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Capitalism is Now Anti-Christian According to Tucker Carlson

Capitalism is Now Anti-Christian According to Tucker Carlson
AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

We know former Fox News host and former conservative Tucker Carlson has been going down an interesting political path, to say the least, over the last couple of years, but in one of his latest interviews, the truth of his goals is revealed, and it's something conservatives must watch out for.

In his latest interview with Nathan Apffel, a documentary filmmaker, best known for his investigative work on the seven-part docuseries "The Religion Business," where he investigates the financial practices, lack of transparency, and accountability within American megachurches and the nonprofit religious sector.

However, during the interview, Apffel argued that Christianity at its core is anti-capitalist, as Carlson nodded along fervently.

"Capitalism should not be anywhere near Christianity," Apffel said.

"You think?" Carlson replied with a smirk. 

"Christianity is more, and I don't like the word socialist with the weight it carries, but Christianity is socialism at its core," Apffel continued. "It's the marker to build social capital. You look at that early Church of Acts, and it transformed Rome within a couple hundred years, the greatest superpower of its time, to where Constantine was like: I'm a Christian hanging out with these dudes. They had no money, they had no buildings, but somehow the love of their neighbor transformed the greatest superpower of its time. That's dangerous."

This is a tired trope most religious conservatives are reluctant to embrace, but it underscores something deeper about what Carlson is attempting to build: a new political coalition that blends social conservatism with progressive economics. 

We saw this as early as November 2025, when Carlson praised Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro for being socially conservative, despite his socialist policies and human rights abuses. What we’re witnessing is a real-time blurring of the traditional left-right divide.

It’s a dangerous possible coalition, as it risks redefining what it means to be a conservative, even though the president has publicly declared Carlson apart from MAGA. 

That distinction, however, doesn’t change the threat.

Modern conservatism emerged after World War II in direct opposition to communism, socialism, and centralized planning. These roots are crucial: they not only affirm a preference for free markets, but also reflect a belief in human agency, the freedom of each individual to act according to their own judgment. Carlson’s vision of conservatism undermines that entirely, trading it for authoritarianism and the imposition of beliefs on the populace in the name of Christianity. This is not only a distortion of what it means to be a Christian, but also a threat to the Democratic-Republic, which even Carlson’s guest acknowledged as the greatest experiment on Earth. 

The risk extends to younger conservatives, many of whom claim to favor capitalism over socialism, but not in the traditional sense. Instead, their focus is often on culture-war issues, nationalism, and protectionism, leaving economic principles as a secondary concern, easily questioned in an age of sensationalism. Unfortunately for us, the wisdom of the young will soon lead the country, not the wisdom of those who lived to see communism fall.

This, combined with the progressive leanings of their peers, creates a dangerous dichotomy: conservatism risks losing its philosophical core, leaving us with two political movements bent on imposing their will, precisely what the founders sought to prevent.

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