Banned by Australia, Banned by Twitch, Still Streaming: SNEAKO Calls for a Muslim World
Locked out of YouTube, Twitch, Kick, and an entire country, the 26-year-old streamer is using what's left of his platform to tell followers that "everybody should be Muslim."
In a clip now circulating widely, Nicolas Kenn De Balinthazy — better known to his audience as SNEAKO — declared that “if everybody was Muslim, the way it should be, we would have world peace,” blaming human “ego” for the “chaos” he predicts “for years to come.” The 26-year-old streamer, who commands more than two million followers across platforms despite being permanently banned from Twitch for “extreme hateful conduct” and removed from YouTube and Kick, has spent the past year transforming a content brand built on shock-value commentary into an explicit religious-supremacist platform.
The remark arrives just weeks after Australia’s federal government imposed a lifetime entry ban on him, and only months after he was filmed in a Miami nightclub singing along to a song that samples a speech by Adolf Hitler. SNEAKO’s trajectory matters because his reach is not fringe — it includes a sitting big-city mayor who hosted him for an hour-long interview at the official mayoral residence.
The Quote in Context
SNEAKO’s “everybody should be Muslim” statement is not an isolated theological musing. It follows an extended sit-down with Dr. Zakir Naik — the Indian Islamic televangelist barred from the United Kingdom, Canada, and Bangladesh over hate-speech concerns — and months of SNEAKO framing Islam as the singular cure for what he describes as Western moral collapse. On the podcast circuit, he has told audiences that his pre-conversion life was “destroyed” — in his telling, for the better — by his new faith, while warning that those who reject it are responsible for the world’s disorder.
A Documented Pattern of Extremist Rhetoric
SNEAKO’s religious-supremacist turn did not emerge in a vacuum. His public statements have been catalogued such as him wishing Adolf Hitler a “happy birthday” on multiple occasions and hosting a video series asking whether contemporary leaders are “worse than Hitler.” His commentary regularly traffics in totalizing claims — that “every conspiracy theory from the last century” can be reduced to a single villain, that “every politician” is owned by hidden forces, that “the West will inevitably fall.”
That rhetorical pattern — collapsing complex global events into a single enemy and a single solution — is the through-line connecting his earlier output to his current call for universal religious conversion.
The Miami Nightclub Incident, Platform Bans, and Mainstream Access
In January 2026, SNEAKO was filmed at Vendôme nightclub in Miami Beach alongside Nick Fuentes, Andrew and Tristan Tate, Myron Gaines, and Clavicular, singing along to Kanye West’s track “Heil Hitler” — a song that samples an actual Hitler speech and is banned from most U.S. streaming platforms.
SNEAKO has been permanently banned from Twitch under the platform’s “extreme hateful conduct” policy, removed from YouTube for what the company described as repeated policy violations, and barred from Kick. None of that prevented New York City Mayor Eric Adams from hosting him for an hour-long, cigar-smoking interview on the porch of Gracie Mansion on June 14, 2025 — an event Adams later claimed he did not know was happening and that the streamer had not been vetted.
Australia’s Lifetime Ban
On May 6, 2026, Australian Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke cancelled SNEAKO’s visa and imposed a lifetime entry ban — the first high-profile invocation of provisions amended by Australia’s Parliament earlier this year. “We will use every power available to us” to stop “people coming to this country to spread hatred,” Burke told Sky News. Shadow home affairs minister Jonathon Duniam, in agreement, described SNEAKO as a “misogynist” who “praises Hitler.” SNEAKO responded on X with “Thanks for having me Australia.”
The “everybody should be Muslim” clip is the natural endpoint of a content arc that began with shock-jock provocation and has hardened, on camera, into an explicit demand for religious uniformity as the price of “world peace.” That demand is being delivered to a multi-million-strong audience of young men — by a creator who has been banned by every major streaming platform that hosted him, banned by an entire country, and welcomed at Gracie Mansion. The question is no longer what SNEAKO believes. It is who is still willing to give him a microphone.





