Skip to content

OPINION: Levin and Shapiro, PACK UP and MOVE TO TEL AVIV: America Won't Be Israel's Speech Cop

Ready to choose: America First—or pack for Tel Aviv?

Table of Contents

Mark Levin screams "Little Adolf" at Nick Fuentes. Ben Shapiro brands Tucker Carlson a "Jew-hater" for one interview.

If Israel is their red line, why do these men still cash American paychecks?

Levin and Shapiro led the Never Trump charge in 2016. They called the outsider a con man, a bully, an ignoramus—terrified his "America First" slogan would sideline their Israel-first agenda.

Trump had no record of bleeding for Tel Aviv. That was enough.

Their hatred crystallized in the Michelle Fields hoax. The Breitbart reporter claimed Corey Lewandowski dragged her to the floor. Video showed a shoulder brush. Shapiro, then Breitbart’s editor-at-large, amplified the lie, quit in protest, and painted Trump as a woman-beater. Classic smear.

Today their target is Fuentes—and anyone who talks to him.

Fuentes’ sin? Exposing socialist Jewish influence in the CIA, the GOP, and conservative media.

Levin, at the Republican Jewish Coalition, vowed to "never stop fighting these wicked people" and called Carlson a "full-blown, out-of-the-closet Jew-hater."

Shapiro devoted an episode to torching Carlson as the “most virulent super-spreader of vile ideas," accusing him of "normalizing" Fuentes’ "twisted mind."

"No to the groypers. No to cowards like Tucker Carlson," Shapiro posted on X.

Shapiro’s empire is crumbling. In 2025, he added 166,000 followers across platforms. Candace Owens gained 2.8 million. Tucker Carlson: 1.2 million.

Podcast charts show Shapiro’s show stagnant amid rivals’ surges.

These Jewish elites—helming conglomerates, directing films, staffing faculties—routinely decry antisemitism as an existential siege, positioning themselves as a beleaguered minority adrift in a hostile America.

While wailing about exclusion, they steer the ship of state, from Hollywood scripts to Supreme Court benches.

Jews are 2.4 percent of Americans. They run Disney (Bob Iger), Warner Bros. Discovery (David Zaslav), and Pfizer (Albert Bourla).

A 2025 analysis found that 75 to 80 percent of television news viewership in the United States falls under firms led by Jewish executives. They are 14 percent of physicians—seven times their population share—per a 2005 National Library of Medicine study. Jews account for 10 to 15 percent of practicing lawyers in the United States and historically, three of the nine seats on the U.S. Supreme Court have been occupied by Jewish justices at various times. At elite universities, Jews are 17 percent of faculty, per the Carnegie Commission.

Meanwhile, the Anti-Defamation League claims antisemitic incidents surged 360 percent over the past decade.

These figures underscore a glaring irony. Jewish leaders and organizations routinely decry antisemitism, portraying their community as a beleaguered victim class — targeted, ostracized, and under siege — despite commanding outsized sway in the corridors of power.

It's a masterstroke of optics — cry victim while vetoing dissent, as if running Disney or Pfizer makes one an underdog. This duality fuels the fire: How can a group comprising 2.4 percent of the population claim ostracism when it shapes 75 to 80 percent of TV news?

Fuentes has hammered this theme relentlessly. In his October 2025 Tucker Carlson interview, he declared the main obstacle in conservatism is "these Zionist Jews," claiming neoconservatism is "Jewish in nature" for prioritizing Israel over American interests.

Carlson’s critiques tread reasonable ground — questioning U.S. aid to Israel and Christian Zionism—but Levin and Shapiro label them antisemitic fire.

Carlson calls pro-Israel evangelicals like Ted Cruz victims of a "brain virus," arguing America "gets nothing out of" endless support for Israel.

He’s spotlighted Israel’s treatment of Palestinian Christians, interviewing Bethlehem pastor Munther Isaac in April 2024 on church bombings and land seizures.

In June 2025, with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, he probed why AIPAC isn’t registered as a foreign agent and decried congressional "loyalty to a foreign power."

Levin blasts this as “full-blown Jew-hater” rhetoric; Shapiro dubs Carlson a “virulent super-spreader of vile ideas." Yet Carlson insists: "I’m not that interested in 'the Jews'"—it’s policy he questions, not people.

This is America, damn it. First Amendment. Free speech. We don’t care if you’re Jewish, Christian, or Martian—but you don’t get to muzzle dissent or play speech cop for a foreign power.

To Levin, Shapiro, and the rest of the Jewish mafia—drop the smears or book a flight to Tel Aviv. Choose: stars and stripes, or Star of David?

Comments

Latest