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Fox News and the New York Times just launched a coordinated attack on Tucker Carlson, but their mission fell flat on its face. In fact, the attempt to smear him only ended up showing the world what a genuine and thoughtful human being Tucker Carlson really is.

The hit job on Tucker centered around a private text message he sent to his producer, which later became part of the Dominion/Fox lawsuit. In the message, Tucker shared a human observation he made about himself and the current political division in America while watching a violent altercation between Trump supporters and an Antifa guy on TV. It was an insightful moment that revealed a level of self-awareness that is rare in many people these days. Unfortunately, in our politically correct Marxist society, observing reality has become taboo, especially if it goes against the left’s narrative.

Tucker eventually felt pity for the Antifa guy who was getting pummeled by the Trump supporters.

Here’s a closeup of the text message from Tucker that sparked the controversy.

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It’s hard to blame Tucker for being angry with Antifa after they terrorized his wife in their D.C. home back in 2018:

While some may consider Tucker’s observation about “white men fighting” to be politically incorrect, he’s actually right. There are stark differences between how black and white people fight, as we’ve seen in countless videos, and there’s nothing racist about point it out.

If you don’t believe us, just spend a few minutes on the WorldStarHipHop website.

What Tucker’s text did was expose the left as a hate-filled bully mob that lacks the capacity for change. In a country that now rewards “conformity” and” groupthink,” Tucker’s self-awareness and observations are seen as a threat. This tweet from the New York Times shows the world how Fox News executives can’t handle the truth and overreact like a bunch of hysterical, screeching school girls.

Are we seriously to believe Murdoch needed his smelling salts after reading Tucker’s text message?

Obviously, the public is on Tucker’s side in this fight.

It’s also interesting to see how The New York Times framed Tucker’s tweet in their story. Rather than acknowledging the thoughtful message Tucker shared, they instead chose to use the phrase “inflammatory views on race and violence.” It just goes to show how the media can twist a story to fit their narrative, even if it means disregarding the true message behind it.

The NYT framejob on this Tweet is so hysterical and pathetic you’ll get a laugh out of reading it firsthand:

A text message sent by Tucker Carlson that set off a panic at the highest levels of Fox on the eve of its billion-dollar defamation trial showed its most popular host sharing his private, inflammatory views about violence and race.

For years, Mr. Carlson espoused views on his show that amplified the ideology of white nationalism. But the text message revealed more about his views on racial superiority.

The text alarmed the Fox board, which saw the message a day before Fox was set to defend itself against Dominion Voting Systems before a jury. The board grew concerned that the message could become public at trial when Mr. Carlson was on the stand, creating a sensational and damaging moment that would raise broader questions about the company.

The day after the discovery, the board told Fox executives it was bringing in an outside law firm to conduct an investigation into Mr. Carlson’s conduct.

Tucker is also apparently guilty of offending the many strong, feminist, independent and empowered women employed by Fox.

The text message added to a growing number of internal issues involving Mr. Carlson that led the company’s leadership to conclude he was more of a problem than an asset and had to go, according to several people with knowledge of the decision. In other messages he had referred to women — including a senior Fox executive — in crude and misogynistic terms. The message about the fight also played a role in the company’s decision to settle with Dominion for $787.5 million, the highest known payout in a defamation case.

The Times concluded its piece with a supposed parade of horribles to convince you that Tucker Carlson is a very, very naughty boy:

A recurring theme of his show during the six years that it ran in prime time on Fox News was the displacement of white Americans by people of color. Mr. Carlson often framed topics in the news as part of a larger struggle between “us” and “them,” with immigrants and other marginalized groups steadily and surely taking from whites what had long been theirs: political and cultural power in the United States.
He attacked Black social justice activists and portrayed immigrants from Central America as a blight on the nation. He said in 2018 that immigrants make the country “dirtier.”

In the aftermath of a mass shooting in El Paso at the hands of a gunman who cited white supremacist beliefs in his manifesto, Mr. Carlson declared on his show that white supremacy was “not a real problem,” likening it to a conspiracy theory.

On Monday, The New York Times and other news organizations urged the judge overseeing the Dominion case to release some of the messages that were redacted.

It’s painfully obvious to most that Fox News was the one who leaked the text to The New York Times. Twitter pundit Greg Price had this to say about the leak:

The real story here is that somebody is leaking text messages from court documents that are currently under seal and the New York Times is reporting it as if Fox found them the night before the Dominion trial.

But as I reported on my Substack, a source directly familiar with the Dominion litigation told me that’s impossible because Fox and their lawyers would have been in charge of producing communications before Tucker went in for his deposition last year.

The real story here is that somebody is leaking text messages from court documents that are currently under seal and the New York Times is reporting it as if Fox found them the night before the Dominion trial.

But as I reported on my Substack, a source directly familiar with…

You can read Greg’s Substack here.

Besides the fact that this text makes Tucker look good, not bad, someone else on Twitter made a great point—if this is how Fox News treats its employees once they leave, then why would anyone want to work there?

Shenanigans like this are why the network is now in a state of chaos, paranoia, and turmoil.

The bottom line is that Tucker’s text message was both reasonable and rational, and it’s hard to imagine any normal-thinking person finding it offensive. It’s also a sad reflection on the castrated fools over at Fox News and shows easily panicked they are by the truth. Is this really how one of the nation’s top news organizations should behave when faced with reality?


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