Illustration showing John Zmirak critiquing Tucker Carlson's view on Dietrich Bonhoeffer, with Christian and historical elements in a dramatic study setting.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

John Zmirak rebukes Tucker Carlson’s take on Dietrich Bonhoeffer

AI에 의해 생성된 이미지
사실 확인됨

Tucker Carlson recently suggested that Dietrich Bonhoeffer set aside Christian ethics to support killing Adolf Hitler — a claim that commentator John Zmirak calls a misreading of both Bonhoeffer and Christian teaching. Zmirak argues Bonhoeffer’s resistance fits within the Christian just war tradition and warns against equating that context with today’s political rhetoric.

Tucker Carlson’s latest show drew sharp criticism after he said that when people are labeled “Nazis,” “we really have no choice but to start shooting them,” invoking Dietrich Bonhoeffer as someone who, in Carlson’s words, concluded that “Christianity is not enough, we have to kill the guy.” Multiple outlets transcribed the remarks from his episode criticizing commentators Mark Levin and Ben Shapiro.

Writing in The Daily Wire, John Zmirak argues Carlson mischaracterized both Bonhoeffer and Christianity. He contends historic Christian thought is not strictly pacifist and that Bonhoeffer’s resistance to the Nazi dictatorship aligns with the just war tradition rather than a rejection of faith.

What Bonhoeffer did — and did not — do is well documented. He was a Lutheran pastor tied to the Confessing Church, joined circles of German resistance, was linked to plots against Hitler (including the July 20, 1944 conspiracy), and was executed by hanging at Flossenbürg on April 9, 1945. Biographies and major reference works describe him as aware of and morally supportive of efforts to remove Hitler, without evidence he personally attempted an assassination.

Zmirak frames his case inside mainstream just war teaching, long articulated in Christian theology and summarized in the Catholic Catechism: force may be used only under strict conditions — grave and certain harm by an aggressor, exhaustion of other means, serious prospects of success, and that force not create greater evils. He also notes that Reformation‑era resistance theorists in both Jesuit and Calvinist traditions developed arguments for opposing tyrants; scholars often cite Juan de Mariana among Jesuits and the Huguenot tract Vindiciae contra tyrannos among Reformed writers as emblematic of that line of thought. Those strands helped inform later debates over justified rebellion, distinct from violence in constitutional democracies.

To contextualize Bonhoeffer’s choices, Zmirak contrasts Nazi rule with present‑day politics. The historical record shows the regime seized extraordinary powers during crisis, suspended civil liberties after the Reichstag Fire (February 1933), enabled rule by decree (the Enabling Act, March 1933), outlawed opposition parties (July 1933), and stripped Jews of citizenship under the Nuremberg Laws (1935). The dictatorship built a vast system of camps and pursued conquest and extermination in Eastern Europe; scholars describe Generalplan Ost and related policies as envisioning the removal and mass death of tens of millions through starvation, deportation, enslavement, and murder. Against that backdrop, Bonhoeffer and fellow conspirators believed tyrannicide in wartime could be morally defensible.

Zmirak also cautions against casually branding opponents “Nazis” or “fascists” today. He points to recent online exchanges in which California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s press office labeled White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller a “fascist.” Separately, reporting this fall detailed incidents in which an activist posted flyers in Miller’s Virginia neighborhood listing his home address — a doxxing case now at the center of a legal dispute. Those episodes, Zmirak argues, illustrate how incendiary language can escalate tensions, though the doxxing itself arose from a separate activist campaign, not from the governor’s post.

Zmirak closes by recommending Eric Metaxas’s biography of Bonhoeffer and a recent biopic as entry points for readers. Regardless of one’s view of those works, the core historical points are not in dispute: Bonhoeffer resisted a murderous dictatorship, wrestled deeply with Christian ethics, and was executed in April 1945 for his role in the resistance.

사람들이 말하는 것

Reactions on X predominantly condemn Tucker Carlson's comments on Dietrich Bonhoeffer as a misinterpretation of Christian ethics and just war doctrine. Users, including prominent figures like Eric Metaxas and Ted Cruz, express shock and defend Bonhoeffer's heroism in resisting Hitler. John Zmirak's rebuttal in the Daily Wire is highlighted as an insightful correction. A minority defend Carlson's point about avoiding casual 'Nazi' accusations to prevent justifying violence. Sentiments range from outrage and support for Bonhoeffer to skeptical defenses of Carlson's broader message.

관련 기사

Tucker Carlson interviewing white nationalist Nick Fuentes, highlighting divisions in the conservative movement over Israel and antisemitism.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Tucker Carlson interview pushes Nick Fuentes into MAGA spotlight, exposing rift over Israel

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지 사실 확인됨

A two-plus-hour interview Tucker Carlson posted on October 27 featuring white nationalist Nick Fuentes drew wide attention online and sharpened divisions on the right over Israel and antisemitism. Carlson apologized to Fuentes for a past slur, offered limited pushback to his rhetoric about Jews, and triggered a cascade of condemnations and defenses across conservative circles.

NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly spoke with domestic extremism correspondent Odette Yousef about how Tucker Carlson’s recent interview with white nationalist and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes is widening divisions on the political right and why those fractures may carry national security implications.

AI에 의해 보고됨 사실 확인됨

Pastor John Hagee, founder and chairman of Christians United for Israel, has sharply criticized antisemitic rhetoric emerging on parts of the American political Right. In an op-ed for the Jewish News Syndicate, highlighted by The Daily Wire, he calls on Bible-believing Christians to place their faith above partisan identity and to stand in unity with the Jewish people.

A new poll reveals that American women are more inclined than men to view political assassinations as justifiable amid rising political violence. Conducted by the Network Contagion Research Institute, the survey highlights surprising gender differences in attitudes toward violence against figures like Donald Trump and Zohran Mamdani. The findings come as the United States grapples with recent high-profile incidents, including the killings of Charlie Kirk and UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

AI에 의해 보고됨 사실 확인됨

Virginia Prodan, an international human rights attorney who fled Communist Romania and resettled in the United States in 1988, is drawing parallels between the religious repression she experienced under Nicolae Ceaușescu and what she views as emerging social and cultural pressures on Christians in America. She cites a 2024 Cato Institute survey indicating widespread concern about the potential loss of freedoms and plans to join a panel on the issue at the Museum of the Bible in December 2025.

On October 25, 2025, faithful and authorities filled the São Paulo Cathedral for an inter-religious act in memory of journalist Vladimir Herzog, killed by the military dictatorship 50 years ago. The event recreated the 1975 ecumenical mass and highlighted resistance against authoritarianism. Participants chanted 'no amnesty' and sang redemocratization anthems.

AI에 의해 보고됨

The Berlin indie-pop band Von Wegen Lisbeth views political statements by musicians as ambivalent. Bassist Julian Hölting stresses that such voices are needed but only reach their own bubble. Singer Matthias Rohde calls for more space to admit ignorance.

 

 

 

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부