← All stories
Society

Crowder Calls for Active Indoctrination of Children on American Exceptionalism

Louder with Crowder · Two Demtards Came After Me on Birthright Citizenship · July 1, 2026
Crowder Calls for Active Indoctrination of Children on American Exceptionalism
Louder with Crowder
Louder with Crowder
Two Demtards Came After Me on Birthright Citizenship
"You need to condition your kids. That's what if these kids are being Somali is the best. And I see a lot of conservative Christian white suburban parents going, you know, I just hope that they I hope I did my job and let them make their own decisions. Let them draw their own conclusions. No, that that that time has passed. You need to be more proactive."
Steven Crowder argues conservative parents must actively teach their children that America is objectively the best country, rejecting a passive approach to values formation. He frames this as a necessary response to what he describes as other groups actively indoctrinating their children with loyalty to other nations. The statement comes during discussion of the Supreme Court birthright citizenship ruling.

About this episode

Steven Crowder dedicates the episode to attacking the Supreme Court's birthright citizenship ruling, arguing that children born to illegal immigrants and birth tourists should not receive automatic citizenship. The conservative commentator, who was born in Detroit but spent 15 years in Canada before returning to the U.S., frames the debate around cultural assimilation and national loyalty. Crowder plays viral footage of Somali American children declaring Somalia "the best" and uses it to argue that multiculturalism has failed and that parents must actively indoctrinate their children with American nationalist values rather than letting them form their own conclusions. He explicitly states that racial and ethnic proximity to the white Anglo-Saxon founders is necessary to maintain American values, while claiming the argument isn't entirely race-based. Crowder attacks critics including Mehdi Hasan and Shri Thanedar who pointed out his Canadian upbringing, arguing his American-born status and citizen father make his situation different from birth tourism or children of illegal immigrants. He praises Justice Clarence Thomas's dissent arguing the 14th Amendment was intended for formerly enslaved Black Americans with no other homeland, not for children of foreigners. The episode includes extended discussion of what Crowder calls the need to restore social pressure for immigrants to assimilate and abandon loyalty to their countries of origin. Throughout, Crowder frames opposition to birthright citizenship as defending American culture against exploitation by China, Somalia, Guatemala and other nations he characterizes as inferior.

Key takeaways

More stories More from Louder with Crowder