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Elon Musk, Joe Rogan mock MSNBC’s op-ed linking home workouts to far right’s rise

MSNBC is going viral for warning about “the far right’s obsession with fitness” — with Elon Musk and Joe Rogan among those mocking the left-wing network’s comparison of the health craze to the Nazis.

re-shared a year-old claiming that the “far right has taken advantage of pandemic at-home fitness trends.”

In it, she even compared some fitness influencers to how Adolf Hitler “fixated on boxing and jujitsu” to garner followers.

MSNBC’s tweet soon got more than 34 million views — and a flurry of mockery.

“Being healthy is ‘far right.’ Holy f–k,” , a self-styled liberal and lifetime fitness fanatic.

Twitter boss Musk — who recently started training martial arts again to take on Facebook rival Mark Zuckerberg — replied to Rogan’s message by saying that “parody & reality are becoming indistinguishable.”

“MSNBC thinks you’re a [N]azi if you work out lmaooo,” , who has previously described himself as a liberal only now labeled far-right because “woke p♏rogressives” are pushing the left to extremes.

Elon Musk said that “parody & reality are becoming indistinguishable.” Getty Images
Elon Musk mocked MSNBC’s opinion piece.

Others also joked that they were “doing white supremacy” with planned workouts.

“I was doing pushups and suddenly a swastika tattoo appeared on my chest. Weirdest thing,” . “I’m prone on the couch eating potato chips, hoping it will go away.”

Someone else asked: “If I skip leg day does that make me a Democrat?”

“I’m just trying to not be so fat y’all,” an accountant wrote alongside a gym selfie.

The mocking tweet by fitness fanatic Joe Rogan was viewed more than 20 million times. You Tube/PowerfulJRE

It was not immediately clear ℱwhy MSNBC decided to again share the op-ed that was first p𒈔ublished in March 2022.

In it, Miller-Idriss said that “neo-Nazi and white supremacist” extremists were targeting fitness fanatics by luring them “with health tips and strategies for positive physical changes.”

“Physical fitness has always been central to the far right,” wrote the MSNBC columnist, making the comparison with Hitler and “Mein Kampf.”

MSNBC’s columnist compared the far-right campaign to lure fitness fanatics to how Hitler “fixated on boxing and jujitsu” to garner followers. Corbis via Getty Images

“The intersection of extremism and fitness leans into a shared obsession with the male body, training, masculinity, testosterone, strength and competition,” she wrote, noting an emphasis on martial arts.

“It’s championed as a tool to help fight the ‘coming race war’ and the street battles that will precede it.”

Miller-Idriss noted that “fitness of course is a staple and a hobby for many people, for whom it is enjoyable and rewarding for brain health and overall well-being. Physical fitness channels dopamine, adrenaline and serotonin in ways that literally feel good.”

However, “intertwining those feelings with hateful and dehumanizing ideas, while promoting the concept that physical warriors are needed to create the strength and dominance to defend one’s people from a perceived enemy, makes for a dangerous and powerful cocktail of radicalization,” she wrote.

The MSNBC columnist said that while many people work out to feel good, it “makes for a dangerous and powerful cocktail of radicalization.” Getty Images

“It’s critical that leaders, including parents, physical trainers, gym owners, coaches and others in the fitness world understand how online grooming and recruitment can intersect with spaces that we generally think of as promoting health and well-being.”