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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  June 24, 2021 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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podcast peered thank you for watching "fox news prime time." hey, go download the will cain's podcast, new episodes every monday and friday. i think you will enjoy it. i hope you've enjoyed this. i will be back here tomorrow night at 7:00 p.m. tucker carlson is up next. ♪ ♪ >> tucker: good evening and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight" peered want to hear an amazing story? it is the benefit of being both true and illuminating. here it is. in 1851, a man called samuel halbert came up with a sit to scientific explanation for why so many were running away from plantations in the american south. these fugitive were suffering from a medical disorders
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characterized by an uncontrollable or insane impulsion to wander. so that was the problem. it wasn't they disliked being enslaved or yearned for freedom and basic humanity, no, no, the problem according to samuel cartwright was that black people as a group were inherently defective. they were maniacs, always running away. that's what he said. 107 years later it is embarrassing to repeat something this stupid out loud. so obviously insane. but here's what you should know. it was taken very seriously at the time and so was samuel cartwright. cartwright was not a french character at all. he was a nationally prominent physician, a high-ranking officer from fairfax, virginia, peered he went to penn medical school. he was a credentialed man of science, a man who commanded the respect of the country. 50 years after the civil war, one of this nation's leading medical dictionaries continued
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an entry for this. so with retrospect, we would call samuel cartwright a bigot, which he undoubtably was. but he was more than that. he was a practitioner of something called scientific racism. it scientific racism is deeper than simple project is. it is the use of science to justify the dominance of one group over another group. they have a history as long as science, simply because of the impulse to dominate is inherent to human nature. so it's not really about color, though it is called racism, instead it is called power. dr. seuss wrote about this, you may want to talk a look at what they wrote, some and you can still buy the books. scientific racism never actually never went away. no one talks about this anymore, instead are medical professionals and law professors, politicians, and cable news hosts have identified a new disorder they claim
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explains everything. it's called "whiteness." and universities it's become of article of faith that we are not to the indelible stain of whiteness, america could be a utopia. only whiteness stops in the way. that is why we must abolish it. as harvard magazine put it, abolished the white race. only then can we be happy. lots of people seem to believe the spirit they are not all bad people, just as not everyone who believes in samuel cartwright in the 1890s. they are looking for meaning in our lives. if you hand them a unified theory of everything, some percentage of them is going to buy wholesale pier they were nice people at jonestown in guyana, they just didn't know any better. it is their leaders that you wonder about. and when they talk about this new iteration of scientific racism, when they talk about whiteness, they sound very much like old-fashioned bigots. take this guy for example. his name is eric michael dyson.
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he's a tenured professor, at some stupid college or another. he lives in an exclusively white neighborhood, he goes on television a lot. watch as he talks about race and ask yourself if he sounds different from david do? he doesn't, only the colors are changed are changed. >> speaking about the, i'm sorry, the maga. we stood by to see snowflake white men who were incapable of taking critiques, who are willing to -- yet they call it snowflakes and they are the biggest flakes of snow to hit the earth? they are incapable of criticism, they are incapable of tolerating different spread they are scared of all, oh, my god, critical race there is going to kill your
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mother. they don't understand theory. >> tucker: white man, they are the problem. you hear that so often, that you don't pause to consider what a change this is. he used to be only a few years ago that the one thing you couldn't do in america was attacked people in public on the basis of their race. i don't like that group because of their skin color, let's hurt them. you couldn't say that, it's the one unacceptable thing and for very good reason you cannot maintain a multiracial democracy and less people of every color have exactly the same rights and responsibilities under the wall and are considered the precisely same moral value under god. you have to have that. that is the most basic prerequisite. all lives have to matter, otherwise it cannot work. it's pretty clear that our leadership class for whatever reason doesn't want it to work. obviously they don't, look at what they are doing.
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when you hear people ascribe blood guilt to a specific racial group, when you hear about the sin of whiteness, what you are watching is the death of our future as a country. we can't live in a nation of warring tribes. we know very well what that looks like, because it's a history of the world. it is miserable and bloody. most americans, of all colors on some level understand this. they don't always have the words to articulate it, but they know it. when their kids come home to schools with assignments suggesting that all races are not equal, that some groups are oppressors inherently and others are oppressed, this is called critical race theory. this is the term that most people go with. critical race theory, that's what we so often debate on television. critical race theory is an inaccurate description. the phrase critical race theory doesn't mean anything.
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it obscures rather than illuminates. it is designed that way. it is designed to confuse you. what is happening in our schools, military, and government, is both simpler and easier to recognize than that. it is not critical race theory, it is racism. not neo racism or reverse racism, those are meaningless terms. we haven't said that often enough or clearly enough. and because we haven't, because we've been tied up in some pointless debate on a concept that nobody can actually define, the race eight, and thus but it is, has loosed from universities and infected on the highest levels. he got the job because he is obsequious. he knows who to suck up to and
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he's more than happy to do it. feed him a script and he will read it. here is millie yesterday, the man in charge, he's working to understand a concept called "white rage." >> i do think it's important for those of us in uniform to be open-minded and be widely read. in the united states military means the university. and it is important that we train and we understand. and i want to understand "white rage" and i am white. i want to understand it. what is it that causes thousands of people to assault this building and tried to overturn the constitution of the united states of america? what caused that? i want to find that out. i want to maintain an open mind here. and i do want to analyze it. it's important we understand that because we need -- we come from the american people. it is important that the leaders now and in the future do understand it. >> tucker: hard to believe
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that man wears a uniform. he's that unimpressive. what is white rage? it's one of those diseases that only affects people with certain melanin levels. it is a race specific illness. that is what mark milley learned from reading about a prayer that's why he's making his soldiers learn about it too. they need to know. watch. >> i've read karl marx, i've read lenin, that is not making me a communist paid what is wrong with having an understanding of the country that we look to defend. it's offensive that we are choosing our general officers, are noncommissioned officers outcome up being "woke." >> tucker: he's not just a pig, he stupid. he reads communists to understand communism, but it's interesting he doesn't read
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white supremacists to understand white supremacy. why not? go to the source? because mark milley would be fired instantly if you read those books. and getting fired is the one thing he doesn't want. so he reads about white rage as if it's totally real. it's a medical condition. and by the way, since it's a medical condition, and what age can you catch white rage? most of us assume that our 2-year-olds were teething, now we know it's there whiteness that's making them so angry. we appreciate your contribution to our generation's scientific racism. by the way, have you read anything recently about winning wars? apparently not. we could go on, and on, and on. each one of them spewing race hate. whiteness, white rage! dressed up as some new academic theory. you certainly have the tape. we'll spare you, because you've seen it everywhere. the question is, and this is the
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question we should meditating on day in and day out is how do we get out of this vortex, the cycle, before it's too late? how do we save this country before we become rwanda? what should we be teaching our children so they can live in the country that you want to live in, a country full of many different kinds of people who actually like each other? who are happy to work together, who are united ultimately by the core fact which is they are all americans. that is the question. it's something that victor davis hanson has thought a lot about and we are very happy to have them on tonight. professor, thank you so much for coming on. very simple question, we are moving into a direction that will destroy the country, that is not an overstatement. that's clear. what do we teach our children to avoid that? >> i think the first thing we do is we have to be a little bit more humble. and that is what we are trying in the united states to do, multiracial democracy, constitutional government, that
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is rare in history. it almost never happens. in the west it only happened to the west and the last 2500 year. the norm throughout history is that we identified by how we look, i wear superficial appearance. we hire by our blood relative, our first cousin. but the idea that your race or your appearance is incidental and not essential to who you are is a very radical idea. but if you want to be regressive and go back to precivilization tribalism, then you could do no better than what we are doing now. so that is very dangerous. but besides of being humble, we need some gratitude. this may not be the greatest generation, this generation bit i've been teaching for 37 years and i can tell you that each five-year period, the ability to comprehend, to analyze, to use inductive thinking has declined. we don't like to say that, but it's true. and i think we really have to think of ourselves as just maybe we owe something to the
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people -- or who was actually slaughtered at gettysburg, and why were they killed? how will we inherit that gift? we lost almost 700,000 americans trying to fight, some to preserve, but the majority to end slavery. we defeated fascism, nazism, communism, and we lost a lot of americans. they have no clue and they don't want to know. we need a little bit of gratitude for the people who came before us. what's the alternative? okay, if we have to be perfect to be good, what are the other countries doing? why don't more people try to come to the united states? and all the other countries combined. this destination is more popular. if i say to myself america, i want to be a citizen of mexico,
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i can't do it. i don't look mexican beautiful black person says they want to be chancellor of germany, good luck. and if a latino, black, or a white wants to be a full citizen of whatever that would mean an communist china, you are never going to make it. so we are unique and we have to start appreciating how unique we are. history tells us there's a rule, if you don't believe you're better than the alternative, than there is no reason for you to continue. so i think -- we are getting to the generation, the first time in civilization's history, where this generation feels that their country is worse than the alternative and are more critical than of our enemies. so a little humility, little gratitude, and a little recognition that we are better than the alternative. and that is good enough. >> you've got to love the country, or else what's the
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point. i agree with that completely. victor davis hansen, thank you so much for that. >> thank you. >> tucker: it's important. you've probably seen the footage of a condo collapse in florida. it's pretty awful. learning a lot more about what has happened. the latest on the ground in surfside florida, next.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> tucker: you may have seen the awful footage of a condominium tower collapsing earlier this morning and florida, surfside florida just north of miami beach. we have the latest on that, andrew. >> what we can tell you right now is that we know 102 people have been accounted for, but at this time 99 people are still missing. this operation has been going on since 1:30 in the morning. just think about this, people were fast asleep in their rooms, and our condos. that is when this building came crashing down. there are more than 100 units inside. we are being told that around 50, may be even more units, are impacted by this. a lot of people living nearby said they felt it, they heard it, there was dust in the area for several hours. in fact, we even heard from one person who described what they
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heard, what they saw it, and just how terrifying this this entire collapse was. >> these -- the huge building, gone. it was the craziest thing i've ever heard in my life. look at the building, it's gone. >> first responders are working through extreme elements trying to get to people as quickly as they can. in fact, they were in the basement of this building, the parking garage, underneath all of this rubble wading through water after pipes that burst trying to get to as many people as they possibly can hoping there are people to rescue. what we know about those rescue operations that they are using sonar, they are using canines, and they are just digging through the debris trying to find people. at this hour we know about three dozen people have been rescued. three of them from the rubble, one of them as a young boy who was pulled up early this morning. we do know a mother and daughter were rescued. that mother actually had to have
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her leg amputated. so there is a surgeon here who helping with those operations, but they have been looking through darkness, raining, lightning. these first responders have not stop since 1:30 this morning trying to find as many survivors as they possibly can. tucker. >> tucker: andrew, thank you for that report. so tall buildings just collapsing seems like an ominous sign. we don't know what caused it. it seems worth finding out, it's part of our effort to tell you what's going on in this country. we bring you this, charles bergen is the mayor of surfside. he joins us now. mayor, they give so much for coming on. any idea what caused this? this is kind of shocking. >> buildings like this do not fall in america. this is a third world phenomenon and it's shocking. i was out there at 1:30, 2:00 this morning and it was just a
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site that we've never expected to see. i thought it was going to be a balcony that had come off, but it was half the building. it's a 134 unit building and approximately half of those units are just gone. they fell into sections. you may have seen it in some videos, it was not unlike what happened at the trade center in 2001 and it's really disturbing. all that aside, we need to focus on getting people out alive and that is exactly what we are doing. >> tucker: e ask. you took the words right out of my head, this does not happen in america, this is a third world phenomenon. one thing this country is really good at is rescuing people, our first responders are superb, amen. but is there any suspicion at all that this might've been intentional? you have to say it, it's so strange. >> we just don't have the luxury right now to speculate and we are going to speculate as soon as we get out as many people as
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we can. that is my sole priority. we've been doing that since 2:00 this morning. we had guys running into a building we were told could eminently collapse, so we has heroes, we have all the resources we need. we are not short on resources, we are just short on good luck. we need a lot more good luck good luck. >> tucker: exactly pair that is kind of life. i hate to ask you this as bluntly as this, but do you know how many casualties there are? >> there are casualties. there are casualties. and it is frightening to think of how many more there are going to be. you need to understand, that thing came straight down. there is to be 10 feet between the balconies, we now have about a footnote foot and a half. it's horrifying actually and i think right now we are starting to get into that horrifying portion of the recovery. the good news is we've got every
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resources we need and yes, thank you, we are going to keep looking until we find everybody we could possibly find. >> tucker: at mr. mayor, thank you for this. appreciate you taking the time. >> my pleasure, thank you. >> tucker: so no one is more out of the group in washington than marjorie taylor greene come a brand-new member of congress. and maybe because of that, she sees things that others did no longer notice but she noticed something odd in a new piece of legislation for which he joins us next to explain what today's.
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>> tucker: lots of washington insiders -- one thing you can say about marjorie taylor greene, she really is a washington outsider. as close as you will find that congress, that is fresher. that means she often notices things that people who have a been there for a long time misprint that's what happened earlier this week when marjorie taylor greene found something lurking in a infrastructure
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bill. that bill states that is, quote, women show be presumed to be socially and economically disadvantaged individuals for the purposes of this subsection." that was news to marjorie taylor greene, so she tweeted this, my construction company is woman owned and i'm offended to be presumed socially and economically disadvantaged." we checked, and it turns out many government clauses assume that women, the majority of the american population, are economically disbanded. what is that? congresswoman marjorie taylor greene joins us now peer they could so much for coming on. how surprised are you to learn that you are a victim? >> i wasn't just surprised, i was outraged. as a matter of fact, i'm very angry about it because i can tell you this, i am probably the only members of congress that owns a woman owned construction company. i've been successful in 11 states.
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i can say a lot more than the federal government. we've had a turn of profits, not a lot. i can tell you is a member of congress has been successful in business, i'm not only surprised, i am very angered to be considered in a category that is socially and economically disadvantaged. as a matter of fact, i don't consider myself that way at all. because i'm american woman and i live in a country through hard work and i can be successful, that is exactly what we've done. and our family construction business that is a women and owned business. so for democrats to treat women and put us down in a category where we have to be a victim in order to succeed, i find that extremely insulting and i see it as a continuation as the democrats war on women. >> tucker: it's strange, because most americans are women. so how can you have an oppressed
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minority that's actually the majority of the country? i mean, it doesn't kind of make any sense, does it? >> no, it doesn't make sense. but this is how democrats achieve their agenda. they have to divide everyone up in some sort of political identity, whether you are a woman, lgbtq, x, y, z. whatever. transgender, black, hispanic, asian pear they have to divide everyone up. they have to give you the message that you are a victim and you can't be successful unless you are using their policy or their government program that they are going to provide for you at a cost to the american taxpayers. and that is how you will be successful. you see, they don't believe in individual rights, they don't believe in our freedoms, and they don't believe in americans independent will and hard work to be successful. that is not just who the democrat party is, they are the party of socialism. that's why in every single bill
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i read, and believe me i read them, because as a business owner i'm used to reading contracts and reading information and anything i sign my name on. that is why in this transformation bill i was completely shocked and angered and insulted, frankly, as a woman who has been successful in the construction industry. you see, what democrats want in this discussing infrastructure bill that they just got through the senate and biden announced that they have a deal for, you see, what they want as they want a transfer of wealth. they don't want to give contracts to transportation companies come at trucking companies, two paving companies that are able to actually do the job and do the job well. they want to provide it to minority owned companies or women owned companies who they consider our socially and economically disadvantaged. and this is everything wrong with the democrats policies. that is why i'm very much against it.
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>> tucker: the party of rich ladies telling you that ladies are oppressed, i love it. boy, you are new to this paired probably the only one who did. thank you for coming on come appreciate it. >> tucker: we talked about britney spears, that was even more unexpected. never done a britney spears segment before. she told us that a spears is being silenced by powerful people and that she is not alone. turns out to be more interesting story than we realize. you've never heard of it at the time. there is something there, it turns out. a former federal prosecutor joins us in a moment to explain what is there and what it means for everybody else in america. stay tuned. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> tucker: what if your tv show was tanking and he lost more than half your viewers since january? do you think that would be exactly the moment to re-release your book on the basis of evidence that people love you so much they are going to buy it? probably not. but if you work at cnn, you are a squeaky little guy that hosts the media show on cnn, you might just try it. and if you did, what would happen? you might sell just 2,000 copies in the entire first week. that book currently ranks 4,007 on the best seller list. there are many how-to manuals having to do with hvac, or hanging drywall, or insulation that are outselling that book. by the way, we don't mean to be
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mean or anything. it's just, all signs point to one conclusion. get out of media, immediately. get out of media. maybe it's time to get out of media. just saying. well, the very last minute we talked about a topic we had never talked about before art i ever thought about talking before. and that is britney spears. she said people are controlling britney spears life in a way that is completely un-american. apparently, it's not just about britney spears. it's about how people in charge use their power. here's what i said. >> why should we care about a rich pop princess, right? i think it's deeper than that. i think it goes to what we talked a lot about which is the rock in the machine and how society also plays a part in a weird form of oppression.
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the people, the monsters in power that controlled the puppet. not just her, but the message it sends to every girl, every boy out there, that you are disposable and the elites can own you. >> tucker: well, that's a pretty dark picture she's painting, but it probably doesn't just apply to britney spears. but back to britney spears. it is spears being prevented from doing the things that adults are allowed to do in this country and why? she is, can they do it to you too? francine, thank you so much for coming on. so i read, and i don't know if it's true, but i think you would note, that britney spears is being prevented from having children. by the some sort of court order or getting married -- cannot be real? >> you know, tucker, it doesn't
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seem like it should be real in america. she is almost 40-year-old woman who is very wealthy and successful based solely on her own talent. and yet, it is true. she has conservators, that is people like guardians if you want to think of them that way, that decide everything for her. including what she can and can't do with her own body. whether she can get married, whether she can have children. there is someone else who decides how much money they can spend. she has an allowance, she's worth millions of dollars, and she gets about a thousand dollars a week and an allowance. so now she's in control of no aspect of her life and i think it should frighten all of us, considering if it can happen to someone as wealthy and popular as britney spears, who couldn't they do it to? >> tucker: it's also a little bit weird considering we've got tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, mentally ill vagrants wiping your bot on
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their lawn every day and you can't do anything because they have economy and you can't tell them what to do, but britney spears can be fright down my prevented from having kids from a conservatorship? it seems strange to me. to speak of the differences that britney spears had a lot of money which means she has a lot of people who were willing to go to court to try to get access al over that money. that is exactly what they did. she can't decide how to spend anything. now, i've talked to some people here in california, i am in l.a. right now. i've talked to some people here who say the attorney that is the court appointed attorney for her and the judge are very fair and just people. the problem is, britney spears didn't pick this lawyer. her lawyer is court appointed. that means the judge pick the lawyer. when she said she wasn't allowed to get her own lawyer, she is exactly right. because she's not even considered to have the capacity to contact with a lawyer, much less be given the money by her father to pay for a lawyer.
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so she can even choose her own lawyer and a country like this where everyone has a lawyer. >> tucker: i just they create ts so strange. remember when alex jones -- no, we are not going to defend alex jones. and then everyone was due platforms. julian assad didn't like what he printed, so he threw them in prison. we shouldn't worry when -- we should worry when an american citizen is treated like this. francine, thank you. >> thanks, tucker. >> tucker: so dr. jill biden, not actually a doctor, but she is trying to make americans get the shot. she's traveling across the country to brown beat them, no matter whether or not they need it. we don't want to gloat or
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anything, but we do have the tape. we are probably going to show it to you after the break.
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>> tucker: welcome of the house judiciary committee passed six bipartisan antitrust bills today that fit finally in the end need to break it up with the tech companies. one bill, called the american choice innovation online act prohibits big tech company from giving preference to their own products on their platforms typical antitrust legislation. it prevents them from discriminating against their competitors. another build called and didn't play act and that bill could force tech companies to break up in the end and sell their assets. they will pass by a single vote by two republican spirit of matt gaetz. republicans have talked about big tech censorship for years who were against censorship. only a handful of supporters of the bills affect most republicans on the committee opposing them.
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why? lets he become a big tech companies like google, facebook, amazon, and apple lobby heavily against the bills. apple ceo tim cook called nancy pelosi personally to complain about them. who else took a side big tech to oppose the antitrust efforts well, let's see, house minority leader kevin mccarthy did that. he said the bills would give government antitrust agencies too much power. if more power than google has? probably not! we don't know where the talking point came from, may be from jeff miller his old friend. he's a republican consultant and fund-raiser and closed mccarthy for decades and he's a lobbyist for apple and amazon. those two companies paid the for more than $1 million combined two years ago. these bills are out of committee and they need to be voted on in the house on the senate and by the way, they are not perfect. if no bill is perfect. but this might be the best chance to pass antitrust legislation to curb the power of
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big tech strangling the democracy and of course ruiningf congress to do just that. dr. jill went to nashville on tuesday and she told the locals that she was greatly disappointed in them. because they weren't taking the coronavirus vaccine at the rate she wanted them to and they didn't appreciate it. >> they state still has a little bit ways to go. only three in ten tennesseans are vaccinated. well, you're blowing yourself. [laughter] >> tucker: you're only booing yourself. real doctors are starting to have some concerns about these vaccines. the cdc acknowledge the vaccines linked to higher ranks of the potentially fatal heart inflammation where they say young people shouldn't take these vaccines. last night we spoke to one of the men who invented the mrna
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vaccine technology about his concerns. >> my concerns are that the government's not being transparent with us. about what the risks are. and so, i'm of the opinion that people have the right to decide whether to accept the vaccine or not. especially since these are experimental vaccines. this is a fundamental right having to do clinical research ethics. so, my concern is that i know that there are risks, but we don't have access to the data. certainly i can see the risk-benefit ratio for those 18 and below doesn't justify vaccines and there's a pretty good chance it doesn't justify vaccination in the very young adults. >> tucker: the government is aimed being transparent about the risk, well, the cdc director is insisting that it's not
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actually significant risk. the process of claiming that she contradicts her own agencies data, watch. >> to put this in perspective if we have a group of 12-17-year-olds who are working to vaccinate over the next four months we can vaccinate a million of them which would be great strides. over the next four months we could expect 30 or 40 of these mild self-limited cases of myocarditis. for that, if we were to vaccinate 1 million we would avert 8,000 cases of covid, 2,000 hospitalizations, 50 icus days, one death. we raise the risks and the benefits of the vaccine. >> tucker: that's just not true. as noted by alex berridge and we checked, you go to the cdc website you will find cdc numbers that contradict the cdc direction just said. according to the cdc out of a typical group of 1,000 young people who take the vaccine, more than 25,000 are expected to
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have side effects one in four. another 700 will likely provide the market require medical care and two will be hospitalized. alex berenson can do math, the author of "unreported truths." first of all, great catch on this, think you for doing this. how can the cdc director say something this cdc contradicts? >> that's a really good question and it is interesting because if you look at the meeting that they had yesterday. the numbers are in there. there's been other papers that they've written over the last few months, you can get to the truth. but then, the scientists comes out and they say things aren't supported by their own data. whether it's because they are bad at math or they have a teacher you unions yelling at tm that they had to get kids vaccinated or they are aware of how important pharma is. i don't know.
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i don't know why they can't tell the truth, but they can't tell the truth, tucker. >> tucker: it is scaring the heck out of people who are very pro-vaccine and i'm in the category, uncle billy for vaccine cells have been. but if they are lying about the harm, why would you trust anything that they have said to come? >> i don't know, i don't know what the frenzy to vaccinate kids is. they will be -- they are very, very low risk groups. i just don't understand -- when you sort of look at state-by-state, once you vaccinate older adults, it doesn't look like there will be much benefit at all from exiting younger people. what the frenzy is on this i don't know. by the way, i just want to say one thing which i know we are short on time but this piece that i wrote i have something called sub stack which is a newsletter that is longer than my twitter feed and shorter than
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the book. your audience has been great supporters of the booklets, but this is a way to get information out quickly in a way that's easier to read than twitter. i hope people come take a look and judge the numbers for themselves because as you said, you and your team were able to see how clearly the cdc is not telling the truth about this. so come to sub stack and take a look for yourself. >> tucker: we should say it's one of the last protected media outlets right now it not controlled by google or facebook, is that correct? >> that's right. you know i was up against amazon, they tried to censor me. it's nonsense or a bowl and people read the stuff for free or they can subscribe and pay. it's an audience like you, when the last bastions out their independent journalism and i'm glad to have raised. i hope i will be able to turn this into a newsletter that's more about covid where i can report on important issues outls
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aren't covering. that's why it's called "unreported truth," the same as the booklet. >> tucker: there so many of those and i think history will be the judge as well. alex berenson, i appreciate it. >> thanks, tucker. >> we are out of time and you can believe it and hour slips by. it will be back tomorrow night 8:00 p.m. the show that's the sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness, and groupthink. now, ladies and gentlemen, sean hannity! how are you doing? >> sean: big show tonight, not a surprise for once. and here at 9:00 p.m., all is good, life is good. welcome to "hannity," coming up my latest message to the mob and the media. new polling numbers tonight show america's media is one of the least trusted and then the entire world. for good reason. the latest from president sippy cup, yeah, really bizarre behavior again today at the white house. it's getting worse

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