National Review Online
Monday, December 22, 2025
Well, that will leave a mark.
Ben Shapiro did the conservative movement a service last
week by giving two speeches that were deliberate acts of provocation.
First, at the Heritage Foundation, he argued that a
political movement, like a nation, needs borders. He illustrated the point with
reference to the Heritage Foundation mission statement, which supports free
enterprise, limited government, individual freedom, traditional American
values, and a strong national defense.
He then compared those principles with the beliefs of
Tucker Carlson, with whom Heritage President Kevin Roberts has been in
ideological sympathy, up to and including initially defending Carlson’s
interview with Nick Fuentes (before backpedaling). Shapiro persuasively argued
that by Heritage’s own standards Carlson — who expresses routine contempt for
markets, who launders Russian propaganda, who sees the advantages of sharia
law, and who gives sympathetic interviews to white nationalists, Churchill-hating
World War II revisionists, and proud misogynists accused of rape — is no longer
a conservative.
We assume that Roberts won’t be inviting Shapiro back any
time soon, but his talk was received warmly by the audience at the Heritage
Foundation.
A couple of days later, Shapiro spoke at TPUSA’s AmFest
conference. He addressed the rank pandering to audience, widespread
conspiracy-theorizing, and cowardly unwillingness to call out lunacy on the
right that has infected the right-wing influencer space. Here, Shapiro focused
on the absolutely cracked theories promoted by Candace Owens about the Charlie
Kirk assassination; these rancid, obsessive musings, which would set off alarms
bells for any psychiatrist if spouted by a patient, have significantly shaped
the debate on the right about Kirk’s assassination.
True to form, Owens responded to Shapiro’s speech with an
anti-Jewish rant.
Shapiro’s critics accuse him of wanting to cancel his
adversaries. But having standards and speaking truthfully about lies is not
cancellation. If Carlson had chosen not to have Fuentes on his show, Fuentes
wouldn’t have been canceled; he just would have been denied the favor of a
high-profile platform with a friendly interviewer.
As Shapiro told the TPUSA audience, “Our first duty is
truth. We owe you the truth. That means we should not mislead you; it means we
shouldn’t hide the ball; we shouldn’t be deliberately obscure about what we are
telling you. We have an obligation to clarity and to honesty.”
Such are the business incentives in the influencer space
and the radicalism that has been unloosed that these words are unlikely to be
heeded any time soon. Yet, Shapiro has put down an important marker, and anyone
vested in the health of the conservative movement should be grateful.
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