April 8, 2026
Why do elite Democrats fear Hasan Piker? | Bhaskar Sunkara
In a striking turn of events, elite Democrats are rallying against Hasan Piker, a prominent Twitch streamer, as they grapple with pressing issues like rising gas prices and a faltering approval rating for the president. The panic was ignited by progressive candidate Abdul El-Sayed's decision to feature Piker at campaign rallies, prompting swift condemnation from party stalwarts who accuse him of being an antisemite. Yet, as Bhaskar Sunkara argues, the real concern for the Democratic establishment lies not in Piker's controversial remarks but in his ability to connect with disillusioned young voters—an audience the party desperately needs to reclaim. This episode highlights a growing divide within the party, revealing a reluctance to engage with the voices that resonate with the electorate amidst a backdrop of economic and geopolitical turmoil.

Stoic Response
Epictetus on Judgment and Engagement
Greetings, students of the Stoa. Today, we gather to reflect upon the tumultuous events unfolding in the realm of politics, particularly the uproar surrounding Hasan Piker and the Democratic establishment. Let us examine the judgments at play and the discipline we must cultivate in our desires, impulses, and assent.
Challenge Unhealthy Judgments
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Recognize Bias:
- Understand that judgments often stem from fear and insecurity.
- Question the motivations behind public condemnation—are they rooted in truth or self-preservation?
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Seek Clarity:
- Distinguish between the individual’s words and their broader impact.
- Reflect on whether the outrage serves to stifle dialogue rather than foster understanding.
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Embrace Complexity:
- Acknowledge that individuals can be both flawed and insightful.
- Consider the context of Piker's remarks and the historical weight they carry.
Discipline of Desire, Impulse, and Assent
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Desire:
- Cultivate a desire for wisdom over popularity.
- Seek to understand the disillusionment of young voters rather than dismiss it as mere folly.
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Impulse:
- Practice restraint in your reactions.
- Allow reason to temper your immediate responses to controversial figures.
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Assent:
- Before agreeing with a judgment, ask yourself: Is this aligned with virtue?
- Engage with opposing views to refine your own understanding.
Imperatives for Thoughtful Engagement
- Listen Actively: Engage with voices that resonate with the electorate, even if they challenge your beliefs.
- Question Authority: Do not accept the judgments of the powerful without scrutiny. Who benefits from these narratives?
- Promote Dialogue: Encourage conversations that bridge divides rather than deepen them.
In this era of extremes, let us not be swept away by the tides of outrage. Instead, anchor ourselves in reason and virtue. For it is through disciplined engagement that we can navigate the complexities of our time.
Article Rewritten Through Stoic Lens
The Dichotomy of Control: Lessons from the Political Sphere
Understanding External Events
In the realm of politics, we witness a tempestuous landscape where external events unfold beyond our control. Rising gas prices, declining approval ratings, and international conflicts are but fleeting shadows. We must remember: what lies outside our influence is not our concern. Instead, let us focus on our responses and judgments.
Discipline in Response
The Democratic Party's recent uproar over Hasan Piker, a Twitch streamer, serves as a poignant example. While they grapple with pressing issues, their attention shifts to a figure who embodies the voice of disillusioned youth. Here, we see a failure to engage with the electorate. Reflect: how often do we divert our focus from what truly matters?
Judgment and Right Action
Consider the accusations hurled at Piker—labeled an antisemite by some party stalwarts. This reaction reveals a deeper truth: the establishment fears the power of popular voices. In our own lives, we must practice discernment. Are we quick to judge others based on popular opinion, or do we seek to understand their perspectives? Engage with empathy, not condemnation.
The Value of Connection
Piker’s ability to resonate with young voters is a testament to the power of connection. He speaks to their struggles and frustrations, while the establishment remains mired in outdated tactics. Ask yourself: Are we listening to those who feel unheard? In our pursuit of virtue, let us strive to connect rather than alienate.
Discipline in Choices
Piker turned down lucrative offers to maintain his integrity, demonstrating a commitment to principles over profit. This is a lesson for us all: what choices do we make in our daily lives? Are we swayed by immediate gains, or do we uphold our values? True discipline lies in aligning our actions with our principles.
Reflecting on Double Standards
The contrasting treatment of Piker and established politicians illustrates a double standard. While one is condemned for strident remarks, the other wields actual power with questionable actions. Let us reflect: How do we hold ourselves and others accountable? Do we apply our standards uniformly, or do we allow bias to cloud our judgment?
Engaging with the Discontented
The Democratic establishment’s reluctance to engage with progressive voices reveals a deeper issue: a disconnect from the electorate. In our own lives, we must confront the discomfort of dissent. Are we open to differing opinions, or do we shy away from uncomfortable truths? Embrace dialogue, for it is through engagement that we grow.
The Call for New Ideas
As we navigate an era of extremes, the old methods of moderation have proven ineffective. The establishment’s focus on silencing dissent rather than fostering new ideas is a path to stagnation. In our own pursuits, are we innovating or merely replicating? Seek fresh perspectives and solutions, for therein lies the path to progress.
Conclusion: The Stoic Path Forward
In conclusion, let us remember that the true measure of our character lies not in the external chaos but in our internal responses. Focus on what you can control: your judgments, your actions, and your engagement with the world. By practicing discipline, empathy, and innovation, we can navigate the complexities of life with the wisdom of Stoicism, transforming challenges into opportunities for growth.
Source Body Text
Gas has topped $4 a gallon for the first time since 2022. The president’s approval rating just fell below 40%. The war in Iran is entering its sixth week, with thousands dead and no end in sight. The strait of Hormuz is blockaded, food prices are climbing and US households are staring down hundreds of dollars in added living expenses. So naturally, the Democratic party has found something truly urgent to focus on: a Twitch streamer. The latest intraparty panic was triggered by Abdul El-Sayed, a progressive running in Michigan’s competitive Democratic Senate primary, who announced that Hasan Piker would appear at two campaign rallies alongside him. The response from the party establishment was swift. Representative Brad Schneider branded Piker “an unapologetic antisemite”. Michigan’s own senator Elissa Slotkin, a former Pentagon official, weighed in with her condemnation, as did Representative Haley Stevens, one of El-Sayed’s primary rivals. Another opponent, Mallory McMorrow, went so far as to liken Piker to Nick Fuentes, a white supremacist who has enthusiastically praised Adolf Hitler on camera. When Politico came calling, both Cory Booker and Ruben Gallego rushed to declare they would refuse an invitation to appear on Piker’s stream. It was quite the pile-on. But who is Hasan Piker, and why have some Democratic party elites branded him enemy No 1? Piker is one of the most-watched political streamers in the country. His audience skews young and male – exactly the demographic that deserted Democrats in historic numbers in 2024. He’s a socialist who talks about class politics, foreign policy and the failures of the American system with a directness that clearly resonates with millions. Last month, he joined a solidarity convoy bringing humanitarian aid to Cuba. He’s also the guy who turned down $500,000 to play poker on stream and who walked away from a million-dollar offer from Polymarket for his 2024 election night coverage. At a time when surveys show nearly 40% of young men admit to betting more than they can afford, that consistency is worth something. It also puts Piker on a higher plane than some establishment figures. Stephanie Cutter, Obama’s former deputy campaign manager, announced just days ago that she’s excited to be advising Kalshi, one of Polymarket’s prediction-market competitors. The establishment’s moral compass is conveniently selective. Has Piker said things that are offensive? Of course. He’s a streamer who broadcasts for hours every day – the medium almost guarantees it. But the specific charges being recycled against him are years old: a 2019 remark that “America deserved 9/11”, which he has since walked back as a hyperbolic critique of US foreign policy; forceful criticism of Israel and its crimes in Gaza; and the time he called ultra-Orthodox Jews “inbred”. “Inbred” is an unfortunate but standard piece of American insult vernacular. Piker himself uses it freely against white nationalists, neo-Nazis and anyone else he dislikes. He has said he regrets applying it to Jewish people specifically and will not do so again. None of this is new. And none of it makes McMorrow’s comparison of Piker to Nick Fuentes, an actual Holocaust denier, anything but ludicrous. None of it was a problem for establishment Democrats until the day El-Sayed announced his rally. The framing of Piker as a threat to all that is decent is nothing but a campaign tactic designed to kneecap a progressive challenger in a primary race. It’s worth reflecting on the power of the respective sides of this controversy. Cory Booker, for example, is a United States senator. Hasan Piker is a guy with a laptop and an audience. Booker supports a bill that would unconstitutionally ban boycotts of Israel and has repeatedly voted to arm a country that has killed tens of thousands and leveled the Gaza Strip. But a streamer who says strident things about it from his living room is somehow beyond the pale? The double standard tells you everything about what the establishment considers dangerous – not the exercise of actual state power, but the existence of a popular voice they can’t control. On Pod Save America, Booker said he’d never even heard of Piker before this past week. This is revealing in a way Booker probably didn’t intend. A senator who aspires to lead the party can’t be bothered to know who commands the attention of millions of the young voters he claims to want back, but he can be mobilized overnight to condemn the guy. His priority clearly isn’t engaging with the audience, though he does find time to “text message back and forth like teenagers” with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s president. After 2024, Democrats conducted an anguished post-mortem about why young men were abandoning the party. Pundits filled columns wondering where the party’s Joe Rogan was – someone with cultural reach who could talk to disaffected men on their own terms. As Ryan Zickgraf pointed out, they got one. And the party’s first instinct was to try to cancel him. What this episode makes painfully clear is that for too many leading Democrats, the priority is defeating progressives within their own ranks and triangulating their way back to power behind a well-heeled professional base. Palestine has become a populist issue among young Americans in a way that the Democratic mainstream still refuses to comprehend – not just in Brooklyn and Ann Arbor, but in rural and working-class communities where people are angry, and where anger at the human cost of US foreign policy doesn’t break neatly along the lines the party expects. We are living through an era of extremes: a war in Iran that almost no one asked for, an economy that’s squeezing ordinary people and a president whose approval is cratering. The old playbook of moderation and scolding isn’t just uninspiring – it’s a proven loser. Abdul El-Sayed understands that you can’t meet this moment by hiding from the people who are actually reaching the voters you’ve lost. The Democratic establishment’s problem isn’t Hasan Piker. It’s that they’ve run out of ideas, and they’d rather police who progressives talk to than offer the country something worth voting for. Bhaskar Sunkara is the president of the Nation, the founding editor of Jacobin and the author of The Socialist Manifesto: The Case for Radical Politics in an Era of Extreme Inequalities