown people are seen as threats or tools.
LGBTQ+ people are treated as enemies of “order.”
They dress it up as “tradition” or “roles,” but it’s just bigotry wrapped in nostalgia.
Violence is a Solution, Not a Last Resort
Fascists don’t see violence as failure—they see it as power. Whether it’s police brutality, border militarization, or street-level intimidation, force is something to admire.
They fantasize about civil war.
They stockpile weapons for “the collapse.”
They cheer when “enemies” are brutalized—especially if they’re immigrants, protesters, or marginalized.
Their politics aren’t built to win debates. They’re built to dominate.
Democracy Is Optional—As Long As They’re in Charge
Fascists will wave the flag and chant about freedom right up until the moment democracy stops serving them. Then they turn on it.
They push voter suppression, gerrymandering, and court-packing.
They idolize strongmen—Trump, Putin, Orban—not for their ideas, but for their power.
They see elections as tools to seize power, not as expressions of the people’s will.
And when they lose? They cry fraud, demand a do-over, or call for a dictatorship.
The “Other” Is the Problem—Always
Fascism needs an enemy. It thrives on division. So there’s always someone to blame:
Immigrants “invading” the country
Black activists “causing unrest”
LGBTQ+ people “corrupting children”
Jews “controlling everything”
Journalists, teachers, union leaders—anyone who pushes back
It doesn’t matter who the scapegoat is. What matters is keeping people angry, afraid, and looking in the wrong direction.
Myths Matter More Than Truth
Fascists don’t care about facts. They care about narratives that justify power.
The myth of the “good old days”
The myth of the “undeserving poor”
The myth of the “silent majority”
The myth that freedom means obedience to authority
They will lie. They will project. They will rewrite history in real time. And they’ll call you a traitor for noticing.
These are not just preferences. They are pillars of a worldview that justifies cruelty, demands submission, and burns down anything that gets in its way.
This is what binds them. Not policies. Not patriotism. Power.
Key Figures
Fascism doesn’t spread itself. It needs power, platforms, and permission.
The fascist faction isn’t just ideology—it’s infrastructure. It has its own generals, mouthpieces, coders, and foot soldiers. Some spread narratives. Others build the platforms. Some organize marches. Others issue marching orders. Together, they form a coordinated system of propaganda, intimidation, and political violence—anchored by powerful men in the heart of government.
These aren’t all the same kind of threat—but they’re all part of the same machine.
Power Brokers
Donald Trump – The beating heart of the fascist coalition. Trump didn’t invent fascism, but he legitimized it, platformed it, and promised it power. He gave Proud Boys marching orders, called neo-Nazis “very fine people,” tried to overturn an election, and now is working on his promise to be a Dictator “on day one.” He is not adjacent to fascism—he is its figurehead.
Stephen Miller – The architect of MAGA’s most fascist policies. Miller masterminded the Muslim ban, child separation, ICE raids, and mass deportation strategy. Obsessed with demographic control and state violence, Miller isn’t just a white nationalist—he’s one with executive power, legal expertise, and a vision for permanent minority rule.
Neo-Reactionary Billionaires
A network of ultra-wealthy tech elites using their capital, platforms, and ideology to mainstream fascism under the guise of “innovation,” “efficiency,” or “civilizational collapse.” While not all openly embrace fascist aesthetics, their policies, alliances, and funding patterns show clear alignment with authoritarianism, minority rule, and the rejection of democracy.Peter Thiel – The philosophical godfather of tech-based authoritarianism. He has reportedly funded far-right candidates, drawn criticism for questioning whether democracy and capitalism can coexist, and is closely associated with Curtis Yarvin’s anti-democratic worldview. His capital and connections have played a visible role in the infrastructure of rising authoritarian influence.
Elon Musk – Perhaps the coalition’s most powerful communications enabler. Since taking over X, Musk has allegedly reinstated previously banned extremists and drawn widespread criticism for amplifying accounts and narratives associated with white nationalism and authoritarianism. Critics argue that his platform decisions have reshaped the online information ecosystem in ways that empower disinformation and hate speech.
David Sacks – Major investor and co-host of the All-In Podcast, which supposedly launders far-right ideas into Silicon Valley respectability. A public defender of authoritarian policies masquerading as a rational “moderate,” he plays cleanup for the ideology Thiel funds.
Marc Andreessen – Co-founder of a16z and key who appears to be a backer of anti-democratic, hyper-capitalist ideology. He shares and funds content that glorifies monarchy, mocks democracy, and pushes for a society run by billionaire engineers instead of public institutions.
Media and Propaganda Machines
Nick Fuentes – White nationalist influencer and Hitler fanboy. Head of the “America First” movement. Promotes fascist theocracy and eliminationist politics aimed at LGBTQ+ people, women, and racial minorities.
Steve Bannon – Strategic brain behind Trumpism’s most authoritarian impulses. Combines populist language with fascist ends: national collapse, minority scapegoating, and regime change from within.
Tucker Carlson – Gateway drug to white nationalism. Though he couches his rhetoric in “concern,” he’s made fascist narratives—like white replacement theory—mainstream. His cultural influence far exceeds his denials.
Stew Peters / Elijah Schaffer / Vincent James – Propagandists who operate deeper in the fascist pipeline, often spreading antisemitic or outright genocidal content on alternative platforms.
Organizers and Militants
Christopher Pohlhaus (Blood Tribe) – Open neo-Nazi group leader staging militarized hate marches. Their presence alone is a fascist intimidation tactic.
Patriot Front (Thomas Rousseau) – White nationalist rebranders who use propaganda, paramilitary discipline, and street presence to recruit and spread fear.
Atomwaffen Division / National Socialist Club – Accelerationist terror cells hoping to bring down democracy through chaos, murder, and insurrection.
Proud Boys (Gavin McInnes / Enrique Tarrio) – A fascist militia masquerading as frat-boy nationalists. Central to the Capitol insurrection, street violence, and political intimidation campaigns nationwide.
Ideological Architects
Richard Spencer – Rebranded white supremacy as “alt-right,” helping fascism re-enter mainstream discourse with ironic detachment and viral polish.
Andrew Anglin – Founder of The Daily Stormer. Pioneered the meme-first, irony-laced fascism that thrives on digital platforms while recruiting the disillusioned.
Curtis Yarvin (aka Mencius Moldbug) – Founding voice of the neo-reactionary movement (NRx). Advocates for replacing democracy with corporate-style monarchy, praises authoritarian rulers, and argues that liberal values are a failed software system. His ideas have influenced far-right tech elites and the “Dark Enlightenment” subculture that seeks to normalize aristocracy, eugenics, and techno-authoritarianism.
Bronze Age Pervert – Pseudo-intellectual influencer advocating authoritarianism, social Darwinism, and male supremacy. A cult favorite among far-right online circles and even some Hill staffers.
None of these names are isolated. Together, they form a coordinated assault on democracy—from the fringe to the Oval Office.
Call them what they are: fascists with followers, budgets, and goals.
And remember: fascism isn’t growing in the dark. It’s growing on national television.
How Did They End Up in the MAGA Coalition?
They didn’t sneak in. They were invited.
The fascists didn’t “hijack” MAGA. They recognized a vehicle—and Trump handed them the keys.
Before 2016, they were scattered across internet forums, militia movements, white nationalist rallies, and fringe political groups. They had the hate. They had the rage. What they didn’t have was a mainstream political home.
Then Trump descended the escalator and declared that Mexicans were rapists. And the fascists heard the dog whistle loud and clear.
MAGA didn’t gradually attract fascists—it immediately resonated with them:
A strongman cult of personality
Open racism rebranded as “border security”
A media ecosystem that declared war on truth itself
An anti-democratic movement willing to destroy institutions for raw power
Trump spoke their language—resentment, grievance, domination.
For the techno-authoritarians watching from Silicon Valley, this was the moment they realized MAGA could be more than a mob—it could be a vehicle for implementing a post-democratic future.
And once the campaign saw how energized they were, they stopped pretending to be bothered. Charlottesville should’ve been the breaking point. Instead, Trump called them “very fine people.” That wasn’t a flub. It was a green light.
From that point on, fascists weren’t just part of the movement. They were a core constituency:
Proud Boys taking orders to “stand back and stand by”
Militias planning for civil war on Telegram
Neo-Nazis organizing rallies around Trump’s slogans
Elected Republicans parroting their talking points to win primaries
Trump didn’t radicalize them. He mainstreamed them.
And they’ve never looked back.
What’s Their Role in the Coalition?
They’re the boot. Everyone else just points to where it should land.
In the MAGA coalition, fascists serve one primary function: force. They’re not the strategists. They’re not the money. They’re the muscle. The mob. The ones who’ll do what others only hint at.
They are the ones who:
Show up armed to intimidate at school board meetings, drag queen story hours, and Black Lives Matter protests
Threaten journalists, officials, election workers, and activists into silence or retreat
Flood social media with memes, slurs, and death threats to overwhelm opposition and test propaganda
Form militias and train for civil conflict, fantasizing about the day they’ll get to “restore order” by force
Mobilize rapidly when dog-whistled by Trump or right-wing influencers—January 6 wasn’t an outlier, it was a proof of concept
They give the broader coalition plausible deniability:
When Corporatists push dehumanizing policies, fascists enforce them in the streets.
When Fake Christians demonize LGBTQ+ people, fascists issue the threats and light the fires.
When Conspiracy Theorists warn of a coming collapse, fascists gear up for it—stockpiling weapons and fantasizing about taking power through force.
They are the shock troops. The blunt instrument. The part of the machine that doesn’t need a leash because the whole coalition benefits from the chaos.
But here's the twist: while they see themselves as warriors, the rest of the coalition sees them as tools. Loud, scary, expendable tools.
And when the spotlight gets too hot?
They’re the first to be thrown under the bus.
If You Believe in This Fight, Help Keep It Alive
There’s still more below, I just need a moment of your time.
The American Manifesto isn’t backed by corporations. There are no ads, no paywalls, no billionaires funding it.
It’s just one person, fighting like hell to expose the truth and give you the weapons to push back.
If you value this work—if you want this movement to keep growing, keep calling out fascism without fear, and keep fighting for the future we deserve—then I need your support.
Join the fight. Become a supporter. Every contribution keeps this mission alive.
Because silence is surrender. We do not surrender. We are #TheRelentless.
What Is Their Relationship With Other Subgroups?
The fascists crave domination. Most of their “allies” just hope to stay useful long enough to avoid being targets.
The Fascist faction doesn’t play well with others. Their worldview is rooted in control, violence, and racial hierarchy—so every other group in the coalition is either a temporary tool, a future victim, or both. Here’s where the lines really fall:
✅ Alignment
Red Pillers
This is ideological overlap at its most toxic. Both worship power, masculinity, submission, and violence. Red Pillers often act as a feeder system for fascism—priming disillusioned young men with misogyny and funneling them toward broader authoritarianism.
Conspiracy Theorists
A natural alliance. Fascists invent the narratives—deep state, globalist cabals, white genocide—and conspiracy theorists run PR. The two groups speak the same paranoid language and share a mission: destroy trust in institutions and replace it with fear and scapegoats.
❌ Divergence
Corporatists
Fascists despise them. They see corporate elites as “globalists” who offshored jobs, undermined national identity, and sold out the white working class for profit. While Corporatists fund the movement, fascists dream of tearing them down.
Fake Christians
The alliance is strained. Fascists view many evangelicals as weak, hypocritical, or deluded. They’ll work together on shared enemies—like LGBTQ+ rights or immigrants—but the moment religion gets in the way of raw power, fascists lose patience. Their god is domination, not scripture.
⚪ Neutral
Blue-Collar Workers
This is the soft flank. Some have absorbed fascist rhetoric through right-wing media. Others oppose it but stay quiet. Fascists see them as pawns—useful in culture wars and street fights, but disposable once power is consolidated.
Libertarians
Fascists laugh at their obsession with freedom. They’ll use their anti-government language when convenient—but they reject the idea of liberty for all. Libertarians see themselves as defenders of rights; fascists see them as obstacles to be crushed when the time comes.
Warhawks
There’s overlap in the love of strength and military power, but it’s surface-level. Warhawks want dominance abroad; fascists want it at home. They’ll cheer the same drone strike, but fight over who controls the boot.
The fascists don’t need lasting allies. They just need chaos, fear, and a path to power. And the more we highlight these tensions, the closer we get to making their coalition collapse under its own contradictions.
Exploiting Wedge Issues
Fascists demand loyalty. But give none in return.
They shout the loudest, march in packs, and preach about unity—until they get what they want. Then everyone else becomes disposable.
They’re not here to build a coalition.
They’re here to use it.
And for the rest of the movement, the question isn’t if the betrayal is coming.
It’s when.
Here’s how to make the others see it first.
Fake Christians
Fascists don’t believe in forgiveness.
They don’t believe in grace.
They believe in purges, hierarchy, and violence as virtue.
They’ll quote scripture when it helps them recruit—then mock it behind your back.
They mock Christ as weak.
They dismiss the Bible as slave morality.
They’ll use your church—until it gets in their way.
“Jesus said turn the other cheek. They’d rather break your jaw—and then say you deserved it.”
Corporatists
Fascists don’t care about markets. They don’t trust global finance. They think the people funding this movement are weak parasites.
They take the money.
They spout the slogans.
But the second the corporatists get in the way of power—they’re next.
“You think they’re patriots. They think you’re vermin with a checkbook.”
Blue-Collar Workers
Fascists wrap themselves in your flag.
But they don’t care if your town dies—as long as it fuels their movement.
They push tariffs that raise your costs.
They back billionaires who break your union.
They call democracy weak—and mock you for still believing in it.
“You thought they were fighting for you. But they’re just using your struggle to justify their rage.”
Warhawks
Fascists love power—but not the kind that builds alliances or stabilizes regions.
They want war—but at home. On their terms.
They fantasize about civil collapse, not global order.
They’re not training for Baghdad—they’re training for Baltimore.
“You want to protect America. They want to replace it—with something you won’t recognize.”
They aren’t here to work with anyone.
They’re here to cleanse, punish, and dominate.
Every ally is a pawn—until they become an obstacle.
And when that happens, they don’t flinch. They purge.
Make the rest of the coalition ask themselves:
“Are these really my people?”
Creating a Sense of Betrayal
They say they stand for loyalty, strength, and sacrifice.
But they abandon their own, mock the weak, and run the second there's heat.
Fascists talk about honor like it’s sacred.
But when things go sideways, they don’t stand their ground—they throw everyone else into the fire and call it strategy.
They sell you a myth of valor.
But it’s all performance. All projection. All power games.
If you still believe in loyalty with integrity, strength with discipline, or sacrifice for something real—look at what they’ve done with those values.
Value: Loyalty to the Cause
“You believe loyalty means standing with your brothers. So do I. But they’ll use you, then vanish.”
You get arrested. They get famous.
You lose your job. They launch a merch line.
You take the fall. They tweet about “optics.”
“If loyalty is sacred, why are you the only one paying for it?”
Value: Strength Means Discipline
“You believe strength is self-control. So do I. But they’ve mistaken rage for power.”
They scream in public and melt down online.
They glorify humiliation, not courage.
They cosplay as warriors—but act like addicts chasing outrage.
“If strength means mastery, why do they collapse the second they’re challenged?”
Value: Sacrifice for Something Greater
“You believe sacrifice should mean something. So do I. But they treat you like ammunition.”
You lose your family. They gain followers.
You go all-in. They cash out.
You bleed. They build platforms.
“If this is a movement of sacrifice, why are you the only one losing anything real?”
Value: Honor in Truth and Action
“You believe honor means standing for what’s right—even when it costs you. So do I. But they lie, deflect, and smear anyone who steps out of line.”
They fake loyalty. They manufacture enemies.
They sabotage dissent. They chase status.
It’s not honor. It’s high school politics in body armor.
“If honor still matters to you, how long can you stay loyal to people who wouldn’t recognize it if it punched them in the face?”
They say they’re fighting for the future.
But they’ve already abandoned everyone who trusted them.
If you’ve ever felt the movement shifting under your feet…
If you’ve ever wondered why you’re the one paying while they keep talking—
You’re not imagining it.
This isn’t the cause they promised.
It’s the con they perfected.
Rip Off the Mask, Break the Machine
This isn’t just a profile of fascists. It’s a warning—and a roadmap.
The fascist faction is not some accidental part of the MAGA movement. It is its oldest limb, its most violent enforcer, and its clearest expression of what happens when hate, fear, and unchecked power are given a home.
But here’s the good news:
They are not invincible.
They are not united.
And they are not the majority.
They’re a parasite masquerading as a partner—using others, mocking them, and planning for a future that doesn’t include them.
That’s our opening.
Every time we expose the fractures—between fascists and fake Christians, between the foot soldiers and the corporatist donors, between the rage-filled base and the billionaire elite—we weaken the illusion of unity that holds this monster together.
This series is about taking them apart, one faction at a time.
Next, we’ll look at the Corporatists—the ones who built the system, bankrolled the chaos, and still believe they can control the monster they helped create.
They don’t chant at rallies or carry torches. They write memos. They fund think tanks. They deregulate, defund, and destabilize everything in the name of “efficiency.”
But don’t be fooled: the damage they’ve done is deeper and more permanent than anything the fascists could accomplish alone.
Because fascism isn’t a single beast.
It’s a coalition of predators.
And we’re here to make them tear each other apart.
“Exit over voice”...indeed, Peter Thiel once tried to start his own country. We kept treating people like him & Donald as harmless cranks. Not so harmless now.
Good post. We can't forget to call out the lesser knowns, too – the working level functionaries in the MAGA movement who most people haven't heard of but who are just as responsible as Elon, Trump, and all the other big names. It's the work of those little MAGA minions who give the big name MAGA their power. https://ktb2025.substack.com/