Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Tucker Carlson Slammed For Suggesting QAnon Congresswoman Only Targeted For Having 'Bad Opinions'

Tucker Carlson Slammed For Suggesting QAnon Congresswoman Only Targeted For Having 'Bad Opinions'
Fox News/YouTube

Tucker Carlson backed conspiracy-theorist and Republican, Marjorie Taylor Greene—the far-right representative for Georgia's 14th Congressional District who was elected in November.

Greene is notorious for embracing QAnon—a discredited far-right conspiracy that a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles runs a child sex-trafficking ring that former-President Donald Trump planned to take down.


She also believed that mass school shootings and 9/11 were staged events.

Recently, the freshman Congresswoman was under fire for her past support on social media for the execution of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

On his Fox News show Monday, Carlson mocked news footage highlighting Greene's conspiratorial threats and suggested she was only being criticized for having "bad opinions."

"No woman is more dangerous than this freshman member of Congress," he sarcastically remarked.

"The threat that she alone poses, as they say on cable news, is existential. This single congresswoman may be just weeks away from developing nuclear weapons."

After a montage showing CNN and MSNBC news coverage of Greene and Democratic calls for her expulsion from Congress, Carlson snarked:

"Oh. So, how dangerous is this three-named congresswoman you probably have never heard of?"
"Well, so dangerous that in the name of democracy, she must be expelled tonight from the Congress. That's what they're saying."

You can watch the clip from his show, below.

youtu.be

"What do her voters have to do with democracy?" he continued.

That's not how democracy works. In the new democracy, CNN gets the veto. If cable news doesn't like your views, you have to leave Congress. That's the rule."

Carlson said of Greene:

"This new member of Congress has barely even voted, she just got there the other day. But CNN says she has bad opinions. Therefore, she's the greatest threat we face."
"Now if you're skeptical about any of this, our advice is keep it to yourself. Because free inquiry is dead, unauthorized questions are hate speech."

Twitter redefined "bad opinions" for the political firebrand.







Carlson's rant came after Repulican and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell denounced Greene on Monday for her extremist views and called her embracing of conspiracy theories "cancer for the Republican Party."

Said McConnell:

"Somebody who's suggested that perhaps no airplane hit the Pentagon on 9/11, that horrifying school shootings were pre-staged, and that the Clintons crashed JFK Jr.'s airplane is not living in reality."
"This has nothing to do with the challenges facing American families or the robust debates on substance that can strengthen our party."

More from People

Melania Trump
Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

Melania Just Held A Bizarre Press Conference To Debunk 'False Smears' Related To Jeffrey Epstein—And Everyone Had The Same Response

First Lady Melania Trump had everyone thinking the same thing after she held a bizarre press conference on Thursday to deny that she had anything but casual ties to Jeffrey Epstein, the late disgraced financier, pedophile, sexual abuser, and sex trafficker.

Mrs. Trump publicly denied any ties to convicted sex offenders Epstein and his procurer Ghislaine Maxwell, saying claims linking her to Epstein are “lies” meant to damage her reputation. She said she met her husband, President Donald Trump at a New York City party in 1998 and did not meet Epstein until 2000, contradicting a witness statement in the Epstein files that alleges Epstein introduced the couple.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sarah McBride; Nancy Mace
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Heather Diehl/Getty Images

Dem Rep. Sarah McBride Perfectly Shames Nancy Mace For Her Transphobic Response To McBride's Condemnation Of Trump

Delaware Democratic Representative Sarah McBride pushed back at South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace after Mace responded with transphobia to McBride's criticism of President Donald Trump's genocidal threat to kill the "whole civilization" of Iran.

Trump has insisted that God supports his war on Iran and declared—before a provisional ceasefire was announced—that "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again" ahead of a deadline to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges that legal scholars and world leaders have said would constitute war crimes.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of JD Vance
News Nation

JD Vance Dragged After Making Bizarre 'Skydiving' Analogy About His Wife To Explain Iran Ceasefire Deal

Vice President JD Vance had critics raising their eyebrows after he used a bizarre analogy about his wife–Second Lady Usha Vance—going skydiving while attempting to explain the United States' position on Iran's right to enrich uranium.

Vance addressed reporters on the tarmac at Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport as he left Hungary, where he had voiced the Trump administration’s support for Prime Minister Viktor Orbán only days before the country’s elections.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @mikemancusi's Instagram video
@mikemancusi/Instagram

Comedian Explains How Millennials' Midlife Crises Are Different From Past Generations—And He's Spot On

Don't make promises you cannot keep, unless your goal is to hurt someone.

Millennials know that practically better than anyone. They were fed a long and impassioned series of advice, hyper-focused on the importance of getting a college degree in order to find a good job. They were also force-fed traditionalist ideals of getting married, having kids, and buying a nice house with the money they'd be making from that great job, of course.

Keep ReadingShow less