You keep saying, over and over, that you are not an antisemite. And you’re right, you’re not an antisemite. You’re the antisemite.

Many years ago, I met with the former president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He told me he hates Zionists but loves Jews. Like you, he believes that makes him not an antisemite.

Your rhetoric makes the same distinction. You recently stated, “Israel is one of the single ugliest countries in the world. Nothing of beauty has been built there since 1948.”

According to your own comments, Netanyahu is portrayed as pursuing total destruction against his enemies, their grandchildren and even their dogs, through a distorted reference to Amalek.

You further claim that the United States acts as a puppet of Israel, advancing the conspiracy theory that a powerful network of wealthy Jewish elites secretly directs American foreign policy in order to expand Israel’s power.

You said the IDF ended up wearing patches referring to the Israeli Defense Force, and that the point of the war was the destruction of one of the holiest places in Islam and the rebuilding of the Temple. That is precisely Hamas’s talking point. It is the justification they used for the October 7th attack, which they called the “Al-Aqsa Blood” operation.

Now you’re going after the most respected Jewish organization in the world, Chabad, an organization deeply involved in tremendous charitable work. You accuse Chabad of wanting to rebuild the Temple and claim they were behind the war efforts with Iran to achieve their so-called messianic vision. That is an astonishing antisemitic delusion.

Pushing conspiracy narratives

Conspiracy narratives such as Jews controlling global media and finance or orchestrating regional conflicts are surging. Tucker, you have no new insights; you are simply parroting antisemitic blood libel lies that fueled massacres of Jews throughout history. These narratives blur the line between anti-Israel politics and antisemitic mythology, making it impossible to differentiate one from the other.

You claim this is a religious war and that Chabad and Evangelicals are behind the war, pushing for the building of the Third Temple. You said, “There are, amazingly, a lot of American evangelical leaders, Christian Zionists, whose main point is rebuilding the Third Temple.”

You pride yourself on being a great debater. So debate me.

You debated Mike Huckabee, a diplomat who had to be careful with his words and who is, by all accounts, a nice guy. I’m not a nice guy, and I don’t have to be careful with my words. You are a demon-possessed nut job, and I would be delighted to cast that demon out of you.

Adolf Eichmann facilitated the deportation of Jews to the extermination camps. He convinced the Jews in the ghettos that he was their friend, that he was not antisemitic, that he simply supported a “Germany First” policy.

Jesus warned about people like that.

“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only those who do the will of my Father in heaven. Many will say to me, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in your name, cast out demons, and done many wonderful works in your name?’ And I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you. Depart from me, you cursed worker of evil.’” (Matthew 7:21–23)

Dr. Mike Evans has written 120 books and is a #1 New York Times bestselling author. He is the founder of the Friends of Zion Museum in Jerusalem, the ten Boom Museum in Holland, and Churches United with Israel, the largest Christian Zionist network in America, with more than thirty million followers.

The writer is a New York Times #1 bestselling author of 119 published books and a Nobel Peace Prize nominee. He is the founder of the Friends of Zion Heritage Center and recently led an initiative that brought 1,000 Evangelical pastors to Israel to combat antisemitism.