Matt Walsh (political commentator)
Matt Walsh | |
---|---|
Born | United States | June 18, 1986
Occupations |
|
Years active | 2010–present |
Employer | The Daily Wire |
Known for | Opposition to LGBT community, anti-transgender commentary, conservative views |
Notable work | |
Movement | American conservatism, 2020s anti-LGBT movement in the United States |
Spouse |
Alissa Ann Linnemann
(m. 2011) |
Children | 6 |
YouTube information | |
Channel | |
Years active | 2012–present |
Genre | Political commentary |
Subscribers | 3 million[1] |
Total views | 1.02 billion[1] |
Last updated: Sept 22, 2024 |
This article is part of a series on |
Conservatism in the United States |
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Matt Walsh (born June 18, 1986)[2][3] is an American conservative political commentator and podcast host. He is the host of The Matt Walsh Show podcast and is a personality with the American conservative website The Daily Wire. He has authored four books and starred in The Daily Wire documentary films What Is a Woman? and Am I Racist?
In 2010, Walsh began his career as a talk radio host for two stations in Delaware, before moving to Kentucky and launching his own website in 2012.[4] He left WLAP in Kentucky when his show was cancelled in December 2013 and joined Blaze Media in 2014.[5] He joined The Daily Wire in 2017, and began hosting The Matt Walsh Show in 2018.[6] Walsh has appeared on several nationally syndicated publications and talk shows.[7][8]
Walsh opposes transgender rights and has campaigned in opposition to groups providing or encouraging transgender health care, particularly for minors.[9][10][11][12] In 2022, Walsh released Johnny the Walrus, a children's book in which he compared being transgender to pretending to be a walrus,[13] and What Is a Woman?, a documentary film about gender identity in the United States.[14] Walsh has campaigned against several hospitals, comparing the transgender healthcare they provide to child sexual abuse, genital mutilation, and rape.[15][16]
Career
Walsh began his career as a talk radio co-host of The Matt and Crank Program at WZBH 93.5 FM in Georgetown, Delaware, from early 2010 to August 1, 2011. He then moved to Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, with WGMD 92.7 FM later that month, where he worked for less than a year.[4][17] In 2012, he moved to Lexington, Kentucky, joining NewsRadio 630 WLAP[citation needed] and launching a website, The Matt Walsh Blog, in which he discussed various issues from a conservative point of view.[5] Walsh announced in December 2013 that he was "leaving radio forever" to focus on blogging after his show was canceled.[4][5]
Walsh began working for conservative media outlet Blaze Media starting in October 2014.[18] He was also a contributor to HuffPost[19] and began writing for The Daily Wire in October 2017.[20] He has appeared on Tucker Carlson Tonight,[7][21] The Ingraham Angle,[22] Fox and Friends,[23][24] Dr. Phil,[8] as well as the podcast The Joe Rogan Experience.[25]
Walsh hosted The Matt Walsh Show on YouTube starting in April 2018 on weekdays; it is an hour in length.[6] According to Walsh, the show made $100,000 per month through advertisement revenue. Walsh announced in April 2023 that the show was being moved to the Daily Wire website after his YouTube channel was demonetized for repeatedly misgendering transgender woman Dylan Mulvaney.[26]
Walsh's work has been supported by J. K. Rowling,[27] Elon Musk,[28][29] and some Republican legislators.[30][31] Rowling argued that Walsh's work "exposed" the "incoherence of gender identity."[32]
In 2023, Walsh starred in a Daily Wire comedy film, Lady Ballers, which debuted on December 1, 2023. He portrayed the character of Kris Dilby, a "woke" beatnik.[33]
Johnny the Walrus
On March 29, 2022, DW Books published Walsh's children's book Johnny the Walrus, which compares being trans to identifying as a walrus.[13]
Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson called the book "hilarious".[34] Conservative news website TheBlaze called the book "an effort to push back against radical gender ideology which defies biological reality".[35] The satirist Andrew Doyle, writing in UnHerd, praised the book for mocking the "indoctrination of the young".[36] LGBTQ Nation denounced the book, calling it "anti-transgender" and a mockery of transgender youth, while PinkNews referred to it as "hateful" and "transphobic".[34][35] It was listed as the bestselling LGBT+-related book on Amazon in December 2021 before Amazon recategorized it to Political and Social Commentary. Walsh called the recategorization "an unconscionable attack on gay rights and a horrific example of homophobia and gay erasure". Target removed the book from its online bookstore on the same day.[37]
What Is a Woman?
Walsh's online documentary, What Is a Woman? was released by The Daily Wire on June 1, 2022, at the start of Pride Month. In the film, Walsh asks various people the question, "What is a woman?" while presenting his own views on the topic.[44] Walsh had asked the same question in other appearances, including a Dr. Phil show on January 19, 2022, with transgender and non-binary people.[45][46] On June 14, Walsh published a book based on the documentary, entitled What Is a Woman?: One Man's Journey to Answer the Question of a Generation through DW Books.[47]
The documentary received a divided reception from critics and political commentators. Detractors, such as AJ Erkert of Science-Based Medicine and Erin Rook of LGBTQ Nation, denounced the film as "propaganda", "transphobic lies", and "science denying". Erkert compared the documentary to the antiscience films Vaxxed and Expelled.[48][better source needed][43] Conservative commentators, such as Rich Lowry and Rod Dreher, praised the film as "mesmerizing" and "excellent".[49][50] Dimitrije Vojnov of Radio Television of Serbia said that Walsh could become the American right's equivalent of Michael Moore, and just as biased.[51]
Eventbrite banned screenings of the documentary due to the service not permitting content that promotes "hate, violence, or harassment towards others and/or oneself". Walsh denied that the documentary was hate speech and accused Eventbrite of hypocrisy for permitting the screening of drag shows that allow children in attendance, which Walsh considers a form of grooming.[52]
In February 2022, Eli Erlick, a transgender activist, alleged that Walsh had invited dozens of people to participate in the documentary under false pretenses.[53][54] Kataluna Enriquez, Fallon Fox, and other transgender public figures corroborated the account. Walsh created a group called the Gender Unity Project, which the activists said attempted to lure them into participating in the film.[54][55] The Gender Unity Project's Twitter account and website[56] were taken down shortly after the allegations went public.[57] Erlick claimed there were at least 50 other recruited interviewees, including a 14-year-old transgender girl.[57][58][59]
Walsh's What Is a Woman? college tour attracted protests of his appearances for screenings at University of Houston and the University of Wisconsin.[60][61][62][63]
For June Pride Month of 2023, The Daily Wire made What is a Woman? available for free on Twitter. The Daily Wire CEO Jeremy Boreing tweeted that Twitter had canceled a plan to promote the video for "hateful conduct," reportedly because of misgendering, and said the video was being suppressed. Twitter CEO Elon Musk initially agreed to lift only some restrictions, but after pressure removed all restrictions and personally promoted the video.[64][65] Chiefs of Twitter's trust and safety division left the company on the same day.[64] The film's tally on Twitter showed more than 62 million views (previously known as impressions[66]) as of the afternoon of June 2 and 177 million for the week.[64][67] Walsh called Musk's promotion of the film a "huge win".[65]
Am I Racist?
Walsh starred in, co-wrote, and co-produced the documentary film Am I Racist?, which was released on September 13, 2024.
Views
Walsh's views have mainly been described as right-wing[68][69][70][71][72] and conservative,[60][73][74][75] but also as far-right.[76][77][78] His commentary is sometimes described by media outlets as trolling or provocation.[79][80][81][39] He labels himself a "theocratic fascist" in his Twitter biography,[82][83] which he said was an ironic response to an opponent using the label as an insult.[84]
Walsh has argued that the trial of Kenosha unrest shooter Kyle Rittenhouse, who was acquitted, was malicious prosecution.[85] He has argued for banning pornography and supports restricting abortion.[86] Walsh has argued that ozone depletion and acid rain were never serious problems, in tweets that Ars Technica described as "willfully ignoring some very well-documented history".[87]
Regarding the casting of Halle Bailey in the 2023 live-action version of The Little Mermaid, Walsh said on The Daily Wire, "from a scientific perspective, it doesn't make a lot of sense to have someone with darker skin who lives deep in the ocean," and suggested that the mermaid should be translucent instead. Walsh's commentary was mocked on CNN by digital senior entertainment writer Lisa France, who said "racism is real, unfortunately, and people get so offended".[88] Later, Walsh said that "Translucent rights are human rights".[89] He jokingly called anime "satanic" in an answer to viewers' questions in one of his videos, adding "I have no argument for why it's satanic. It just seems that way to me."[90][91] He has called multiculturalism a "failed experiment".[92][third-party source needed].
Cannabis
Walsh believes that cannabis should not be legal. He believes that it is more dangerous than alcohol and tobacco, and that it causes violence.[93][94][95]
LGBT issues
Walsh is an opponent of the LGBT rights movement and the LGBT community, in particular the transgender rights movement and the idea of being transgender in general.[13][96]
In February 2021, after a Gallup poll showed a sharp increase of people who identify as LGBT, especially bisexual and transgender, in Generation Z compared to previous generations, Walsh accused "the media, Hollywood, and the school system" of "recruiting" children into the LGBT community. Other commentators quoted by PinkNews argued that Walsh was wrong, attributing the increase to different factors, including an easing of social stigmas among younger people.[97]
Shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022, Walsh accused President Joe Biden of feminizing the U.S. military and recruiting lesbians who he said "can't do three pushups", and said that it was "not a coincidence that [Russia's invasion] happened after Biden spent his first year in office focusing primarily on wokeness".[98]
The New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg argued that Walsh's commentary, as well as that of other right-wing commentators, have caused an increase of anti-LGBT violence and sentiment in the United States.[99] The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) described Walsh as one of the "peddlers of fear and disinformation about LGBTQ people" in the wake of the Club Q mass shooting in November 2022.[100] Walsh had previously said opposing all-age drag events was like fighting cancer,[76] and "just like cancer, stopping it is not a gentle or a painless process".[99][101] Following the shooting, Walsh lambasted critics of his rhetoric as "soulless demons" and "evil to the core", accusing them of using the shooting to "blackmail us into accepting the castration and sexualization of children".[102][103] He also rhetorically asked those on the left who felt that "the drag queen-child combination" would lead to "violent backlash" from right-wingers, "if it's causing this much chaos and violence, why do you insist on continuing to do it?"[104][105] Jeet Heer from The Nation described Walsh's comments, along with those of a few other right-wing figures, as "implicitly a threat," saying, "The right is trying to create a new lynching culture, with LGBTQ people as the target."[105]
In April 2023, Walsh defended Uganda's anti-homosexuality bill, arguing that LGBTQ rights in Africa were a form of neocolonialism. The bill would enforce life in prison for anybody identifying as gay or bisexual. Walsh argued that opponents to the bill "don't think that Uganda has any particular right to govern itself and have its own culture and its own way of life."[106]
Sick leave
Walsh stated that "...especially with younger people, but you shouldn't be using sick days", saying that, "With [only] rare exceptions, taking a sick day as an adult should be pretty embarrassing for you, calling your boss and saying 'sorry, I can't come in today, my tummy hurts' is humiliating". Citing that he himself has "used sick days maybe twice in seven years and in both of those cases because I had lost my voice and I couldn't speak. You can't blame me for that - it's impossible to do a podcast when you can't speak."[107][108]
Transgender issues
Walsh has repeatedly opposed the transgender community[13] and "gender ideology",[109] notably with his children's book Johnny the Walrus,[13] his documentary What Is a Woman?,[54] and campaigns involving hospitals and schools.[9][110] Walsh and his campaigns are sometimes described as anti-trans and transphobic.[68][59][43][60] Progressive magazine The New Republic named Walsh "Transphobe of the Year" in 2022, saying he "has made a name for himself by demonizing medical professionals and pushing conspiracy theories about 'grooming' and pedophilia in the LGBTQ community".[68] Walsh has referred to being transgender as a "delusion" and a "mental illness".[63] He has also argued that transgender people cannot "defend the logic of trans ideology" and that they have "embarked on a campaign to restructure all of human society".[109] Walsh argues that biological sex is what determines if someone is a man or a woman.[109] He has said that "I truly see the fight against gender ideology as the last stand for Western civilization ... Because if the sane side loses this, it's over."[109]
Walsh has compared giving hormone treatments and gender-affirming surgery for transgender youth to "being sexually violated in a way that is just as depraved or damaging as molestation or rape". In May 2021, Walsh called doctors who perform gender-affirming surgeries for transgender youth "Nazi scientist-evil", "pedophiles", and "plastic surgeons basically acting like Leatherface from The Texas Chain Saw Massacre".[15][13] Walsh's views are in opposition to the stance of leading American medical groups, which have established guidelines to treat transgender youth; those groups and some research say that denying such care can lead to higher rates of suicide and other mental health issues.[9][72] He has also referred to these surgeries as "castration".[109]
Walsh rented an apartment in Virginia for one day in 2021 to qualify to speak out against the Loudoun County School Board for allowing transgender students the use of restrooms matching their gender identity.[110] During his speech, which he later featured in his film What Is a Woman?, Walsh said: "You are all child abusers. You prey upon impressionable children and indoctrinate them into your insane ideological cult, a cult which holds many fanatical views but none so deranged as the idea that boys are girls and girls are boys."[43]
In January 2022, Twitter suspended Walsh's account for 12 hours for tweets it deemed as hateful content against transgender people.[111][better source needed] In October 2022, Walsh encouraged his followers to misgender transgender people, writing that "we have made huge strides against the trans agenda", and that the acquisition of Twitter by Elon Musk, which he called "the liberation of Twitter", will allow them to "ramp up our efforts even more".[73]
In November 2022, Walsh was challenged as a guest on the podcast The Joe Rogan Experience for suggesting that "maybe millions of kids" had been put onto puberty blockers. Producer Jamie Vernon interjected and stated that only 4,780 children had been put on puberty blockers within the past five years. Walsh lowered his guess to "hundreds of thousands" and said he "could be wrong", adding, "who are you gonna trust when they're telling you the numbers?"[25]
Campaign against Eli Erlick
In August 2022, Walsh accused transgender activist Eli Erlick of being a "confessed drug dealer" targeting children because of a deleted Instagram post in which she proposed sending surplus hormone therapy prescriptions—including hundreds of doses of testosterone, estradiol, and spironolactone—to transgender youth for free within states attempting to criminalize transgender healthcare for minors. Walsh reported her to the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she was a PhD candidate. When the university did not respond to Walsh's report within a day, he said it was "time to escalate" and shared the contact information of various leaders of the university, while threatening to further escalate to the Board of Trustees, the university's donors, and to organize a protest on campus if the university continued to not respond.[112][10] The university said it "strongly supports transgender members of our community" and "takes allegations of illegal activity seriously, harassment included". Some conservative commentators reported Erlick to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.[10] Erlick claimed to never face investigation.[113][third-party source needed]
Following Walsh's statements Erlick reported harassment on social media, including messages with anti-LGBT slurs and threats of physical violence. Erlick accused Walsh of "profiting from the moral panic over transness", "attacking free speech itself", and stochastic terrorism, which is incitement of violence against a target through mass media with plausible deniability. Walsh denied that his actions constituted stochastic terrorism and argued that sharing public contact information is not harassment.[10]
Campaigns against hospitals providing transgender health care
In 2022, Walsh campaigned against hospitals providing transgender health care for youth.[9][114] Boston Children's Hospital, one of the hospitals denounced by Walsh and other right-wing figures, reported harassment, death threats, and a hoax bomb threat in August 2022 that led to a woman's arrest in September.[9][72][115]
In September 2022, Walsh made accusations against another hospital, Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC), and its transgender clinic in Nashville, Tennessee.[16][9] Walsh said on his show that VUMC doctors "castrate" and "drug and mutilate" children.[116] He said on Twitter that VUMC considered transgender health care a "money-maker", that it threatened "consequences" for medical staff who declined to provide care, and that it tried to "enforce compliance" from hesitant parents of transgender youth.[9][16] Walsh criticized VUMC's "trans buddies" program and called its patient advocates "trans activists".[117] The New Republic described the accusations by Walsh as "cherry-picking informational content" and noted that Walsh had singled out doctors by name.[114] Tennessee Governor Bill Lee and other Republicans in the state called for an investigation into the hospital.[16][117] Walsh tweeted about meeting with Tennessee lawmakers on a bill to shut down the clinic.[114] VUMC reported harassment and threats against its staff, and there were calls for murders and arrests of VUMC doctors in far-right groups on Reddit and 4chan.[9] Vanderbilt took down its webpage about the clinic and said that Walsh had "misrepresent[ed] facts about the care" it provides.[9] On October 7, 2022, VUMC announced that it would pause gender-affirming surgeries for minors and review its practices.[118] Since 2018, VUMC provided an average of five such surgeries to minors annually. All patients were over 16-years-old and obtained parental consent. None have received genital surgery.[118]
Walsh spoke at a Nashville rally organized by The Daily Wire called "The Rally to End Child Mutilation" on October 21, 2022, in opposition to transgender health care for minors. The rally, whose headline speakers included Tennessee Republican state senator Jack Johnson and representative William Lamberth, senator Marsha Blackburn, and former congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, drew between 1,500 and 3,000 people, including supporters and protesters.[31][11]
Politicians
After South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem permitted businesses to require a COVID-19 vaccine for their employees, Walsh criticized her by writing that she was only considered a frontrunner for the 2024 United States presidential election because of her physical attractiveness.[69] After Noem called his comment misogynistic, Walsh said he had no regrets but would "accept apologies from all of the performative idiots pretending to be offended by it".[119][better source needed]
When U.S. representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tweeted photos of her grandmother's house in Puerto Rico that was unrepaired in 2021, four years after Hurricane Maria, and blamed former President Donald Trump for not doing enough to help the recovery, Walsh criticized Ocasio-Cortez for not providing the money herself. He launched a crowdfunding effort to pay for the repairs and raised $100,000 in the first 24 hours, reaching the set goal of $48,990, but the grandmother refused the funds and GoFundMe shut the effort down after raising $104,000, with all of the money being returned to the donors. Ocasio-Cortez responded to the criticism by saying, "My abuela (Spanish: "grandmother") is okay ... but instead of only caring for mine & letting others suffer, I'm calling attention to the systemic injustices you seem totally fine [with] in having a US colony."[120]
Walsh criticized Donald Trump in November 2022 for nicknaming Republican Florida governor Ron DeSantis "Ron DeSanctimonious" ahead of the November 2022 midterm elections.[121]
Catholic Church event cancellations
St. Francis Xavier College Church, at Saint Louis University, canceled a speech by Walsh that it had planned to co-host with Young Americans for Freedom in December 2021. The church said it had decided that Walsh's "provocative positions on immigration, on communities of color, on Muslims, and on members of the LGBTQ community" were "in contradiction to Jesus' great commandment to love God and love our neighbor".[122][123] Walsh subsequently spoke at a different St. Louis venue.[124]
In 2023, the University of San Diego, a private Catholic educational institution, refused Walsh permission to speak on campus, for the reason that they regarded his opinions as "Grossly Offensive".[125]
Personal life
Walsh is a practicing Catholic,[126] and lives in Nashville, Tennessee.[127] He is married to Alissa Ann Walsh (née Linnemann),[128] whom he met on eHarmony.[129] They have six children, including two sets of twins.[130][131]
Books
- The Unholy Trinity: Blocking the Left's Assault on Life, Marriage, and Gender. New York: Crown Publishing Group (2017). ISBN 978-0-45149505-1, 0-45149505-5.
- Church of Cowards: A Wake-Up Call to Complacent Christians. Washington, DC: Regnery Gateway (2020). ISBN 978-1-62157920-5. OCLC 1141857412.
- Johnny the Walrus. Illustrations by K. Reece. Nashville, TN: DW Books (2022). ISBN 978-1-95600705-3, 1-95600704-0.
- What Is a Woman?: One Man's Journey to Answer the Question of a Generation. Nashville, TN: DW Books (2022). ISBN 978-1-95600700-8. OCLC 1322213918.
Filmography
Year | Title | Type | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | What is a Woman? | Documentary | Himself | |
2023 | Lady Ballers | Film | Kris Dilby/Himself | |
2024 | Am I Racist? | Documentary | Himself |
See also
- Anti-gender movement
- Conservatism in the United States
- Transgender rights in the United States
- Transphobia in the United States § Transphobia in US culture
References
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{{cite web}}
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- ^ Villarreal, Daniel (September 9, 2022). "Anti-trans troll Matt Walsh is upset that Eventbrite won't allow screenings of his film". LGBTQ Nation. Retrieved September 30, 2022.
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- ^ a b Mendez II, Moises (June 10, 2022). "Why Are Social Media Companies Taking Ad Money From a Right-Wing Transphobic Doc?". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on July 2, 2022. Retrieved June 10, 2022.
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- ^ a b Parsons, Vic (February 10, 2022). "Anti-trans troll Matt Walsh 'tried to trick trans people into fake documentary'". Pink News. Archived from the original on June 22, 2022. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
- ^ a b c Ketterer, Samantha (October 13, 2022). "Hundreds of transgender rights allies protest Matt Walsh's 'What is a Woman?' speech at UH". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved October 19, 2022.
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- ^ a b Hansford, Amelia (October 31, 2022). "Student eats Bible pages to protest anti-trans bigot Matt Walsh's campus visit". PinkNews. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
- ^ a b c Tolentino, Daysia; Ingram, David (June 2, 2023). "Elon Musk's response to anti-trans video sparked day of chaos at Twitter". NBC News. Retrieved June 3, 2023.
- ^ a b Woodward, Alex (June 5, 2023). "'Elon Musk promotes transphobic content as hate speech surges on his far-right platform". The Independent. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
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- ^ a b c Olivier, Indigo (December 27, 2022). "Transphobe of the Year: Matt Walsh". The New Republic. Archived from the original on December 28, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
- ^ a b Darcy, Oliver (August 26, 2021). "Kristi Noem slams right-wing media personality Matt Walsh for 'horrible misogyny'". CNN. Archived from the original on November 15, 2021. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
- ^ "Fact Check-No evidence that U.S. schoolchildren are self-identifying as animals and disrupting classrooms". Reuters. July 6, 2022. Archived from the original on July 23, 2022. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
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- ^ a b c Woodward, Alex (August 31, 2022). "Police clear bomb threat to Boston Children's Hospital after far-right harassment". The Independent. Retrieved October 1, 2022.
- ^ a b Lavietes, Matt (October 31, 2022). "Far-right figures appear to be testing Twitter's boundaries for anti-LGBTQ speech". NBC News. Retrieved November 8, 2022.
- ^ "Social media posts spark calls to investigate Tenn.'s VUMC". Washington Post. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ Giles, Christopher; Robinson, Olga; Sardarizadeh, Shayan (November 6, 2020). "US election 2020: How a misleading post went from the fringes to Trump's Twitter". BBC News. Retrieved October 1, 2022.
- ^ a b Carless, Will. "Club Q attack no surprise for extremism experts who saw looming threat, decades-old pattern". USA Today. Retrieved November 30, 2022.
- ^ "Killing over Pride flag follows far right's years of criticism of the LGBTQ symbol". NBC News. August 24, 2023. Retrieved October 31, 2023.
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It does say in my Twitter bio that I'm a theocratic fascist, well because a few months ago someone sent me a message, trying to insult me, and the message said: 'hey, y'know, you should put theocratic fascist in your Twitter bio because that's what you are.'
- ^ Waldman, Paul (November 10, 2021). "Opinion | Kyle Rittenhouse's story is a tragedy. The right thinks it's a triumph". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on November 11, 2021. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
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- ^ "CNN's Reporter calls out Matt Walsh's Little Mermaid Point". The Wrap. September 15, 2022. Retrieved September 17, 2022.
- ^ "MATT WALSH'S LITTLE MERMAID QUIP IS A FINE KETTLE OF FISH AS TWITTER CHIPS IN". HITC. September 15, 2022. Archived from the original on September 15, 2022. Retrieved September 17, 2022.
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- ^ Walsh, Matt (November 16, 2023). "Here's What You Don't Know About Marijuana". YouTube. Retrieved March 29, 2024.
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- ^ a b Goldberg, Michelle (November 21, 2022). "Opinion | The Massacre at Club Q Was Only a Matter of Time". New York Times. Archived from the original on November 22, 2022. Retrieved November 22, 2022.
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- ^ Astor, Maggie (December 10, 2022). "Transgender Americans Feel Under Siege as Political Vitriol Rises". The New York Times.
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- ^ a b Heer, Jeet (November 28, 2022). "The Club Q Massacre and the New Culture of Lynching". The Nation. Retrieved November 30, 2022.
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- ^ @MattWalshBlog (January 14, 2023). "Kids number 5 and 6 were born last night" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
External links
- 1986 births
- Living people
- 21st-century American male writers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- 21st-century Roman Catholics
- 2020s anti-LGBTQ movement in the United States
- American anti-abortion activists
- American anti-communists
- American anti-same-sex-marriage activists
- American children's writers
- American columnists
- American male non-fiction writers
- American nationalists
- American people of Irish descent
- American political commentators
- American political podcasters
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- American YouTubers
- Catholics from Tennessee
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- Critics of multiculturalism
- The Daily Wire people
- Far-right politics in the United States
- Internet trolls
- Male critics of feminism
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- YouTubers from Tennessee