Antifascist Dad: Urgent Conversations with Young People in Chaotic Times
By Matthew Remski
A guide for parents on fighting the rise of far-right extremism with their children; conversations on resisting despair, building resilience, and divesting from toxic masculinity.
From hit shows like Adolescence to hand-wringing pieces in The Atlantic, we’re being told that today’s boys are not ok. The algorithm feeds manosphere content straight to their screens. Brofluencers sell alpha answers to complex problems. And far-right radicalization is at a fever pitch.
But if there’s a crisis among young people in 2026, it won’t be solved by talking about them. We should be talking to them: about their needs, their fears, the world they’re inheriting…and what they can do about it. We also need to get clear about why fascism appeals, and why it doesn’t get anyone closer to real friendship, belonging, empowerment, or self-worth. How, despite what the manosphere tells them, it’s the opposite of cool.
Conspirituality co-host Matthew Remski explores 12 urgent conversations for antifascist homes. He breaks down complex ideas in age-appropriate ways to help families understand:
The cultural, political, and economic landscape we’re in—and why the alt-right mirror world is so seductive to this generation of young people
Body-based tools and emotional regulation techniques to help kids ground their nervous systems
Strategies for practical community defense, moral courage, and defining your own role in antifascism
How to stand with marginalized classmates and scapegoated communities
The intersections of capitalism, fascism, cult dynamics, and schoolyard politics
Why fear-based, authoritarian, or condescending parenting styles backfire
What antifascism has to do with equity, ethics, and belonging—and why it’s relevant to discussions of porn, consent, intimacy, embodiment, and gender
This book is written from Remski’s own perspective as a dad. It will resonate with parents and kids of all genders, but it hits especially hard for parents of boys—the kids most actively targeted by alt-right messaging, who must think hard about who they are within the system that makes them; about who they will stand with in dangerous times; and about what they need to learn to create safety, care, and community.
Softback book.
296 pages.