What "Cowardly" Alex Jones Does Not Understand About Ye
Alex Jones joined Steven Crowder to backstab Ye and Nick Fuentes
During Ye’s interview on Alex Jones’ show last Thursday, the most creative man on the planet expressed a cornerstone belief in his potential Christian Nationalist campaign for president. Ye made a declarative statement on the topic of the Jewish people, National Socialists, and their leader Adolf Hitler. Stating that he has intentional and radical love for every person including all three of these groups, Ye bucked the paradigm that has relegated the utter mention of Hitler as the lowest form of evil.
To be a radical Christian in the modern age one must grab the reigns of contemporary thought and drive a stake clear through the engine that powers the demonic beast. As Christians, we cannot make a definitive statement on the state of Adolf Hitler’s soul and any other Nazi who participated in the German political movement. We are not allotted the divine capacity of judgment and therefore must humbly reproach from the earnest desire to cast damnation on those with materially obvious ends in their spiritual life. Only salvation secured in Christ’s victory has deigned us worthy of the opportunity to be in eternal communion with God in Heaven. We of course hate the sin that is caused by the action of any human, but this hatred becomes unhealthy and unholy when we attach these sins directly to the souls of individuals within a particular time and particular place.
Alex Jones joined Steven Crowder earlier today to turn his back on Nick Fuentes and mimic the old “Hitler is evil” routine. Spending the entire interview referring to Nick in a degrading manner and diminishing the political relationship the two had forged over the past few years. In addition, Jones took time to portray Ye as being ignorant of history and even suggested that he was crazy.
After a long-winded interview regurgitating talking points you would hear from the ADL or NBC, the mental divide between the truth and the modern political landscape became apparent through an unsuspecting host in Jones.
What Alex Jones does not understand about saying “I like Hitler” is that the statement intentionally denies the constructed reality of evil to bring attention to the evil at hand now. The purpose of saying the one declarative statement that would be met with scorn in every household in the country is to break free of the mental framework that has been built for the last 75 years.
To truly be free is to think and express freely. World War II ended long ago and it is time to destroy the old ways of think that hold us hostage through means of generational guilt expressed in media, education, banking, and politics. Declaring “I like Hitler” or “Hitler is not in hell” is not a positive endorsement of the negative aspects of a political movement from antiquity, but it is to embrace reality and identify that evil is now, it is real and in front of us. No amount of hatred can change the past, and no amount of anxiety can change the future.