On Monday, Ben Shapiro said: “The issue here isn’t that Tucker Carlson had Nick Fuentes on his show. He has every right to do that, of course. The issue here is that Tucker Carlson decided to normalize and fluff Nick Fuentes. And that the Heritage Foundation then decided to robustly defend that performance.”
He described Carlson as “the most virulent super-spreader of vile ideas in America.”
He argued that Carlson “takes other people’s hideous ideas. He softens them. He treats them with love and care. And then he provides them with a massive signal boost.”
Shapiro emphasized: “It is not cancellation to draw moral lines between viewpoints. In fact, we used to call that one of the key aspects of conservatism.”
Ben Shapiro’s claim that he’s “fought for principles all his life” can be unpacked through the lens of Alliance Theory from the attached Pinsof et al. paper.
1. Principles as rhetorical signals of allegiance
Pinsof argues that what people call “principles” are often propagandistic devices serving alliance maintenance rather than moral absolutes.
Shapiro’s “principles” — free speech, Western civilization, rational debate, Israel’s moral clarity — are not unified by abstract logic but by their strategic function within his alliance network. They rally support for the factions that sustain his brand: pro-Israel conservatives, religious traditionalists, anti-woke centrists, and big-donor institutions. His principles remain fixed only where his alliances are stable. When alliances shift, his moral reasoning shifts accordingly — for instance, his defense of Elon Musk’s “free speech absolutism” vanishes when Musk platforms voices that threaten Jewish interests or mainstream conservatism.
2. The Fuentes-Carlson rift as alliance fracture
Alliance Theory predicts that ideological coherence gives way to transitivity logic (“the enemy of my enemy is my friend”). Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes both challenge the GOP donor class and Israel-first orthodoxy, which places them in partial alliance with populists and dissidents Shapiro views as existential rivals. His denunciation of them therefore isn’t about moral deviation but about defending his coalition’s transitive chain: pro-Israel donors → legacy conservative media → Shapiro’s Daily Wire ecosystem.
Fuentes’ overt hostility toward Israel and Carlson’s flirtations with post-liberal nationalism break that transitivity. By calling them “antisemitic” or “immoral,” Shapiro uses victim and perpetrator biases to cast his faction as the righteous victim and theirs as moral offenders. The moral language cloaks what is functionally an alliance defense.
3. Shapiro’s “principles” through the bias triad
Alliance Theory identifies three common distortions that maintain loyalty networks:
Perpetrator bias: excuse your allies’ wrongs. Shapiro rationalizes U.S. and Israeli military actions as “tragic necessities” while condemning identical tactics by Hamas or Russia — a textbook propagandistic asymmetry.
Victim bias: exaggerate your side’s grievances. He routinely frames criticism of Israel as evidence of Jewish victimization while dismissing right-wing Christians’ complaints about censorship or economic marginalization.
Attributional bias: attribute allies’ success to virtue and rivals’ failure to vice. His narrative that conservative Jews built civilization by merit while “leftists” and “grifters” destroy it serves this bias perfectly.
4. Why the current kerfuffle erupted
The right’s realignment over Israel, nationalism, and identity pits bridging alliances (Shapiro’s pro-Israel neoliberals) against revolutionary alliances (Fuentes-style populists seeking to overturn the hierarchy). Tucker straddles both, trying to reconcile populist energy with legacy respectability. Pinsof’s model predicts these conflicts arise when a coalition’s internal transitivity fails — when allies share enemies but no longer share interdependence. Shapiro depends financially and reputationally on the donor and institutional ecosystem that Carlson and Fuentes now threaten. His moral outrage is therefore better understood as an adaptive defense mechanism for that alliance, not as betrayal of abstract reason.
5. The broader takeaway
Alliance Theory’s punchline fits this drama cleanly: politics masquerades as morality, but functions as coalition maintenance.
Shapiro’s “lifelong principles” are consistent only in their service to the same core alliance structure that has defined mainstream conservatism since the Reagan era: pro-market, pro-Israel, anti-left, culturally traditional yet corporate-friendly. Carlson’s populism and Fuentes’ ethnonationalism threaten that structure from below, so moral condemnation becomes strategic warfare.
The fighting on the right is not about truth or ethics. It is about which set of strange bedfellows will define the next conservative alliance.
Ben Shapiro’s “I’ve fought for certain principles all my life” line collapses the minute you apply any historical or Alliance Theory scrutiny.
1. The myth of the lifelong moral crusader
Pinsof’s Alliance Theory dismantles the idea that public figures are animated by stable moral principles. What they call “principles” are alliance signals that change when coalition incentives shift. Shapiro’s career is a perfect case study. His supposed constants—free speech, truth, Western values, moral consistency—are stage props for defending whichever allies secure his relevance and funding. The proof is his own record.
2. The “Never Trump” to “Trump defender” pivot
In 2016, Shapiro called Trump “a bully,” “a liar,” and “a stain on conservatism.” He framed himself as the principled conservative standing athwart populist vulgarity. Once Trump captured the base and his media audience shifted, Shapiro’s “principles” morphed into “we must defeat the left, and Trump is our imperfect vessel.”
According to Alliance Theory, this is a textbook transitivity shift: when your rivals (the media, the left) make an enemy of Trump, loyalty to your coalition requires you to side with him. Shapiro’s propagandistic bias rewrote his moral story—he didn’t change, the world did; Trump didn’t become moral, he became useful.
It wasn’t moral growth. It was alliance realignment: the Never Trump conservative class lost its power, and Shapiro adapted to remain inside the dominant coalition of donors, culture warriors, and the MAGA media economy.
3. “Principles” as performance for patrons
Shapiro’s media empire (The Daily Wire) is built on monetizing outrage among conservatives who want intellectual cover for their loyalties. His “principles” are curated to fit donor-class preferences—pro-Israel, anti-regulation, anti-woke—but flexible enough to keep populist subscribers onboard.
When his sponsors or allies shift, so does his “principled” rhetoric. He’ll rail against populist nationalism when it threatens Jewish or corporate interests, then pivot to “national conservatism” when it polls well. He’ll champion free speech until someone questions Israel. He’ll preach personal responsibility until the “working class heartland” needs subsidies. Pinsof’s point that “moral principles are not so principled” was written for this kind of career.
4. The alliance logic of “fighting for principles”
What Shapiro calls “principles” are better understood as propagandistic loyalties:
Similarity: he allies with those who share his subcultural identity—religious, Zionist, highly verbal elites.
Transitivity: he aligns with whoever fights the left, even if that means excusing Trump or Musk.
Interdependence: he relies financially and reputationally on right-wing networks that expect loyalty to Israel and opposition to left populism.
When these alliance factors realign, his “principles” mutate overnight. He doesn’t betray them; he redefines them so that his coalition remains morally coherent to itself.
5. The farce of the self-styled moral warrior
Under Alliance Theory, his claim of “fighting for principles” is a self-serving moral fiction—a tactic to frame himself as the victim of betrayal rather than the agent of opportunism.
When he attacks Fuentes or Tucker, he’s not defending principles; he’s defending the legitimacy of his alliance’s moral hierarchy—where Israel, capitalism, and his media network occupy the top rung. When he backs Trump or Musk, he’s not embracing hypocrisy; he’s maintaining transitivity (“the enemy of my enemy is my friend”).
Alliance Theory predicts exactly this pattern: “principled” figures use moral talk to signal loyalty, recruit allies, and justify double standards. By those standards, Shapiro isn’t a lifelong fighter for principle. He’s a disciplined coalition operator whose moral vocabulary shifts as fluidly as his donor base.
6. Bottom line
Shapiro’s “principles” have always meant “interests of my allies.” The moral consistency is theater; the alliance logic is real. Once you strip away the rhetoric, his record reads not as a moral struggle but as an evolutionary adaptation to changing power conditions within the American right.
In 2007, I signed on to the email lists of several influential magazines on the right, among them Townhall, which operates under the auspices of evangelical Stuart Epperson’s Salem Communications; Newsmax, the organ more responsible than any other for drumming up the hysteria that culminated in the impeachment of Bill Clinton; and Human Events, one of Ronald Reagan’s favorite publications. The exercise turned out to be far more revealing than I expected. Via the battery of promotional appeals that overran my email inbox, I mainlined a right-wing id that was invisible to readers who encounter conservative opinion at face value.
Subscriber lists to ideological organs are pure gold to the third-party interests who rent them as catchments for potential customers. Who better suits a marketing strategy than a group that voluntarily organizes itself according to their most passionately shared beliefs? That’s why, for instance, the other day I (and probably you) got an advertisement by way of liberal magazine The American Prospect seeking donations to Mercy Corps, a charity that helps starving children in the Third World. But back when I was getting emails every day from Newsmax and Townhall, the come-ons were a little bit different.
“Dear Reader, I’m going to tell you something, but you must promise to keep it quiet. You have to understand that the “elite” would not be at all happy with me if they knew what I was about to tell you. That’s why we have to tread carefully. You see, while most people are paying attention to the stock market, the banks, brokerages and big institutions have their money somewhere else . . . [in] what I call the hidden money mountain . . . All you have to know is the insider’s code (which I’ll tell you) and you could make an extra $6,000 every single month.”
Soon after reading that, I learned of the “23-Cent Heart Miracle,” the one “Washington, the medical industry, and drug companies REFUSE to tell you about.” (Why would they? They’d just be leaving money on the table: “I was scheduled for open heart surgery when I read about your product,” read one of the testimonials. “I started taking it and now six months have passed and I haven’t had open-heart surgery.”) Then came news of the oilfield in the placenta.
“Dear NewsMax Reader,” this appeal began, leaving no doubt that whatever trust that publication had built with its followers was being rented out wholesale. “Please find below a special message from our sponsor, James Davidson, Editor of Outside the Box. He has some important information to share with you.”
Here’s the information in question: “If you have shied away from profiting from the immense promise of stem cells to treat disease because of moral concern over extracting stem cells from fetal tissue, pay close attention. You can now invest with a clear conscience. An Israeli entrepreneur, Zami Aberman, has discovered ‘an oilfield in the placenta.’ His little company, Pluristem Life Systems (OTCBB: PLRS) has made a discovery which is potentially more valuable than Prudhoe Bay.”
Davidson concluded by proposing the lucky investor purchase a position of 83,000 shares of PLRS for the low, low price of twelve cents each. If you act now, Davidson explained, your $10,000 outlay “could bring you a profit of more than a quarter of a million dollars.”
Not long after I let the magic of the placenta-based oilfield sink in, I got another pitch, this one courtesy of the webmasters handling the Human Events mailing list and headed “The Trouble with Get-Rich-Quick Schemes.” Perhaps I’m a little gullible myself; for a couple of seconds, I believed the esteemed Reagan-era policy handbook might be sending out a useful consumer advisory to its readers, an investigative guide to the phony get-rich-quick schemes caroming around the right-leaning opinion-sphere. But that hasty assumption proved sadly mistaken, presuming as it did that the proprietors of outfits like Human Events respect their readers. Instead, this was a come-on for something called “INSTANT INTERNET INCOME”—the chance at last to “put an end to your financial worries . . . permanently erase your debts . . . pay cash for the things you want . . . create a secure, enjoyable retirement for yourself . . . give your family the abundant lifestyle they so richly deserve.”
Back in our great-grandparents’ day, the peddlers of such miracle cures and get-rich-quick schemes were known as snake-oil salesmen. You don’t see stuff like this much in mainstream culture any more; it hardly seems possible such déclassé effronteries could get anywhere in a society with a high school completion rate of 90 percent. But tenders of a 23-Cent Heart Miracle seem to work just fine on the readers of the magazine where Ann Coulter began her journalistic ascent in the late nineties by pimping the notion that liberals are all gullible rubes. In an alternate universe where Coulter would be capable of rational self-reflection, it would be fascinating to ask her what she thinks about, say, the layout of HumanEvents.com on the day it featured an article headlined “Ideas Will Drive Conservatives’ Revival.” Two inches beneath that bold pronouncement, a box headed “Health News” included the headlines “Reverse Crippling Arthritis in 2 Days,” “Clear Clogged Arteries Safely & Easily—without drugs, without surgery, and without a radical diet,” and “High Blood Pressure Cured in 3 Minutes . . . Drop Measurement 60 Points.” It would be interesting, that is, to ask Coulter about the reflex of lying that’s now sutured into the modern conservative movement’s DNA—and to get her candid assessment of why conservative leaders treat their constituents like suckers.
The history of that movement echoes with the sonorous names of long-dead Austrian economists, of indefatigable door-knocking cadres, of soaring perorations on a nation finally poised to realize its rendezvous with destiny. Search high and low, however, and there’s no mention of oilfields in the placenta. Nor anything about, say, the massive intersection between the culture of “network” or “multilevel” marketing—where ordinary folks try to get rich via pyramid schemes that leave their neighbors holding the bag—and the institutions of both evangelical Christianity and Mitt Romney’s Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
And yet this stuff is as important to understanding the conservative ascendancy as are the internecine organizational and ideological struggles that make up its official history—if not, indeed, more so. The strategic alliance of snake-oil vendors and conservative true believers points up evidence of another successful long march, of tactics designed to corral fleeceable multitudes all in one place—and the formation of a cast of mind that makes it hard for either them or us to discern where the ideological con ended and the money con began.
Back in our great-grandparents’ day, the peddlers of such miracle cures and get-rich-quick schemes were known as snake-oil salesmen.
Those tactics gelled in the seventies—though they were rooted, like all things right-wing and infrastructural, in the movement that led to Barry Goldwater’s presidential nomination in 1964. In 1961 Richard Viguerie, a kid from Houston whose heroes, he once told me, were “the two Macs”—Joe McCarthy and General Douglas MacArthur—took a job as executive director for the conservative student group Young Americans for Freedom (YAF). The organization was itself something of a con, a front for the ideological ambitions of the grownups running National Review. And fittingly enough, the middle-aged man who ran the operation, Marvin Liebman, was something of a P. T. Barnum figure, famous on the right for selling the claim that he had amassed no less than a million signatures on petitions opposing the People’s Republic of China’s entry into the United Nations. (He said they were in a warehouse in New Jersey. No one ever saw the warehouse.) The first thing Liebman told Viguerie was that YAF had two thousand paid members but that in public, he should always claim there were twenty-five thousand. (Viguerie told me this personally. I found no evidence he saw anything to be ashamed of.) And the first thing that Liebman showed Viguerie was the automated “Robotype” machine he used to send out automated fundraising pitches. Viguerie’s eyes widened; he had found his life’s calling.
Both the Rick Perlstein “The Long Con” Placenta essay and Pinsof’s Alliance Theory offer a devastating joint lens on Ben Shapiro, the Daily Wire, and the present right-wing fight over Nick Fuentes and Tucker Carlson. Each reveals the same structural pattern: “principled conservatism” as a commercialized con sustained by alliance maintenance and emotional manipulation rather than enduring values.
1. The conservative-media business model as moral theater
The Placenta piece shows that the New Right fused ideological evangelism with grift from the start: fundraising appeals mixed “all-out assaults on our traditional family structure” with miracle-cure pitches for “23-cent heart miracles” and “oilfields in the placenta.” The same logic runs through today’s Daily Wire empire. Fear-based marketing, “liberal elites” as villains, and salvation through subscription or donation—these are not journalistic principles but sales funnels. Shapiro’s “principles” work the way Paul Weyrich’s fake UN scare letters worked: they dramatize existential peril to mobilize cash and loyalty.
In Alliance Theory terms, these tactics are propagandistic biases repackaged for profit. The “victim bias” (we are persecuted by woke tyrants) and the “perpetrator bias” (our side’s excesses are righteous) are not moral errors—they are engineered tools for audience retention. The Daily Wire isn’t a forum for principle; it’s an evolved descendant of the Viguerie direct-mail hustle described in Placenta: the political-outrage industry as a self-funding feedback loop.
2. Shapiro’s shifting “principles” as alliance maintenance
When Shapiro says he has “fought for certain principles all his life,” he is performing what Alliance Theory calls moralized alliance signaling. His “principles”—free speech, Western values, Israel’s moral clarity—are the rhetorical glue that binds his coalition: religious Zionists, corporate conservatives, and anti-woke suburbanites. But the glue flexes whenever coalition incentives change. “Never Trump” in 2016 became “Trump was flawed but necessary” by 2020 because the alliance map changed; moral logic did not.
In Pinsof’s terms, Shapiro’s shift followed transitivity: the enemy of my enemy (the left, the media) made Trump a provisional ally. The same transitivity drives his current war with Carlson and Fuentes. They threaten the continuity of the pro-Israel, donor-friendly conservative super-alliance that sustains the Daily Wire ecosystem. Hence the moral absolutism—“antisemitic,” “immoral,” “dangerous”—deployed to define them as out-group. What looks like a fight over values is a boundary-maintenance exercise within a fracturing coalition.
3. The Daily Wire as institutionalized grift
The Placenta essay traces how right-wing outfits discovered that outrage and fear were the most reliable currencies. Today’s Daily Wire inherits that template with higher production values:
perpetual crisis (“the left is coming for your kids”),
salvation through consumption (subscriptions, coffee, razors, movies “that fight the culture war”),
charismatic brokers who translate paranoia into purchases.
This continuity shows the seamless merger of the ideological and the commercial described in Placenta: the political con and the money con are the same enterprise. The Daily Wire’s product is not news but identity validation. Its audience buys the feeling of moral clarity that Alliance Theory calls propagandistic loyalty signaling—proof of allegiance through outrage.
4. The Nick Fuentes–Tucker Carlson rift as system stress test
Fuentes and Carlson appeal to a different set of “losers of globalization,” seeking new revolutionary alliances (Pinsof’s term) between disaffected nationalists and religious populists. Their version of authenticity threatens the bridging alliance that links Shapiro’s donor class to the MAGA base. Carlson flirts with post-liberal nationalism; Fuentes burns bridges with overt ethnic rhetoric. Both expose the contradiction between the Daily Wire’s moral branding and its dependence on corporate advertisers and Israeli alignment.
Alliance Theory predicts that when transitivity fails—when allies share enemies but not mutual dependence—coalitions fracture and moral panic follows. That’s the “kerfuffle”: a proxy war between two wings of the same ecosystem, each claiming to defend truth but actually defending different revenue-and-status networks.
5. The farce exposed
Pinsof shows that politics masquerades as morality to mobilize allies. Placenta shows that conservatism’s infrastructure long ago monetized that masquerade. Viewed through both lenses, Shapiro’s claim of a life spent “fighting for principles” is performative camouflage. He’s fighting for the credibility of the con itself: a marketable story in which moral conviction and monetized outrage remain indistinguishable.
6. Summary
Placenta reveals the business architecture of conservative deceit.
Alliance Theory reveals the psychological architecture of partisan loyalty.
Together they explain Shapiro and the Daily Wire perfectly: the latest generation of conservative “moral entrepreneurs” whose actual product is belief itself.
The feud with Fuentes and Tucker isn’t about principle—it’s about control of the pipeline through which grievance, money, and identity flow.
The Placenta essay maps the deep continuity between ideological conservatism and commercial grift—the fusion of moral panic, miracle-cure marketing, and identity management for profit. The people who most embody these themes in today’s right-wing media are those who operate at that same intersection: moral outrage as business model, fear as sales pitch, and “principle” as brand asset.
Here’s who fits that pattern most clearly:
1. Ben Shapiro and the Daily Wire network
The Placenta template describes how conservative publishers learned to fuse fundraising and fearmongering into one machine. Shapiro industrialized that formula in the streaming era. Every “woke outrage” headline is a hook to sell memberships, merch, and branded lifestyle products. The ideological posture—rational debate, Western values—is just the respectable veneer on the same direct-mail hustle that once sold “23-cent heart miracles.”
2. Alex Jones
Jones is the most literal descendant of the snake-oil lineage described in the essay. He sells supplements and “survival gear” on the back of constant fear programming: government plots, pandemics, globalist cabals. He merges ideology and commerce so seamlessly that his politics can’t exist without his store. It’s the placenta con updated for the age of InfoWars—paranoia monetized minute by minute.
3. Glenn Beck
Beck pioneered the fusion of prophecy, patriotism, and product. His “Goldline” and emergency-food sponsorships in the Obama era were textbook examples of the essay’s formula: depict America as collapsing, then offer a commercial salvation for $19.95 a month. Beck’s self-branding as both moral guide and investment guru made him a transitional figure between televangelist grifters and today’s influencer capitalists.
4. Steve Bannon
Bannon merges populist revolt with venture-capital opportunism. He positions himself as the anti-elite warrior while running data-mining and fundraising operations that mirror the very elites he denounces. His entire War Room brand operates as a perpetual crisis engine that converts anger into donations and email lists—the same machinery Richard Viguerie built in the 1970s.
5. Charlie Kirk and Turning Point USA
TPUSA is a 21st-century version of the direct-mail pyramid described in Placenta: endless fundraising appeals tied to lurid warnings about Marxism, grooming, or campus tyranny. It manufactures “childlike minds,” to borrow the essay’s phrase—young followers mobilized through fear narratives and merch.
6. Candace Owens
Owens has mastered the identity-flip variant of the con: present yourself as living proof that the movement’s values transcend race or gender while monetizing the same grievance pipeline. Her transition from “Blexit” activist to Daily Wire provocateur shows how quickly moral branding turns into product line.
7. Matt Walsh, Michael Knowles, and other Daily Wire culture warriors
They serve the same function Weyrich’s fundraising letters once did—moral panic as retention strategy. “The left wants your children,” “Christianity is under attack,” “men are disappearing.” Each panic is serialized content that drives subscriptions and keeps the audience in a permanent state of alarm and dependence.
8. Dan Bongino and Mark Levin
Both operate in the “rage-broker” tradition that Placenta charts: simplified villainy, apocalyptic tone, heavy cross-promotion with financial and health sponsors. Their moral language—“freedom,” “patriotism,” “faith”—functions as a shield for a business empire of ads, investment schemes, and gold-seller partnerships.
9. Mike Lindell
The MyPillow CEO literalizes the essay’s blend of product and prophecy. He packages commercial failure as martyrdom, turning each lost retailer into proof of divine calling. His election conspiracies work the same way the old “UN-children’s-rights” scams did—absurd, unverifiable, yet effective at corralling “fleeceable multitudes all in one place.”
10. Tucker Carlson (post-Fox version)
Carlson represents the high-status, pseudo-intellectual layer of the same ecosystem. He markets skepticism of elites while courting billionaire backers and new-media paywalls. His moral rhetoric (“they hate you”) is identical in structure to the old direct-mail copy the Placenta essay quotes—us-versus-them storytelling as brand positioning.
Summary
The essay’s central idea—that right-wing media long ago merged the con, the crusade, and the commerce—runs straight through these figures. Each converts anxiety into allegiance and allegiance into revenue. The content changes—Goldline becomes crypto, the UN becomes “wokeness”—but the grift architecture is identical:
invent an existential threat
cast yourself as moral redeemer
monetize the fear
That’s the placenta economy of modern conservatism.
The Placenta essay lays out a brutal anatomy of the conservative media ecosystem: the seamless merger of ideology, fear, and commerce. The snake oil isn’t a side-effect—it’s the business model. Right-wing talk radio perfected that model decades before YouTube or podcasts. Below is how its biggest figures embody that pattern.
Rush Limbaugh
He’s the original architect of the placenta economy in audio form. Limbaugh fused the “moral crisis” narrative with a relentless sales pitch—gold coins, pain-relief creams, home-security systems. His listeners were sold the fantasy of insider truth, then redirected toward advertisers who promised to protect them from the very threats he described. Like the direct-mail hucksters in Placenta, he trained his audience to trust outrage as proof of truth. His genius wasn’t ideological consistency; it was turning resentment into a consumable lifestyle.
Sean Hannity
Hannity inherited Limbaugh’s role and refined it into a loyalty racket. The Placenta essay’s description of “childlike minds” created by endless moral panic fits him perfectly. Every show is a crisis—an election stolen, a border invasion, Christianity under siege. Hannity’s “principles” track precisely with Republican power centers and sponsors. He poses as the everyman defender of freedom while functioning as a marketing conduit for the party line and whatever commercial tie-ins keep Fox’s ad slots full.
Mark Levin
Levin presents himself as a constitutional purist, but he operates as the moral-absolutist wing of the same business. His furious monologues, pitched at apocalyptic temperature, mirror Placenta’s “alarmist vision of civilization besieged.” He keeps listeners in a state of existential panic that makes them susceptible to both ideology and product. The performance of anger is his sales technique. The Constitution is just the prop through which he channels that rage.
Glenn Beck
Beck is the most literal Placenta case study. His program has always paired “The Republic is dying” with a commercial cure—gold, survival food, prepper gear. Like the miracle-pill and stem-cell scams the essay catalogs, Beck’s world collapses unless you buy his sponsor’s miracle solution. He replaced religious salvation with commercial redemption. His chalkboard conspiracies worked the same way as the old UN-children-rights scare letters: vivid nonsense that keeps believers emotionally and financially invested.
Michael Savage
Savage markets himself as the intellectual-outsider doctor who sees the truth others suppress—exactly the tone of the “23-cent heart miracle” pitch. His shows fuse pseudo-medical moralizing (“liberalism is a mental disorder”) with xenophobic fear and self-promotion. The overlap between his professional credentialing and his paranoia-as-expertise is the Placenta pattern in its rawest form: authority as marketing hook.
Alex Jones
Jones is the full grotesque flowering of what Placenta calls “the strategic alliance of snake-oil vendors and conservative true believers.” Every segment sells the apocalypse and then sells the cure—vitamins, filters, survival packs. The money game and the ideology are indistinguishable. He is the purest example of the right-wing con where “the ideological one and the money one are two facets of the same coin.”
Dan Bongino
Bongino’s product is emotional solidarity with perpetual grievance. His show and ads are structured identically: They’re coming for you—defend yourself with our sponsor. He wraps the entire cycle in ex-Secret-Service authority, the modern version of the “former FBI star” endorsing fake charities in Placenta. It’s a blue-collar paranoia pipeline that turns personal insecurity into clicks, merch, and political loyalty.
Michael Berry, Clay Travis & Buck Sexton, Jesse Kelly, and the second-tier imitators
These figures keep the same rhythm alive for a younger demographic. The formula never changes: manufacture crisis → personalize victimhood → monetize trust. The tone may shift from preacher to bro, but the grift architecture remains pure Placenta: fear as engagement, engagement as commerce.
Summary
Right-wing talk radio is the oilfield in the placenta. It converts anxiety into energy and energy into profit. Every ad, every outrage, every call to “wake up, patriots” is part of one continuous transaction. The medium trains its audience to mistake adrenaline for enlightenment and loyalty for principle. The result is what the essay foresaw decades ago: a movement in which the truth and the sales pitch are the same sentence.
The Placenta essay’s framework—ideology fused with con artistry—applies perfectly to much of the right-wing web. It describes a machine that thrives on fear, moral panic, and “exclusive insider” claims that double as marketing. The sites below are the digital descendants of the old direct-mail and talk-radio grifts the essay dissected.
1. Breitbart
The site’s tabloid tone and “exclusive” scoops operate like a perpetual fundraising letter. Every headline screams crisis—border chaos, cultural collapse, liberal tyranny—followed by ads for gold, survival gear, and testosterone boosters. Like the placenta hucksters, it teaches readers that outrage is proof of virtue and distrust of mainstream reality is a mark of intelligence. Ideology and product placement merge into one emotional transaction.
2. Gateway Pundit
Jim Hoft’s site is pure Placenta energy: invented enemies, fantasy conspiracies, and sensational lies that keep readers coming back for the next fix. It’s the online version of the “UN-children’s-rights” scare letter—wild claims framed as insider revelation. The constant hysteria sustains clicks and ad revenue; accuracy is irrelevant.
3. Daily Wire
Shapiro’s operation belongs here too. It presents itself as rational conservatism but functions like a content-marketing firm wrapped in moral rhetoric. Each “principled” story doubles as a funnel toward subscriptions, movies, or branded goods. Like the 1970s direct-mail cons, it sells a lifestyle of fear and moral superiority to a middle-class audience desperate to feel both besieged and righteous.
4. The Federalist
Polished language, Ivy-educated contributors, same grift logic. The tone is pseudo-intellectual moral panic—“the elites are destroying faith, family, and freedom.” It offers cultural sophistication as the premium version of snake oil, appealing to readers who want to feel thoughtful while inhaling propaganda. The article’s arguments serve the same function as the placenta pitches: draw the audience into emotional identification, then monetize it through donors and ad partners.
5. Townhall / PJ Media / HotAir
These are the digital heirs of the Viguerie-era direct-mail networks. They mix scare-copy headlines with syndicated columns and list-rental clickbait: “The Left’s New War on Faith—Learn How to Protect Your Family.” The boundary between editorial and sales pitch is gone. Their readers are still being “prospected,” just through pixels instead of envelopes.
6. Newsmax
It literally evolved from the kind of mailing-list profiteering Placenta described. Its website and email blasts are loaded with medical quackery and investment schemes wrapped in patriotic language. The ideological and financial con are identical. Newsmax doesn’t even hide it—it is the oilfield in the placenta.
7. Western Journal / Conservative Brief / RedState / American Thinker
These aggregators exist to recycle alarmist narratives in high volume. The formula: moral outrage headline → traffic surge → programmatic ads. They exploit the same cognitive pathway the essay identified—keep readers panicked, self-righteous, and certain they’re part of the last line of defense against evil.
8. OANN and The Blaze (networked sites)
They operate as ecosystem hubs where “the news” and product tie-ins are indistinguishable. Their streaming platforms are the modern equivalent of the “FreedomFest” sales conventions mentioned in Placenta—a marketplace for ideology and miracle cures, both promising salvation from liberal collapse.
9. Epoch Times
Its spiritual veneer and obsession with Chinese conspiracy mirrors the essay’s description of “mystic wingnut great-circle-of-life” appeals. It packages paranoia as moral enlightenment and sustains itself on subscriptions and supplement ads.
10. Infowars
Alex Jones’s empire deserves its own footnote in the Placenta canon. It’s the most direct descendant of the “23-cent heart miracle” model: terrify the listener, then sell them vitamins and water filters as deliverance. It’s not metaphorical snake oil—it’s literal snake oil.
Summary
The right-wing web runs on the same closed circuit the Placenta essay exposed decades ago:
Invent or inflate a civilizational emergency.
Cast yourself as the heroic truth-teller.
Turn panic into profit—through clicks, merch, or “patriot” investments.
What began as mail fraud in ideological wrapping has become a digital economy of moral panic. The names change; the placenta still gushes cash.
The Placenta essay could have been written with Fox News and Newsmax in mind. Both are the logical descendants of the conservative money-and-fear machine it described.
1. Fox News: ideology as product packaging
Fox perfected the Placenta model on a corporate scale. The essay traced how conservative media learned to combine moral panic with a sales pitch—first through mailers, then through talk radio. Fox turned that same fusion into a billion-dollar cable empire.
Perpetual crisis: Every hour is an “all-out assault on our traditional way of life.” Like the old fundraising letters, Fox creates a narrative of national emergency that never resolves. The threat shifts—from Obama to migrants to “woke” schools—but the structure stays fixed. Fear keeps viewers hooked.
Merchandising the cure: Instead of miracle pills or “23-cent heart miracles,” Fox sells advertisers’ products and the emotional reward of belonging. The “solution” is to keep watching, buying, and voting for the network’s allies.
Emotional conditioning: As Placenta said of right-wing appeals, “They are in the business of producing childlike minds.” Fox turns adult citizens into loyal customers who consume outrage as entertainment. Its programming rhythm—fear, anger, relief—works like a drug high.
The con and the cause: The essay argued that the ideological and the commercial became indistinguishable. Fox is that principle institutionalized: a news outlet that is also a political action committee, a donor-recruitment arm, and a lifestyle brand.
2. Newsmax: the pure snake-oil heir
Newsmax literally grew out of the direct-mail ecosystem the essay chronicled. Founder Christopher Ruddy built his first lists the same way Richard Viguerie did—targeting conservative donors with sensational claims, then renting those lists to advertisers.
Email grifts and miracle cures: Newsmax’s inbox pitches (“the blood sugar secret Big Pharma won’t tell you”) are indistinguishable from the Placenta examples of placenta-oil and “23-cent heart miracle” ads. The editorial site funnels readers straight into those offers.
Ideology as clickbait: Headlines about “Biden’s dementia” or “globalist tyranny” play the same role that the old UN scare stories did—manufactured urgency that drives traffic and purchases.
Fake empowerment: Just as the essay mocked the promise that a $25 donation could “save civilization,” Newsmax promises viewers that watching its channel makes them part of a heroic resistance. The flattery conceals the extractive purpose: list-building, ad impressions, and product sales.
Financial incentives for unreality: Newsmax’s false election claims, like the “oilfield in the placenta” miracle, were profitable lies. They generated outrage, loyalty, and donations far more efficiently than truth ever could.
3. The shared DNA
Both networks run on the same operating code:
Invent a crisis.
Blame an invisible enemy—liberals, elites, globalists.
Offer emotional or commercial salvation.
That loop was already visible in the 1970s fundraising letters the essay documented. Fox and Newsmax simply replaced postage with broadcast and algorithms.
4. Bottom line
The Placenta essay isn’t just relevant to Fox and Newsmax—it’s prophetic about them. They are the full-scale institutionalization of the con the essay described: politics as perpetual panic, journalism as sales pitch, morality as marketing copy. The oilfield in the placenta became the 24-hour news cycle.
Conservatism Inc’s media machine is Placenta-like because it replicates every structure and tactic that essay exposed—the seamless merger of ideology, money, and manipulation. The placenta metaphor captured a closed system that feeds on its own lifeblood: believers supply cash and loyalty, which nourish the very machine that keeps them anxious and dependent. Modern conservative media industrialized that loop.
1. Built on fear as currency
The Placenta essay described “the alarmist vision of White Protestant Civilization Besieged.” That script is still the central product of Fox, Newsmax, the Daily Wire, talk radio, and the influencer right. They keep followers in a permanent state of emergency—immigration waves, Marxist schools, stolen elections—because fear is the most reliable engagement driver. Without constant peril, the audience wanders off and the money stops flowing.
2. Ideology and commerce fused
In the old direct-mail grift, the fundraising letter and the get-rich-quick ad were the same document. Now, the show, the ad, and the donation pitch are the same segment. Every broadcast, newsletter, or livestream is simultaneously political sermon and sales funnel—gold, supplements, coffee, prepper food, subscription memberships. The medium doesn’t deliver information; it monetizes outrage. That’s exactly the fusion the essay exposed in the 1970s mail-order right.
3. Manufactured childlike dependency
The essay said these operations were “in the business of producing childlike minds.” The current machine infantilizes its base the same way—by supplying simple villains and magical fixes. The world is divided into heroes and monsters; complexity equals betrayal. Followers are kept anxious but grateful, constantly reassured that salvation will come if they just “stay tuned,” donate, and vote the right way.
4. Self-licking ecosystem
Placenta-style conservatism is self-referential: Fox cites Breitbart, which cites Daily Wire, which cites anonymous X accounts, creating a hall of mirrors that feels like independent confirmation. The audience never leaves the womb. As in the essay’s direct-mail networks, every part of the system feeds another part financially and psychologically.
5. Professionalized deceit
The essay called lying a feature, not a bug: proof of belonging to the tribe. Today’s media machine treats fabrication the same way. Outrage stories that later collapse—migrant “caravans,” grooming panics, voter-fraud myths—still serve their purpose by demonstrating loyalty and fueling donations. Truth is irrelevant; conviction is the product.
6. The perpetual upsell
In Placenta, every lie ended with “Send $25.” Now every segment ends with “Subscribe,” “Buy,” or “Vote.” The call-to-action never changes, only the packaging. The conservative media complex turned ideology into a SaaS model—recurring billing via fear.
7. Why the comparison fits
Both systems:
depend on continuous moral panic,
rely on the audience’s distrust of outsiders,
collapse the boundary between belief and purchase,
and convert sincerity into a sales tool.
The result is a politics that isn’t about governing or truth but about sustaining a market for grievance. That’s what makes Conservatism Inc’s media machine so perfectly Placenta-like: it’s not an information system—it’s a parasitic circulatory system that lives off its own host.
The Placenta Machine: A Metabolic Map of Right‑Wing Infotainment
Big picture. Think of the ecosystem as a single organism that must keep its host (the audience) in a steady state of arousal, identity‑certainty, and purchase intent. The placenta is the interface that converts ambient grievance into usable psychological nutrients (belonging, meaning, marching orders). Each outlet plays an organ‑level role in the metabolism.
Organ Roles
Fox News — The Liver (mass filtration & packaging)
Function: Filters diffuse national news into clean, standardized outrage packets: simple villains, rotating scandals, nightly catechism.
Output: “Safe” grievance—broad enough for advertisers, sharp enough to sustain habit.
Dependency mechanism: Predictable rhythms (primetime liturgy) and parasocial anchors supply stability; you “come back tomorrow” for the next detoxifying flush.
Daily Wire — The Pancreas (enzymes of principle)
Function: Secretes “principle‑enzymes” that break complex events into bite‑sized moral talkers: free speech, Western values, masculinity.
Output: Rapid‑acting moral insulin that normalizes blood‑outrage levels when they spike or crash.
Dependency mechanism: If you accept the enzyme kit, every story digests the same way, sparing you cognitive effort while reinforcing brand‑loyal identity.
Newsmax — The Adrenal Glands (surge & spike)
Function: Delivers intermittent cortisol bursts—sharper claims, closer proximity to movement actors, higher decibel.
Output: Spiky, high‑variance content that feels more “real” when Fox seems compromised.
Dependency mechanism: Variable reward schedule (some nights nothing, some nights “bombshell”) deepens checking behavior.
Talk Radio (e.g., local & national syndication) — The Heart (circulation)
Function: Pumps the same metabolites through every county; callers provide micro‑immunology (vernacular frames, lived examples).
Output: Repetition with community texture; the beat you move to while driving or working.
Dependency mechanism: Daily cadence + participatory loops harden habit into lifestyle.
Influencer Pods/Streams — The Microbiome (edge fermentation)
Function: Ferments unprocessed takes (rumors, fringe theory, “spicy” clips) into novel flavors later pasteurized by bigger organs.
Output: Innovation on the margins; occasional toxins; occasional breakthrough narratives.
Dependency mechanism: FOMO and novelty: if you don’t sip here, you’ll be “late” when Fox finally plates it.
Metabolic Cycle (Outrage → Order → Offering)
Intake (trigger): Video/clip/event enters via microbiome/influencers.
Enzymatic breakdown (principle kit): Daily Wire‑style frames convert it into universal morals (“free speech,” “family,” “border,” “elites”).
Filtration & packaging (Fox): Polished segments align the day’s macros; villains and heroes labeled; risk removed.
Circulation (radio): The line is repeated, localized, ritualized; callers metabolize into talker points.
Adrenal spikes (Newsmax): Periodic surges prevent tolerance, renewing urgency.
Excretion/Retention: Inconvenient facts are expelled; sticky narratives retained as fat reserves (evergreen talking points).
Merch & Mobilization: Supplements, films, memberships, newsletters, political donations—calories that feed the organism and bind the host.
Recycling Loops (How the Placenta Sustains Dependence)
Affect Loop: Anxiety → dose of certainty → brief relief → re‑anxiety if you unplug. (Tolerance builds; dose escalates.)
Status Loop: In‑group fluency (knowing today’s talkers) → micro‑status in your circle → fear of falling behind → increased intake.
Moral Loop: “Principles” reduce ambiguity → world feels legible → ambiguity returns in real life → more principles required.
Failure Modes (Signals the System Is Working on You)
Isomorphic stories: Every event decodes into the same 3 morals.
Perma‑escalation: Baseline outrage must rise to be felt at all.
Information anorexia: Disconfirming sources feel nauseating; you “can’t stomach” them.
Fox, Daily Wire, Newsmax: Quick “Placenta Tests”
Does it transmute complexity into moral macros you can recite? (Enzyme success.)
Does it time your emotions to a daily liturgy? (Circulatory capture.)
Does it provide intermittent spikes to prevent tolerance? (Adrenal maintenance.)
Does it route you to purchases/donations/communities that promise to stabilize the feeling? (Nutrient lock‑in.)
Quotable Lines:
“Fox is the liver of Conservatism Inc—detoxifying raw grievance into advertiser‑safe calories.”
“Daily Wire sells the enzyme kit: sprinkle ‘principles’ on anything and it digests into the same moral macros.”
“Newsmax is the adrenal cortex—periodic cortisol hits to keep the host from dozing off.”
“Talk radio is the heartbeat; influencers are the gut flora—together they ferment outrage into dependency.”
“The ecosystem’s placenta doesn’t deliver truth; it delivers nutrients for identity.”
Why this framing helps
Diagnostic: Lets you ask “what organ is acting here?” instead of “is this true?”—useful when truth claims are noisy but metabolic effects are clear.
Actionable: You can disrupt a loop by changing organ exposure (e.g., skip adrenal feeds for a week, add contradicting microbiome, rewrite your enzyme kit).
Portable: Applies to other ecosystems (celebrity gossip, wellness, finance‑doom) with organ swaps.
