In early January, an Oklahoma state senator named David Bullard introduced a bill invoking the Bible to suggest that people who provide care to transgender young people should be drowned.
On a livestream one night in early November, a man donated $10 to Nick Fuentes, the white nationalist who would in a few short weeks dine with Donald Trump.
Eight months before the white nationalist figure Nicholas J. Fuentes ignited a political firestorm by dining with Kanye West and Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, he strode out onstage to a crowd of what he claimed were 1,000 followers, chanting America First.
Nick Fuentes, a known white nationalist streamer who pushes Holocaust denial conspiracies and other anti-Semitic hate, has a lingering, if not growing presence across social media.
Just hours before then-President Trump banned all travelers arriving from Europe — a white woman in a turban took the stage at a yoga studio in Venice, Calif.
When Christian nationalist livestreamer and January 6 insurrectionist Nick Fuentes had dinner with former President Donald Trump and Ye (formerly known as Kanye West) at Mar-a-Lago last month, many Americans over the age of 30 were left wondering.