Carl Benjamin - The Psychology Behind Why Tommy Robinson & Ethno-Nationalists CLASH episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 18, 2026 · 10 MIN

Carl Benjamin - The Psychology Behind Why Tommy Robinson & Ethno-Nationalists CLASH

from The Daily Heretic · host Andrew Gold

👉 Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for long-form conversations that cut through political tribalism and examine what’s really driving today’s conflicts: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Why do figures often lumped together on the “right” end up in such fierce disagreement — and what does psychology have to do with it? In this episode, Andrew Gold speaks with Carl Benjamin about the internal clashes reshaping right-leaning politics online. Rather than treating these disputes as personality drama, the conversation digs into why movements fracture: identity, belonging, and the psychological need for clear boundaries. Carl breaks down the tension between civic nationalism and ethno-nationalism, arguing that these are not small differences but fundamentally different worldviews. He explains why Tommy Robinson is often misunderstood in this context — and why, despite his reputation, Robinson’s instincts are closer to classical liberalism than to ethnic politics. The discussion explores how support for equal treatment under the law, free expression, and civic belonging can coexist with hard criticism of institutions, without sliding into ethnic exclusion. A central theme is labeling. Carl examines how broad tags flatten nuance, turning disagreement into betrayal and debate into exile. When movements become obsessed with loyalty tests, they often push out voices that don’t fit perfectly — even if those voices share many core values. The result, he suggests, is a cycle of fragmentation that benefits no one except the loudest gatekeepers. The episode also looks at why online politics amplifies conflict. Algorithms reward outrage; audiences reward certainty. Carl argues that psychological incentives — status, belonging, moral clarity — can pull groups toward ever-narrower definitions of who “counts,” making cooperation increasingly difficult. Throughout, Andrew presses on whether provocative rhetoric clarifies or confuses, and whether civic nationalism can survive in a climate dominated by identity-first thinking. The exchange is sharp but analytical, focused on understanding motives rather than scoring points. If you’re trying to make sense of why the “right’s civil war” keeps escalating, why liberals end up branded as enemies, or how psychological dynamics quietly shape political factions, this conversation offers a grounded framework — whether you agree with it or not. 🎧 Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJPUZYNxsSM&t=1717s #CarlBenjamin #TommyRobinson #CivicNationalism #EthnoNationalism #PoliticalPsychology #UKPolitics #CultureWar #TheDailyHeretic Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

👉 Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for long-form conversations that cut through political tribalism and examine what’s really driving today’s conflicts: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Why do figures often lumped together on the “right” end up in such fierce disagreement — and what does psychology have to do with it? In this episode, Andrew Gold speaks with Carl Benjamin about the internal clashes reshaping right-leaning politics online. Rather than treating these disputes as personality drama, the conversation digs into why movements fracture: identity, belonging, and the psychological need for clear boundaries. Carl breaks down the tension between civic nationalism and ethno-nationalism, arguing that these are not small differences but fundamentally different worldviews. He explains why Tommy Robinson is often misunderstood in this context — and why, despite his reputation, Robinson’s instincts are closer to classical liberalism than to ethnic politics. The discussion explores how support for equal treatment under the law, free expression, and civic belonging can coexist with hard criticism of institutions, without sliding into ethnic exclusion. A central theme is labeling. Carl examines how broad tags flatten nuance, turning disagreement into betrayal and debate into exile. When movements become obsessed with loyalty tests, they often push out voices that don’t fit perfectly — even if those voices share many core values. The result, he suggests, is a cycle of fragmentation that benefits no one except the loudest gatekeepers. The episode also looks at why online politics amplifies conflict. Algorithms reward outrage; audiences reward certainty. Carl argues that psychological incentives — status, belonging, moral clarity — can pull groups toward ever-narrower definitions of who “counts,” making cooperation increasingly difficult. Throughout, Andrew presses on whether provocative rhetoric clarifies or confuses, and whether civic nationalism can survive in a climate dominated by identity-first thinking. The exchange is sharp but analytical, focused on understanding motives rather than scoring points. If you’re trying to make sense of why the “right’s civil war” keeps escalating, why liberals end up branded as enemies, or how psychological dynamics quietly shape political factions, this conversation offers a grounded framework — whether you agree with it or not. 🎧 Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJPUZYNxsSM&t=1717s #CarlBenjamin #TommyRobinson #CivicNationalism #EthnoNationalism #PoliticalPsychology #UKPolitics #CultureWar #TheDailyHeretic Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Carl Benjamin - The Psychology Behind Why Tommy Robinson & Ethno-Nationalists CLASH

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👉 Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for long-form conversations that cut through political tribalism and examine what’s really driving today’s conflicts: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Why do figures often lumped together on the...

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