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STRONG LANGUAGE

Myron Gaines Sparks Fresh Outrage with Antisemitic Post Amid Miami Nightclub Fallout

As Open Source Intel pointed out, playing Heil Hitler while doing Nazi salutes wasn't the best idea for these viciously antisemitic 'influencers'.

Justin Waller, Nick Fuentes, Myron Gaines, Sneako, Andrew and Tristan Tate, and Clavicular.
Justin Waller, Nick Fuentes, Myron Gaines, Sneako, Andrew and Tristan Tate, and Clavicular.

Miami-based podcaster Myron Gaines, co-host of the polarizing "Fresh & Fit" show, is facing a new wave of backlash after posting a defiant message on X that's being slammed as blatantly antisemitic.

In the post, Gaines declares, "An attack on 1 is an attack on ALL. Welcome to the real nigga NATO: Niggas Against Talmudic Owners We're f***ing back!" It's accompanied by a group photo of seven influencers, trying to project an air of unbreakable solidarity.

This is the same crew that's been at the center of controversy since their wild night out at Miami's Vendôme nightclub on January 17, when they chose to blast Ye's banned song Heill Hitler and do matching Nazi salutes.

To unpack it, the "NATO" acronym is a twisted riff on the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's famous mutual defense principle – "an attack on one is an attack on all." But Gaines flips it into "Niggas Against Talmudic Owners," which critics are calling straight-up antisemitic code.

The Talmud is a core Jewish religious text, and "Talmudic Owners" taps into age-old conspiracy theories about Jewish people pulling strings behind the scenes in media, finance, and power. It's the kind of language that's long fueled hate in far-right and "manosphere" online spaces, those corners focused on masculinity, dating advice, and often edgy politics.

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This comes hot on the heels of the Vendôme incident, where the group was filmed blasting Kanye West's (now Ye's) banned track "Heil Hitler," chanting along to its antisemitic lyrics, and even throwing what looked like Nazi salutes during a bottle parade.

The video went viral, drawing swift condemnations from Jewish leaders like Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, who called it "normalized Jew-hatred," and politicians like Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, who branded it "absolutely disgusting." Vendôme issued an apology the next day, vowing an internal review, while reports surfaced of nightlife mogul David Grutman banning Clavicular from his Miami venues.

So why drop this now? It feels like the group is digging in their heels against the mounting criticism – boycotts, calls for accountability from groups like the Auschwitz Jewish Center Foundation, and even potential bans. Instead of dialing it back, Gaines is doubling down with "We're fucking back!" as if to say they're untouchable.

But the response online? It's brutal."You are exactly what the Hebrews envisioned. You are the perfect culmination of all their degenerate efforts," one reply flipped the script darkly.

Jewish users and allies are highlighting the Nazi undertones, with comments like "'Niggas against talmudic owners' translates to 'people against Jews' just so everyone is aware. Blatant nazi ideology."

Even wilder, the post has spawned crypto chaos, someone launched a Solana token called $NATO ("Niggas Against Talmudic Owners"), which pumped from 28K to 102K in market cap before likely crashing, as these meme coins do.

And in one bizarre twist, a user mocked Gaines as a "house nigga" who'd be discarded by the white supremacists he's aligning with.

At its core, this is 2026 internet toxicity in full swing: a cocktail of antisemitism, bro bravado, and bait designed to provoke. It's drawing lines in the sand over free speech versus hate, and with the group's massive following, over 15 million combined, it's raising alarms about how this content influences young audiences.

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