Elijah Schaffer is a racist, antisemitic, and deeply misogynistic right-wing host and commentator who was once fired from The Blaze for allegedly drunkenly groping a female colleague. So now he runs his own media platform called Rift TV, here he is free to hire neo-Nazis and develop programs with fellow racist, antisemitic, and deeply misogynistic Christian nationalist pastor Joel Webbon.
Earlier this week, Webbon traveled to Florida to meet with Schaffer to discuss their future collaborations and, while there, Webbon appeared on Schaffer's own program, where the two shared their thoughts about women.
"A lot of women ask me, 'Does Elijah Schaffer hate women?' And the answer, of course, is yes. Who doesn't?" Schaffer said, before insisting that he was "totally kidding."
Schaffer then proceeded to demonstrate that he was not, in fact, totally kidding.
"I hate what women have become," he continued. "And I do hate it when women expect men in society to uphold the natural masculine tendencies. Women are literally going after the top 10 percent of men; I saw a tweet that said, 'It's crazy that in 2025 to pull bitches, you literally have to be like a millionaire, 6'7, drive a Lamborghini, and be white.' So women are still going after men that emulate the most masculine tendencies, right? They're going for tall, rich, famous men. And men, what do we get? The women, they're just whores. They can't even cook a Hot Pocket."
"That why once you have sex with them, once you cum, you come to your senses," Schaffer added. "You have that post-ejaculate clarity—post-nut clarity, they call it on online these days—but you realize after you nut, you're like you're just a bunch of holes. And that's really sad because it devalues women, so then your view of women become so low because women really are just a bunch of holes today. But that doesn't mean that's who they have to be or who God made them to be or what they should be. And I think that a lot of the hatred that I have towards women, and a lot of the hatred a lot of men have towards women, is simply the product of generations of sin and rebellion that have created women to be something that they're not."
For his part, Webbon has his own issues with women, which he expressed in a more tactfully theocratic manner.
"What would cause a woman who ordinarily, according to created order in the way that God has designed women—that she would aspire towards beauty and not just external, but internal, and that is chiefly described as a gentle and quite spirit—and she would forsake that and embrace being a loud woman?" Webbon asked. "What are the causes? One is a lack of accountability; a lack of accountability for women, which we absolutely have had for decades. A complete and utter lack of accountability for women has caused them to be loud."
"But here's another one: women in the public sphere," Webbon added. "We can't just pretend that it's a lack of accountability, that it's like, 'Oh, well, there's all these women who are on public platforms and they're speaking and they're doing this and they're doing that and it's just the fact that we don't acknowledge that women have faults and the fact that we never speak about their sin and that we never hold them accountable.' No, they shouldn't be speaking. Period."
"The public sphere is not the realm of women," Webbon declared.