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To Catch a Fascist: The Ethics of Unmasking the Radical Right image

To Catch a Fascist: The Ethics of Unmasking the Radical Right

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An anti-fascist spy handed American officials evidence of murderous intent from a Nazi planning server — and they declined to act.

About the Guest

Christopher Mathias is a journalist covering the far right, formerly a senior reporter at HuffPost, with work appearing in The Guardian, The Nation, MSNBC, Zeteo, and WNYC. His reporting has helped unmask white supremacist cops, soldiers, teachers, and politicians, and he was a Deadline Awards finalist for feature writing. He is originally from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania and lives in New York. His new book, To Catch a Fascist: The Fight to Expose the Radical Right (Atria Books), is out now.


About the Episode
Days after Jonathan Rauch’s influential Atlantic essay announced he’d moved from fascism skeptic to fascism believer, Christopher Mathias joins the show to discuss his new book — a deeply reported investigation into the decentralized network of anti-fascist activists who infiltrate, monitor, and expose neo-Nazis and white supremacists operating in positions of power across America.

The conversation quickly moves beyond whether Trump is a fascist to the harder questions his book raises: Who gets to decide who is exposed? What rights to privacy do members of extremist groups retain? Is unmasking community self-defense or vigilantism? And does the same logic that justifies exposing a neo-Nazi EMT extend to the tens of thousands of ICE agents now conducting raids on American streets?

Timeline

00:00 Introduction
 Jonathan Rauch’s Atlantic essay and the renewed fascism debate

01:10 Meet Christopher Mathias
 Introducing the book and the journalist behind it

01:45 The Greenville Moment
 When Mathias first used “fascist” in a headline after watching Trump whip a crowd into chanting “Send her back”

02:40 Defining the F-Word
 Fascism as a right-wing politics of domination; Langston Hughes recognizing it in the 1930s before the word arrived

04:15 The Hard Question
 If MAGA is a fascist movement, are the 70-plus million who voted for Trump fascists too?

05:55 The Worst of the Worst
 Why the book targets explicit neo-Nazis in positions of power, not ordinary Trump supporters

08:15 Who Decides?
 Privacy, accountability, and whether everyone at Charlottesville deserves exposure

10:45 Antifascist Amnesty
 Leave the movement and we leave you alone; return and we publish

12:30 The Equivalence Trap
 Why Mathias rejects the idea that this is just radicals exposing radicals

14:05 From Neo-Nazis to ICE
 How anti-fascist tactics are now used to identify masked federal agents

17:15 Where Does It End?
 Drawing lines between violent enforcement and bureaucratic participation

19:40 “Just Following Orders”
 Why some orders shouldn’t be followed, and the occupation of Minneapolis

21:30 The Battle Over Shame
 Competing databases, surveillance, and what America should be ashamed of

23:15 The Spy Who Warned Charlottesville
 An infiltrator uncovers plans for violence that officials ignore

26:00 Minneapolis as Model
 “We protect us” and a blueprint for grassroots resistance

28:45 The Underground War
 Intelligence, counterintelligence, and the personal cost of exposure

30:30 Closing
 Fascism as a snake eating its own tail and the urgent task of limiting the damage


Links & References

Mentioned in this episode:

Jonathan Rauch, “Yes, It’s Fascism” — The Atlantic (January 2026)

To

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