On Tucker Carlson's Dime
Nick Fuentes Mocks 6 Million Jews Murdered in the Holocaust
Evangelical author Joel C. Rosenberg blasts Tucker Carlson for hosting Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes, condemning Carlson for normalizing neo-Nazi ideology and sparking outrage among pro-Israel conservatives.

Prominent evangelical author and Israel advocate Joel C. Rosenberg has accused former Fox News host Tucker Carlson of attempting to mainstream neo-Nazi ideology by giving a platform to white nationalist Nick Fuentes in a recent interview.
In a widely shared X (formerly Twitter) post on Friday, Rosenberg, founder of All Israel News and All Arab News, and host of The Rosenberg Report on TBN, labeled Fuentes a “neo-Nazi Holocaust denier” and condemned Carlson for “embracing and trying to normalize” him on the American right.
The tweet included a 2019 video clip of Fuentes mocking the Holocaust through a grotesque analogy involving “baking 6 million cookies” in ovens, a clear reference to the Nazi crematoria used to murder six million Jews.In the resurfaced footage, the 27-year-old far-right activist responds to a viewer’s question about Cookie Monster baking 6 million batches of cookies over five years. Fuentes uses the premise to question the historical reality of the genocide:He doubts whether 15 ovens could produce that volume (analogizing to Auschwitz crematoria).
He suggests the true number was far lower - “maybe 200,000 to 300,000.”
He mocks aerial reconnaissance photos showing no smoke from chimneys and claims the soil could not have absorbed the “cookie crumbs” (a reference to human ashes).
He jokes that the ovens may have been used for “delousing” - a common Holocaust denial trope.
“Six million cookies? I’m not buying it,” Fuentes concludes, laughing.
Rosenberg’s post is part of a larger thread criticizing Carlson’s October 27, 2025, episode of The Tucker Carlson Show, a two-hour conversation in which Fuentes attacked Christian Zionism, labeled support for Israel a “brain virus,” and blamed “organized Jewry” for America’s problems. While Carlson challenged some points, many critics, including conservative leaders, condemned the interview as dangerously lenient toward antisemitic extremism.
The backlash has been swift.
Heritage Foundation president Kevin Roberts initially defended Carlson but later denounced Fuentes’ “vicious antisemitism.” Jewish conservative figures, including Rep. Randy Fine (R-FL), called Carlson “America’s most dangerous antisemite.”
Rosenberg, a New York Times bestselling author of geopolitical thrillers like The Ezekiel Option, has long warned of rising antisemitism across the political spectrum, particularly since the October 7, 2023, Hamas massacre in Israel.
His latest critique reflects growing alarm among pro-Israel evangelicals that fringe voices like Fuentes are gaining traction within conservative media circles.Fuentes, banned from most major platforms until his 2023 reinstatement on X, leads the “Groyper” movement and has previously dined with Donald Trump and Kanye West at Mar-a-Lago. He openly praises Adolf Hitler and calls for a “holy war” against Jews.
Carlson has not responded to Rosenberg’s thread as of publication.