The MAGA meltdown; Mamdani's Rainbow Coalition; Remembering Tatsuya NakadaiReading, Watching 11.16.25This is a regular feature for paid subscribers wherein I write a little bit about what I’ve been reading and/or watching. If you’re not yet a paid subscriber but regularly read, enjoy, or share Unpopular Front, please consider signing up. This newsletter is completely reader-supported and represents my primary source of income. At 5 dollars a month, it’s less than most things at Starbucks, and it’s still less than the “recession special” at Gray’s Papaya — $7.50 for two hot dogs and a drink You can buy When the Clock Broke, now in paperback and available wherever books are sold. If you live in the UK, it’s also available there. In case you missed it, this week I interviewed Laura K. Field about her new book, Furious Minds: The Making of the MAGA New Right. I also appeared on The Ezra Klein Show to talk about right-wing antisemitism. During the show, I repeated a quote I got a long time ago from R. Derek Black, now Adrianne Black. You should check out her book The Klansman’s Son: My Journey from White Nationalism to Antiracism: A Memoir, which came out last year. Over the weekend, the MAGA coalition seems to have gone into full meltdown.— More commentary on that this coming week. In the Times yesterday morning, there was a big piece on the Tucker fiasco. I noticed this quote from Jonah Goldberg:
This struck me because it’s virtually identical to what William F. Buckley said about Pat Buchanan back in 1991:
When are they gonna learn? A report from Emily Jashinsky of unHerd pushed back on Rod Dreher’s claim that “30 to 40 percent of young staffers are groypers.” One of her sources in the administration said the following:
Once again, I have to quote Sartre’s Antisemite and Jew:
I wasn’t sure if I should share this, but the weirdest and most hateful response I’ve gotten to the interview so far was from the pro-Israel right. Hussein Aboubakr Mansour, who’s originally Egyptian and whose story involves being seduced by antisemitism as a young man and then rejecting it. As far as I can tell, he makes a living through various neoconservative fellowships and sinecures. A while back, I subscribed to his Substack because an essay he wrote about the Middle East looked interesting. But I quickly came to the conclusion he was a charlatan who cloaked superficiality in pretentious verbiage. For instance, here’s his description of his own prose:
Now, any half-educated person knows that gargoyles and flying buttresses are Gothic, not baroque, so this metaphor is a mess. It’s fake erudition. Anyway, I opened up his newsletter’s email yesterday to see this:
He should feel uncomfortable, because he’s confessing to antisemitism! If you call the groypers what they are, this sentence reads more clearly: “the Klein-Ganz type of Jewish intellectual absolutely deserves what they are getting from the Nazis—pitchforks, torches, and all.” On Twitter, he went on to write, “Now, this Jewish liberal-left intellectual, I must be honest, has been as destructive to this country as the groyper claims.” So, “the Nazis are right about left-wing intellectual Jews.” That’s just antisemitism, from its content to its form: it positively drips with malice. He’s so preoccupied with driving this venomous attack home that it fails on the level of analysis. As it so happens, the groypers are not after me and my ilk at the moment; they are waging an internecine war against Mansour’s neoconservative patrons, and antisemitism is a weapon in that war. We are caught in the crossfire. Mansour is a research fellow at the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy, a think tank that’s at least partially funded by the state of Israel. I wonder if they know—or care—that one of their fellows is engaging in base antisemitism? Continue reading this post for free in the Substack app |

