American Reich: Eric Lichtblau on Murder, Neo-Nazis, & the New Age of Hate
JAN 9, 202656 MIN
American Reich: Eric Lichtblau on Murder, Neo-Nazis, & the New Age of Hate
JAN 9, 202656 MIN
Description
Writer’s Voice: compelling conversations with authors who challenge, inspire, and inform.
Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Eric Lichtblau joins Writer’s Voice to discuss his new book, American Reich, a gripping investigation that begins with the murder of Blaze Bernstein in Orange County and expands into a sweeping analysis of white nationalism in 21st-century America.
“We’ve seen an enormous surge in hate crimes across the board… and this is horribly symptomatic of the rise of the neo-Nazis in the 21st century.” — Eric Lichtblau
Lichtblau traces how online extremism, political normalization of hate, and leaderless neo-Nazi networks have collided to shape a dangerous new era—one that has produced waves of hate crimes, radicalized young white men, and emboldened supremacist movements.
Lichtblau also explores the role of Trump-era politics, the mechanics of recruitment and radicalization — and what gives him hope for resistance and solidarity.
We also re-air a clip from our 2017 interview with photojournalist Zach Roberts about his viral photos of the brutal beating of De’Andre Harris by white supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia during the Unite the Right rally on August 12 of that year.
Follow us on Bluesky @writersvoice.bsky.social and subscribe to our Substack. Or find us on Instagram @WritersVoicePodcast.
Key Words: American Reich, Eric Lichtblau, Writer’s Voice podcastwhite supremacy, neo-Nazis, hate crimes, online extremismreplacement theory, Trump white nationalism
You Might Also Like: Zach Roberts on Charlottesville attack, Michael German on POLICING WHITE SUPREMACY
Subscribe (free or paid) for Substack transcripts
Key Topics
The murder of Blaze Bernstein as a window into national extremism
How Trump-era rhetoric normalized white supremacist ideology
Historical cycles of xenophobia and racism in America
Online radicalization & social platforms as recruitment engines
Atomwaffen Division, James Mason, and leaderless resistance
Replacement theory explained
Why young white men become targets for recruitment
The reality of modern hate-crime statistics
Community resistance and hope