tv Tucker Carlson Tonight FOX News August 25, 2022 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT
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that's upsetting." i'm not going to say anything about labs. a poodle is smarter. not a lab. it's going to take more time. that's all for us tonight. dvr the show. this is for the lab. tucker's up next. always remember, i'm watters, and this is my world. ♪ ♪ >> tucker: good evening. welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." they finally got big orange. you were starting to think it would never happen. once you accuse a man of sexism, perjury, mental illness, treason, the last of which is a death penalty offense, let us remind you, impeach him twice on unrelated grounds, and send the
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fbi to his home with a welcome letter from barack obama, which is a state possession, which is a felony, you wouldn't think there's a lot left to accuse the guy of. you'd think they'd have run out of sins. no. there's one left. it's a big one. the crime of all crimes, an offense so diabolical, so morally repugnant, so contrary to the laws of god and nature, that once revealed to the public donald trump is done forever. he will never again darken the door of american democracy. he will slink back in shame to his lair off the fifth tee to prepare for his well-deserved punishment. won't see him again until sentencing. that's how bad this is. what did donald trump do, ladies and gentlemen? we can now tell you. donald trump created the covid vaccine. he did that himself. on purpose, with malice of forethought, the vax is donald trump's doing.
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we learned that this week from democrats in congress. they announced that shocking news. an investigation by the coronavirus subcommittee found, as politico put it, that the trump administration pressured the food and drug administration to authorize the first covid-19 vaccines on an accelerated timeline. following this? an accelerated timeline. they didn't even fully test the stuff. that's not science. donald trump doesn't do science. so they just handed this stuff out to people, citizens, recklessly. in the words of south carolina congressman james clyburn, donald trump assaulted our nation's public health institutions with this poison, this so-called vaccine, and in doing so, quote, undermined our nation's coronavirus response. that's what trump did. here's the worst part. no one knew trump was doing it. they trusted donald trump. he was the president of the united states. people believed him when he said the vax worked. especially older people.
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they knew they were at risk. they wanted to believe that a shot would keep them safe. so they took donald trump's word, and then they took the vax. then a lot of them got covid anyway. it's horrifying when you think about it. here's one of donald trump's elderly victims. >> hey, folks, guess you heard this morning, i tested positive for covid, but i've been double vaccinated, double boosted, symptoms are mild, and i really appreciate your inquiry and concerns. i'm doing well. getting a lot of work done, will continue to get it done. >> tucker: look at that man. donald trump's vaccine did that to him. four shots, a human pincushion. before he took donald trump's vaccine, that man was spry, filled with vigor and vim, famous for his mental acuity. look at him now. in case you think, oh, we're overstating the case, this is a
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bad video, we'll take you to a live shot of that same man to give you some sense of the long-term effects of donald trump's vaccine. here he is speaking in maryland. watch this. >> in the hands of ted cruz and marjorie taylor green. i i mean it. it's not just social security. senator scott wants everything in the federal budget voted denovo every five years it goes out of existence. that includes medicare, veterans benefits, and everything else. along comes senator ron johnson of wisconsin. [crowd booing] > >> tucker: marjorie taylor green controls social security? it doesn't make sense. the compassionate person in you feels for that man, because you know what happened to him. he took donald trump's vaccine, which democrats alerted us this week wasn't properly tested. now your first reaction would
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be, wait a second, seems like a revision of what i saw personally. wasn't it joe biden who promoted the vaccine, who made it mandatory? wasn't joe biden in charge when it became obvious the vaccine didn't work? didn't joe biden's media tell us to get the shot months after donald trump left office? you may remember that. possibly because you remember clips like this, from july of last year. >> if you're a schoolteacher, if you're a nurse, if you're a cop, you need to get vaccinated. and if you don't, you need to look for another job. >> tucker: yeah, take the vax or you're fired. in retrospect, it's pretty obvious they were carrying water for donald trump in that video. now, if you're still not convinced, you're probably a cynical person. you've probably concluded the democrats are panicked for being blamed, trying to shift the blame to donald trump before the
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full-strength of the vaccine comes out. it is coming out, and the midterms are on the way. you may have concluded that. we're not cynical on this show. in fact, we're relieved. now that donald trump is responsible for the vaccine we can finally talk about the vaccine. till now we haven't been able to do, it's been like living in a john cheevers story. dad has passed out drunk at the dinner table, but nobody has mentioned it. we have to pretend it's not happening. "dad is fine. be quiet." over time, that level of denial is hard to sustain. it makes you crazy, but thank god it over now. now that we can blame donald trump for the vaccine, we can finally tell the truth about the vaccine without being fired or attacked or thrown off the internet. we really should have thought about this earlier, because it feels good, the freedom of this. so let's take a moment to talk about donald trump's vaccine and why it seems to be, among other things, dramatically raising death rates among young people. according to data from new zealand, the government there,
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for example, children were vaccinated between the ages of 10-19, were more likely, not less likely, more likely to die within a month of vaccination than those who didn't take the vaccine in the same age group. it's not just the new zealand government. this summer a dutch researcher published a paper that covid-19 vaccinations caused mortality. it found that we could, quote, we could not observe a mortality reducing effect in dutch municipalities. we found a significant mortality enhancing effect during the two periods of high unexplained excess mortality. oh. so the data suggests, don't prove, but suggests, the vaccine may be killing people. unexplained mortality is also on the rise in many other countries. australia, england, wales. the so why is donald trump's
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vaccine doing all of this in other countries? well, we can't be sure. but as alexander baronson reported recently, the canadian government is seeing a similar problem, at huge scale. as of this summer, people who took donald trump's vaccine, in the canadian province of manitoba, are roughly 50% more likely than the unvaccinated to be hospitalized or die from covid. again, to pause, how bad is donald trump's vaccine? so bad that people who take it are more likely to die of covid. hmm. now, we have data from more canadian provinces, but they seem to be hiding it now. on july 28th, the province of british columbia reported it would stop reporting the number of deaths that occurred in people taking the covid booster. oh, wow. why is that? we're not allowed to ask. oh, we are now, because it's a trump crime. the charts are missing from the internet archives, widely known as a front for russian
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operatives working on behalf of who? donald trump. we do have the most recent available data. what do they show? they show that 70% of all deaths in that province occur in people who are boosted. do the math on that for a minute. well, your first reaction might be, oh, well, vaccinated and boosted people tend to be older, so of course they're dying at a greater rate. nothing to do with the shot. but then you look deeper. you read the lancet article entitled risk of infect, hospitalization and death months after a second covid-19 vaccine, that people over the age of 80 have worse outcomes, more hospitalizations, more deaths, when they're vaccinated than when they are unvaccinated. so it turns out when donald trump told you, as he did hundreds of times, certainly you must remember this, that this is a pandemic of the unvaccinated, it turned out to be exactly the opposite. we're seeing this in a lot of
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different places in a lot of different data sets. in fact, as written in "the journal of ver rolling," immune function among vaccinated individuals eight months after the administration, two doses of covid-19 vaccine, was lower than that among unvaccinated individuals. sounds like it's hurting people's immune system in a profound way. another independent study, quote, vaccination introduces a profound interference that causes problems with health. a german tweet stated that at least one out of every 5,000 covid shots causes, quote, serious side effects. 1 in 5,000? really? this shot was taken by hundreds of millions of people, including in this country. they're talking about decreased
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sperm counts. another report in june that there was a 22% drop in the personal counts. on top of that, there's heart inflation. myocarditis, now suddenly famous in neighborhoods across the country, because everyone seems to know someone else's son who has it. in december of last year, researchers at oxford found that, quote, myocarditis risk was increased during 1-28 days following a second vaccine. you knew that, because you're seeing it among you know. no one is talking about it. we're not allowed to talk about it. now we can, because donald trump did it. researchers in israel, meanwhile, found that vaccination increased the 42-day risk of myocarditis by a factor of three. this is a serious heart condition. not a small finding. you may have noticed the rising young athletes dying of heart
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attacks in recent months, something you're not allowed to notice. you can't herself. a 37-year-old cycling champion in scotland just died of a heart attack two days after winning a mountain biking championship. can't say he was out of shape. maybe it wasn't vax related. have you seen that a lot before? hmm. then five doctors you may have read about in toronto who died in the same month in july. now, of that group of five dead physicians, there was a 27-year-old triathlete who died after a swimming competition and 50-year-old olympian who died after a run. these aren't people sitting on the couch, smoking weed and eating doritos. we can't know why all of this happened, but the point is we're allowed to notice now. that's significant, especially since some places are still forcing children to take the vaccine. that would include most colleges in the united states. they just announced that boosters are mandatory, in the district of columbia, which is falling apart, the mayor has decided, she declared this
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today, that unvaccinated students will not be allowed in school. they won't even get virtual learning unless they take a vaccine, donald trump's vaccine, that appears to be hurting a lot of people, but unless they take it they will get no education whatsoever. hmm. who knew that muriel bowser, who runs d.c., was working for donald trump, but she appears to be. at least you know who to blame. if alex baronson had known that two years ago he would have saved him a lot of trouble. alex baronson, of course, is one of the people who brought us this information. he joins us now. alex baronson, don't you think in retrospect, it would have been wise to declare yourself part of the resistance two years agos you begun your reporting journey on this, and you never would have been booted off twitter, and could have said what you wanted to say. >> i'm definitely part of the resistance, tucker.
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i'm just not sure who aim resisting. >> tucker: ha-ha-ha! that's a good point. >> you brought up a lot of interesting data points. i won't mention where you might have found them, although my website is a good place to look. >> tucker: probably so, yes. >> all this stuff, people can kind of -- they can say, oh, myocarditis, you can get that after covid, and that japanese doctor who wrote that's one person who cares, there's one data point that cannot be just waved away, period, okay? and that's all cause mortality. it's the total death count, whether it's in the united states or europe or australia, governments are good at counting their citizens being born and dying. >> tucker: that's right. >> what we've seen for this year, in europe -- this is my top story today, which is why i'm mentioning it -- is week after week european countries
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are reporting above average all cause deaths, as of this moment in europe there are more excess deaths in 2022, which is postvaccination, than in either 2021 or 2020 when covid was supposed to be ravaging europe. no one has offered a good explanation for why this is. >> tucker: so i don't understand. given those data, which i think are indisputable, we can argue what they mean, but they suggest something profound and terrifying is going on. in face of that data, why can they mandate this? why isn't someone trying to figure what's going on? >> i have no idea. nobody under 30 should be getting this. i've said that for a while, but it's indisputably true. the answer might be very uncomfortable for a lot of people, why we're not looking to it. >> tucker: just blame trump. this is one of the great stories of our age.
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i appreciate your doggedness in covering it. alex baronson, thank you. >> thanks, tucker. >> tucker: turns out the fbi dramatically interfered with the 2020 presidential election. dramatically. unequivocally. this was election interference by the country's biggest law enforcement agency says mark zuckerberg. remarkable. details for you. then andrew tate was kicked, not just the internet, but everywhere this week. you're not supposed to listen to andrew tate for some reason. we wondered why. what does andrew tate from to say that they don't want you to hear? we're open-minded, and we sat down with him at length. that interview is coming up.
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fbi intervened and said it was disinformation. how would zuckerberg know? they believe the fbi. keep in mind, the fbi had hunter biden's laptop when they said that. they've had it since 2019. so when the fbi told facebook that on the eve of a presidential election, they knew it was a lie. they interfered in the last presidential election. if ever there was an attack on democracy, it's the country's largest law enforcement agency, weighing in in a dishonest way, three weeks before the voting begins. here's a clip. >> there was a lot of attention on twitter during the election because of the hunter biden laptop story. >> yeah, we had that too. >> yes. you guys censored that as well? >> we took a different path than twitter. i mean, basically the background here is the fbi i think basically came to us, some folks on our team, was, like, hey,
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just so you know, you should be on high alert, we thought there was a lot of russian propaganda in the 2016 election. we have it on notice that basically there's about to be some kind of dump of -- of -- that's similar to that, so just be vigilant. >> tucker: so the fbi censored the story. just to recap, in case you didn't live in this country, prior to two years ago, that's not allowed. you're not allowed to do that. that is election interference. that's an attack on democracy by our most powerful domestic government agency. it's unbelievable. it defies -- we put a request into facebook to see the communications from the fbi to facebook. we have a right to see them. we hope they send them to us. keep in mind, in october of 2020, a facebook executive and democratic operative named andy stone, claimed that facebook was blocking the story as part of our standard process to reduce the spread of misinformation.
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they didn't tell us that the fbi told them it was russian disinformation, which the fbi knew it wasn't. the country's premier civil rights lawyer, founded the center for american liberty. thanks for coming on. this seems like a blockbuster, a shocking story to me. >> it's a shocking story, but it confirms information we already have. i already sued twitter after the election for taking people's speakers down, including my client, and it turned out that he was taken down at the request of the california secretary of state, who was auditioning to become a united states senator in the -- in the biden administration. so we filed a lawsuit, went to court, showed the judge all the evidence of how the government was involved in the censorship, and the judge didn't buy it. the case is pending before the ninth circuit. other cases like this. hearing it from mark zuckerberg's mouth is truly stunning, and i don't know how the government can deny this.
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the timeline is just three weeks before the 2020 election is when the fbi reached out to twitter, facebook, as well as maybe other companies, and said, hey, we heard about this russian disinformation, you might want to suppress this information on your website. by the way, when the fbi reaches out to you, taps you on the shoulder, and asks you to do something, that isn't a suggestion. they have subpoenas, they have guns, and they also are from a government that regulates you. so this is shocking. it demands an investigation. but just adds up to the pile of evidence that i've been saying points to a major reorganization or disbanding of the fbi is needed at this point. i don't trust anything they say. >> tucker: so just to be totally clear from a legal perspective, the u.s. government is not allowed to use itself censorship
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for partisan ends. >> who needs russian disinformation when we have our own? we have our own disinformation coming from the fbi and our own government. this is not trivial, just because it being done to the other side. anybody can control the fbi or some forces can get in there, decide they don't like joe biden, are they going to go out there and start spreading misinformation or suppressing information that's truthful about the biden administration? i don't like that either. this cannot be allowed. we cannot let our law enforcement do this. we've seen it before. so this is not the country that we want to be living in, tucker. >> tucker: no, it's not. thank you so much. so now it's now a crime of course to say the last election was rigged. we haven't said that. mark zuckerberg just admit the last election was rigged by the fbi for the benefit of joe biden. mark zuckerberg said that. when is the director of the fbi going to explain? so one of the biggest people on the internet, andrew tate, a
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couple days ago he disappeared. most of us hadn't heard about him, but turns out a lot of young people knew about andrew tate, accused of all kinds of crimes, none of which he's been charged with, but we thought if they don't want us to hear andrew tate talk, maybe he's worth listening to. our interview with him straight ahead.
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>> tucker: andrew tate is a former kickboxer who's bit up a truly enormous following on social media. until a couple months ago we'd never heard of him. then the other day, virtually every tech company on the planet banned him. not just his presence, but also his ability to conduct business on the internet. he was taken off instagram, facebook, tiktok, youtube. all of it. not only was he not allowed to talk, but you weren't allowed to like him because he was an incredibly bad person.
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our view on that is we'll decide for ourselves, since we're adults, americans, and listen to anyone we want, we'll come to any conclusion we care to come to about what that person is about. we sat down at some length and talked to andrew tate. we wanted to show you some of it, so you could make up your mind, which you're still allowed to do, as far as we're concerned. here's part of the interview. >> i don't really feel i've exposed anything. i'm truly not a very political person. this is the first time someone has experienced this level of ban. i'm not particularly right wing. i don't vote. i mean, i obviously have my own personal views, but they didn't ban me for that. they banned me simply because i had large swaths of the population agreeing to very traditional masculine values, teenage men and young men, 22, 23, 24, were looking up to me and aspiring to be like me. i lead a traditional masculine life. i have fast cars, a big house, a
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lot of money and beautiful girlfriend. they thought this was very, very threatening. and for some reason they decided that it's better if they annihilate me from the internet, replace me with somebody that's more aligned with whatever they're trying to purport. >> tell us what your message is to young men. >> being a man is difficult. mention issues are largely overlooked. the people in charge of the world pretend to care, but when somebody who is championing men's issues like myself comes forward and finally manages to garner huge percentiles of the public support, i'm silenced. they're not really interested in men's issues. there's a lot of young men growing up today that feel disaffected. they feel invisible. the agendas that are being forced down their throats are not agendas they align with or feel affinity to, or agendas they want. i basically just say to men, look, it's a very hard life. you're going to need to get up, work hard, go to the gym.
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strong body is a strong mind. you have to reject listening blindly to everything you're told. reject the slave mind. think for yourself. get a strong network of brothers, work aside them. don't tolerate low-quality people in your life, can means don't tolerate men who just smoke drugs and play video games, or disloyal or dishonest. build a network of high-quality people to reject the programming that the matrix tries to influence you with. they ignore 95mers 95% of what , and they take the bit when i say avoid women that are dishonest, put it on a three or four-second clip, say i'm a massive social
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status, right, men with ferraris, money, rappers, people with youtube channels, interesting people. if you're a normal man with a normal job, you don't really exist in the ol world. it's difficult to get followers. nobody replies to your dms. you don't matter. you don't have access to the sexual marketplace. it's difficult to get recognition that you're alive. a lot of men feel lost and lonely because of that. i was championing to a degree their issues by saying to them, look, that is unfair perhaps, but that's the way the game works. you need to become a man of importance, a man of influence, or you're going to suffer the pain of being invisible forever. here's how you do it. i wasn't trying to change the rules of the game.
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i was just telling men how to win. i came from nothing, and i'm completely and utterly self-made. men are so depressed, because they feel invisible, that life is too hard. women expect me to be strong and smart and funny and interesting with a nice apartment and fast car and tall and well connected and funny. it's just too much for them to handle. the social pressure on men is absolutely immense. i was championing their issues. at the same time all these social media platforms pretend to care. as soon as somebody they resonate withstands up and champions their issues, they mask blanket ban me, which shows they have absolutely no care for the young men of the world today. they think that by banning me i'm just going to vanish and the young men are going to go and start eating the gruel that they're fed on their youtube feed. they don't want to read, they don't want to see transgender people wear makeup. they don't want to see that. they want to see a man who has a bunch of money, a nice life, fast cars, and is strong and is confident. they want action hero.
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that's something that large portions of the world still want to be. and youtube and social media platforms obviously just don't like the idea of that. they want to get rid of me and try to replace me with something they see as far more malleable, trying to create people that are more malleable, easy to program and easy to control. >> tucker: the u.s. embassy in bucharest, romania, was tipped off to your misdeeds, and alerted the local authorities you might be committing human trafficking. given that this is the same charge they leveled against julian assange, or a species of, skeptical, but i want to know the details. were you arrested for human trafficking? what happened? >> yeah. i was not arrested. so what happened is, i suffered from a case of swatting. it's very popular with people who are large on the internet, many large youtubers have been swatted, where you call the police, say somebody has a gun, there's a hostage situation, and a swat team arrives. somebody made a phone call to
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the american embassy saying i was holding women at my house. the police arrived. let me state this now, i state this openly to the world, i have absolute respect for the police. i would hate to live in a country where if you called the police saying women are held against their will that the police don't respond. that would be terrible. of course they should come and look. absolutely. they turned up. they investigated. they realized that nobody was in the house against their will. there was no crime committed. they said, okay, you're not a suspect, but you are a witness to this, along with me, my brother, the housekeeper, the gardener, everybody on the premises at the time was labeled a witness. we had to go to the police station for 45 minutes for pieces of paper. we filled them in and let go. i was swatted. nobody was hurt. there's no human trafficking. there's no women who were tied up. there's none of these things. it's all just complete fallacy. >> tucker: you probably made some of these companies made with your views on covid. so sum up for us, if you would,
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what you think the response to covid globally did to the populations of the west. >> yeah. so i certainly made them mad with my views on covid. i don't want to go too conspiracy theory, and never kill myself. let me say that here for the record. >> tucker: ha-ha-ha. okay. >> at the time of covid first being announced, my brother and i decided, we sat and had a logical conversation, and sat and said we're too young fighting age males. if covid can kill us, then the world is over. it's zombie apocalypse time. there's no point hiding. we may as well go out with a bang. my brother and i flew to stockholm, sweden. sweden never closed down. stockholm and sweden never closed down, never made you wear masks, never mandated the vaccine. at the very beginning of covid, which the rules were strictest,
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when florida was still closed, when miami was still closed, when the republican states were still closed, stockholm, sweden, was wide open with full nightclubs and a party scene like you've never seen. we lived in sweden for three solid months with zero restrictions, zero worry or interest in covid. it was like the world was completely normal. from there, when we left, obviously covid was still going on, and in a neighboring country, you go to germany, and they were having full panic attacks, genuine panic attacks if you didn't have a mask on. it was obvious to me. i spent the last three months ignoring this, and i'm fine. now i'm in german surrounded by panic attacks and endless masks. this doesn't make sense. i told the truth on social media. i said this is obviously an overreaction. the dismation of your income, the fact that you can't can't get a doctor's appointment for a genuine ailment or risk of cancer, for example, the fact you can't see your loved ones in their final days, these things are far more destructive than
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the common cold. i think that what they're doing is unfair. i think it's a massive overreaction. this is based on my personal experience. i think at the time, although there was a lot of pushback, but i would like to think now that 99% of the world sees i was totally right. it's funny, tucker, i'll tell you, at the height of covid i used to say to my brother, how will people struggle with the cognitive dissonance when this is all over? covid is still out there. nothing has gone away. the thing that we were all hiding from is still right there, out there, to get you. but now everyone walks around, they're not scared of it anymore. i'm, like, are people critical enough to analyze themselves and say for a year of my life i was deathly afraid of something. now i'm exposing myself to said thing. i'm not afraid anymore. the media tricked me and i was a fool. but they're not. they don't even seem to self-analyze and go i got tricked. they're just, like,, oh, okay, next thing. hey, andrew now, like robots.
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it's mind bending to me truly. >> tucker: so i saw you compare the experience of rich people under covid, you're one of them, to everybody else. what did you notice about that? it seemed like a two-tiered response. >> yeah. so the story was very simple. i was flying inside of europe. there's a lot of low-cost air carriers. only low-cost primarily. not much first class, business class, anything like this. i was flying, and my experience was plagued by endless paperwork, wearing a mask, put the mask over your nose. every time you eat, you have to put the mask on in between. i got told off for not having the mask up high enough, told off for drinking too long, because my mask wasn't on. pure panic and chaos. decided i'll buy private jets from now on. when i bought a private jet, there was no masks, paperwork, no masks when i landed.
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my air stewardess was not wearing a mask. pilot wasn't wearing a mask. covid didn't exist if you're rich enough. maybe covid is scared of money. i'm not sure. seems like everyone flying on private jets never had to worry about covid ever, it's just the people at the bottom who had to worry about covid. it's interesting, right, life has always been two-tiered, this separation in regards to physical access. i think a lot of people in the world don't realize that it still exists, and the rules are only the rules for a certain class of people. once you pass a certain wealth index you can do whatever you want. covid highlighted that to me. it's truly sad. it's easy to make a joke of it, but when i would fly on a private jet, do whatever i wanted, go to sweden, party in nightclubs, do what i wanted, and come to england, and see my friend who couldn't see his dying mother because of a covid restriction, that's criminal. it's crazy what's happened, how
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the world has moved on, and cognitive dissonance that people don't have enough respect for themselves and analyze how they were easily fooled. it's really sad to even think about. maybe that was the beginning of me being disliked by pointing out my human experiences during the pandemic. i want to tell you something that's actually kind of scary about this banning. it all came so hard and so fast that i don't know if they all just follow each other. i don't know if they're all influenced by each other, if there's someone above them all. i don't know. but when they go to cancel you, ladies and gentlemen, it comes hard and fast. you lose your facebook, then your instagram, then your gmail, then your discord, then your website hosting and your domain name. then your payment processor. then your bank. it's just, like, in real time, you're watching your phone and
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app just exploding. boom, boom, it's crazy. >> tucker: andrew tate. he has a right to speak in public. we do believe that. no one gets to tell you who you can watch. no one gets to tell you what you have to think. no one gets to tell you who you have to hate. you're an american, an adult. you can make those decisions yourself. why don't they want you to hear from andrew tate? they think he's a worse influence on the youth than, say, credit cardi b, tell us how. they're telling us he's a criminal. okay. has he been charged? who are the victims? what are their names? it's going to take more than that to have us believe he should be canceled, or anyone else, by the way. we're against censorship, period. more than anything, we're in favor of people making up their own minds based on the evidence, like adults do. so if you're interested, watch the full unedited interview with andrew tate after the show on
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music or musical >> tucker: all authoritarians obsess over the parts of government that have the guns. they want to control them completely. the pentagon with that in mind inspiring service members from liking where sharing social media posts that in any way criticize the administration, including those by the lieutenant colonel. if fired by the one man who criticize disastrous exit from
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afghanistan. author of the new book "crisis on command" joining us tonight. we appreciate your coming on once again. you personally have not only been separated from the marine corps, but band and nobody can like your tweets? >> tucker, great to be back on and, yes, the dod has a standing order that nobody can like, share, or engage in my content. >> sean: you spent your life in the marine corps as an officer and this is a new thing, correct? it wasn't always like this in a reality check? >> i made 17 years not saying whatever i wanted to say whenever i wanted. i made a decision that at a certain point, we have to look at the system and make decisions we think are within our values. everything i did was out of the love for the marine corps. >> tucker: for sure, what happened to you for telling the obvious truth that everybody
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knew? one of the most depressing things that has happened. we assured her and tell us that there is active duty members of the marine corps who sympathize with you and admire you for what you do. >> there are still a ton of talented members in the marine corps. the whole extremism thing as a distraction and lloyd austin might ask you how many words have we lost in extremism? at the is zero. how many words have we lost based on poor leadership and strategy. a lot. the leaders i have that are still in the military contacting me, i know you're looking for ways to make a change, but i think right now is the time in american history where we have to look at the problems in the military and have hard conversations about the truth that we can also obviously see. >> tucker: every time you're on i find it inspiring and concerning. a true hero, stu schaller, thank you.
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>> tucker: tony andrew tate is a thought criminal with an inalienable right to decide for yourself and you can fox nation right now with the whole interview. we'll be back, we always are, hpm, your sean hannity. wait, that's not sean hannity, that's pete hegseth! >> i snuck up on you, brother! little ambush, tucker, great show, thanks a lot! welcome to the special edition of "hannity" as tucker said, i'm pete hegseth in tonight for s sean. we begin with breaking news from south florida. today judge bruce reinhardt ordered the doj to unseal a redacted version of that affidavit used to justify the mar-a-lago raid. officials ha u
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