Inside the Right’s 2025 Messaging War: Karen Hunter Exposes a Strategy Built on Old Racial Codes
Karen Hunter is warning her audience about what she calls a sophisticated effort by hyperconservative activists to control racial narratives ahead of 2025.
After watching a clip of Lara Logan and author Jim Simpson discussing Black Americans, Hunter said her initial reaction shifted once she learned who the speakers were.
“Once you know who the people are and what their actual mission is, then you are like, ‘Oh, this is part of the game.’”
In the clip, Simpson claims, “The last thing in the world they want is a happy, prosperous Black community” and argues that communists have been “targeting the Blacks since the 1920s.” Logan adds that abortion clinics in Black neighborhoods are “by design” and part of something “nefarious and divisive.”
Hunter acknowledged that some criticisms of historical figures like Margaret Sanger have merit, saying, “She’s right about where they put the abortion clinics.” But she argued that the larger framing was manipulative. “You aren’t our friend either,” she said.
Hunter connected this rhetoric to what she sees as a renewed playbook intended to divide Black people from within. She pointed to efforts to spark tension between African, Caribbean and Black American communities and compared the tactic to propaganda used during the Rwandan genocide.
“They were told they were each other’s enemies and they bought it,” she said. She adds, “When you hear a white person say, ‘You guys are always playing the victim,’ that should raise your Spidey senses,” calling it a “racist trope” that allows people to ignore history while “continuing to be horrible.”
Hunter stressed that many poor white Americans are also being misled and invoked Lyndon Johnson’s notable warning:
“If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice your picking his pocket,” urging listeners to stay vigilant, because political operatives are “being real tricky with the language out here” and that communities must resist efforts “to divide us.”
Watch Karen Hunter break it all down in the clip below.



