According to the common adage, “the enemy of my enemy is my friend.” But sometimes, the enemy of your enemy is also your enemy.
This principle — that one is at times assaulted on more than one front by more than one enemy — is important for the political Right to digest, given that the movement’s natural opposition to the globalist establishment that currently rules much of the Western World is causing many within the movement to side with foreign authoritarian powers simply because they appear to be in conflict with the Western globalists.
Specifically, many rightists have now become cheerleaders for China and Russia.
While such support, at least for China, has not yet gone completely mainstream, it is slowly gaining a creeping traction in many circles within the dissident Right. Given the rapid growth of the pro-Beijing movement, it likely won’t be long before a major segment of the mainstream Republican Party is openly advocating for China.
Nick Fuentes, the popular livestreamer and leader of the Gen Z-driven “Groyper” movement of identitarian Christians, has at various times praised Chinese leadership and said he would be happy to see Taiwan fall to Beijing.
Ron Unz, the former publisher of The American Conservative who has a large following at his website The Unz Review, has also taken a pro-China stance, as have most of the popular columnists at his site.
Vox Day, the self-described Christian nationalist novelist who runs the right-wing book publisher Castalia House, authored the influential anti-Marxist book Social Justice Warriors Always Lie, and maintains a popular blog known as Vox Popoli, has likewise come out in favor of China, arguing that the reason the Western Powers attack China and Russia is because the two nations refuse to go along with the satanic pedophiles Day believes are in control of the West.
Writes Day:
Ignore all the rhetoric and the neo-liberal economic assumptions and focus on what the various parties mentioned are doing. What’s actually taking place is that The Empire That Never Ended, which intended to transfer its global center of power from Washington DC to Beijing, has finally abandoned its attempts to do so.
Xi Xinping was seen as an impediment, not an implacable obstacle, but the confirmation of his continuing power in the CPC and his ongoing anti-corruption campaign means that the imperial plans for China have failed. Ukraine appears to be the backup plan, but that is failing too, thanks to the Russians and their stubborn refusal to submit to the imperial order.
Day has also called Xi Jinping “the most intelligent world leader on the scene today.”
It’s not difficult to understand why many on the Right, which has for so long been associated with anti-communism, are beginning to support China.
Within the contemporary Right, there has been a great awakening in which knowledge of the international conspiracy to destroy our freedoms, our faith, and our way of life has become widespread. Many now realize that the enemy is not external, but embedded right here in our own country.
This knowledge is only further reinforced by the Deep State’s actions in recent years, such as the arrests of J6 prisoners, the Biden Justice Department’s targeting of conservative parents at school-board meetings, and the attacks on President Donald Trump that resulted in his removal from office.
The general understanding among the Right today is that our own government is waging war against us, which is inarguably true. And many rightists yearn to see a public figure who will fight on their behalf against the globalist establishment, yet few in our own country seem to step up to the plate, at least not with real results.
So when they see Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping standing up against the globalist world order, these rightists are inclined to cheer, relieved that someone — even if it’s a foreign leader — is finally not only challenging Washington, but appearing to get the better of it.
Yet the perception of China as opposed to the New World Order is not accurate; on the contrary, China is part of the plan, and globalist figureheads such as the World Economic Forum’s Kaus Schwab have praised China as a “role model.”
The New American detailed the cooperation between China and WEF globalists at a Davos tech conference in 2018:
Among the articles CNBC carried on the Tianjin conference, for instance, was one titled “Everyone could learn from China’s tech policies, World Economic Forum says,” by CNBC staff writer Evelyn Cheng. “The World Economic Forum is looking to China for ideas on how governments can appropriately regulate the technologies of the future,” Cheng writes. “The organization, which runs the annual conference of world leaders in Davos, Switzerland, announced Wednesday it is launching a hub in Beijing for government officials, businesses and academics to come up with suggestions for future policies on developments such as artificial intelligence.”
“The group in the communist country will mark the third location of the Center for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, which opened in San Francisco in March 2017,” Cheng reports, noting that a WEF hub was opened in Tokyo in July, and another is scheduled to open in Mumbai, India, in October.
Some right-wingers argue that China is not really communist, that such rhetoric is a relic of the Cold War. And while it is true that the country now showcases many signs of free-market capitalism, the freedom is little more than a guise, as the CCP maintains tight control over the economy, using corporations as another arm of the state.
It’s tempting to want to believe that we have allies abroad, but the last thing the Right needs is to fall prey to foreign communists who merely want to use us as pawns to dethrone the current globalist oligarchs just to take their place as overlords of the New World Order.