Thursday, November 20, 2025

Nalin Haley explains right wing 24-year-olds

@alecbarton28
America First is inevitable.

@fjm1235
Short answer? Because he's right.

@PeterParker-yg6fc
so tired of being held down yet being told i am privileged

@TheBinMan-hj9hu
That’s easy, men don’t like billionaire ‘philanthropists’ socially engineering society to enrich themselves while destroying the middle class.

@Jhop273
Because we're tired of them pissing in our mouth and being told it's raining

@CalebCamarillo-c8g
All the over 50 out of touch millionaires are just scratching their heads trying to figure it out 😂

@realWorsin
Every time I hear a politician say "Israel" I pull up a 2-hour Nick Fuentes rant.

@SmokingRabbit
It's not just young men listening to him. Men of the West are awoken. All the uptalk vocal fry slore tropes and canards have lit the phoenix.

@lardna
BECAUSE HE'S RIGHT. NEXT!

@kathleendalessandrocohen6954
I'm 66. He's telling the truth period.

@dustinwaldron2010
All the “fatigue“ is real and exhausting. Free us from the tiny hats exponential usury and debt slavery.


Nalin Haley, the son of Nikki Haley, is a 24-year-old who has recently gained attention for his political views and activities. He has expressed conservative and MAGA-aligned positions, notably advocating against H-1B visas and calling for restrictions on naturalized U.S. citizens’ eligibility for public office. He has also been known to critique his mother’s political opponents and has publicly spoken about his family’s political involvement.

This interview discusses the internet uproar over Nick Fuentes, emphasizing that beyond the noise, a crucial lesson emerges: many young American men, mostly white, listen to Fuentes intently because they feel excluded and marginalized by contemporary society.

It questions why these young men trust Fuentes over mainstream conservative voices and highlights the societal conditions that alienate them, including perceived systemic discrimination against white men in education and workplaces. The discourse around race and exclusion has fueled resentment, making attacks on Fuentes counterproductive and reinforcing his influence among disaffected youth.

Nalin urges understanding these young men's experiences rather than dismissively labeling them, warning that failure to do so risks fostering division and violence, contradicting America's foundational universal principles of equality and inclusion.