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  • Media organizations ask Congress for access to January 6 footage | CNN Politics

    Media organizations ask Congress for access to January 6 footage | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    CNN, along with a group of other media organizations, has signed on to a letter calling for congressional leaders to grant access to security footage from inside the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, after House Speaker Kevin McCarthy gave Fox News’ Tucker Carlson access to the material earlier this month.

    In a Friday letter on behalf of the press coalition to McCarthy, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, attorney Charles Tobin called on Congress to release all the security footage showing the attack on the Capitol.

    “Without full public access to the complete historical record, there is concern that an ideologically-based narrative of an already polarizing event will take hold in the public consciousness, with destabilizing risks to the legitimacy of Congress, the Capitol Police, and the various federal investigations and prosecutions of January 6 crimes,” Tobin said in the letter.

    Advance Publications, ABC News, Axios, CBS News, Scripps, Gannett, the Los Angeles Times, Politico and ProPublica are the other media organizations joining CNN on the letter.

    The request comes after Carlson announced on his show that he had been granted “unfettered” access to “44,000 hours” of surveillance footage from inside the Capitol on January 6. CNN previously reported that McCarthy did not consult with his House GOP leadership team or with Jeffries before deciding to give Carlson access.

    In an interview with The New York Times on Wednesday, McCarthy justified the decision by saying, “I promised.”

    “I was asked in the press about these tapes, and I said they do belong to the American public. I think sunshine lets everybody make their own judgment,” the California Republican told the Times.

    McCarthy has faced significant pressure from his right flank to relitigate the work of the House select committee that investigated the January 6, 2021, insurrection. The now-defunct January 6 panel got access to all the security footage from US Capitol Police during its investigation, but it did not release some footage for security reasons. A source familiar with the committee’s work told CNN that the unreleased footage was considered sensitive material because it showed top officials moving through the US Capitol when they evacuated to safety.

    During his bid for the speakership, McCarthy vowed to hold hearings on the security failures that led to the Capitol getting overrun, and he told the select committee to preserve all of its records for potential future review by the newly empowered GOP majority.

    Carlson has been a prominent promoter of January 6 conspiracy theories and has devoted significant airtime to boosting false claims that liberal “deep state” partisans within the FBI orchestrated the insurrection as a way to undermine former President Donald Trump.

    Some Republican lawmakers had hoped to review the material themselves, likely to look for footage to support their controversial claims about the January 6 attack.

    Democrats have criticized McCarthy’s decision to give Carlson access to the security footage.

    Jeffries said in a letter to colleagues that the move “represents an egregious security breach that endangers the hardworking women and men of the United States Capitol Police, who valiantly defended our democracy with their lives at risk on that fateful day.” Schumer told his Senate colleagues in a letter that the disclosure “poses grave security risks to members of Congress and everyone who works on Capitol Hill.”

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  • “That’s Not Public Disclosure”: Kevin McCarthy’s Deal With Tucker Carlson Is No Act of Transparency

    “That’s Not Public Disclosure”: Kevin McCarthy’s Deal With Tucker Carlson Is No Act of Transparency

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    In defending his decision to hand over security footage from the Capitol riot exclusively to Tucker Carlson, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has claimed that he is fulfilling a promise of transparency he made to voters. “I was asked in the press about these tapes,” he told The New York Times, “and I said they do belong to the American public.”

    But McCarthy has hardly fulfilled that vow: The full record of security footage from the January 6 attack is still not available to the public or any members of the media aside from Carlson, who has theorized that FBI operatives orchestrated the riot as part of a conspiracy to undermine Donald Trump and frame his supporters. (The Fox News host has conducted sympathetic interviews with Capitol riot suspects; attempted to downplay the insurrection as a mere act of “vandalism”; and suggested that antifa activists might have secretly incited violence on that day.) And by granting Carlson access, McCarthy will allow his majority to cast doubt on the facts of the insurrection without having to rehash it themselves.

    “Tucker is not going to spend his TV program emphasizing previously unseen acts of violence by Trump supporters,” Ford Fischer, a video journalist working to unearth a massive cache of January 6 footage, told me. “Tucker is going to put out things that are weird or counter to the narrative, which is fine. But that’s not public disclosure, that’s media relations for the Republican Party.”

    Fischer’s concerns have also been echoed by top Democratic brass, like Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer, who has accused McCarthy of “pandering to MAGA election deniers.” As he wrote in a Wednesday letter, “The footage Speaker McCarthy is making available to Fox News is a treasure trove of closely held information about how the Capitol complex is protected and its public release would compromise the safety of the Legislative Branch and allow those who want to commit another attack to learn how Congress is safeguarded.”

    The McCarthy-Carlson deal comes roughly a month and a half after McCarthy’s embattled bid for the Speakership, during which the then House minority leader promised GOP hard-liners, including Matt Gaetz, that he’d release thousands of hours of footage from January 6. (At the time, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a vocal advocate for those charged in the Capitol riot, pointed to McCarthy’s vow as one of the reasons she so fervently supported his bid.)

    Thus far, a relatively small amount of surveillance footage has trickled out of federal and congressional investigations or other official avenues, including clips filed in the hundreds of cases related to the attack. Officials have previously claimed that releasing all of the footage could open the Capitol up to future security risks—a concern that Republicans seem to have forgotten about.

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • Kevin McCarthy Gives Tucker Carlson His Blessing to Rewrite the History of January 6

    Kevin McCarthy Gives Tucker Carlson His Blessing to Rewrite the History of January 6

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    Kevin McCarthy has a long, documented history of rewriting the events of January 6, 2021, for his own professional benefit. Just a few short weeks after declaring that Donald Trump “bears responsibility for Wednesday’s attack on Congress by mob rioters” and that “He should have immediately denounced the mob when he saw what was unfolding,” the GOP lawmaker traveled to Mar-a-Lago to kiss the ex-president and insurrection-inciter’s ring. A few months after that, he went on national TV and lied about Trump’s knowledge of the attack on the Capitol, claiming that the president hadn’t seen the riot, and that when he found out, he moved to end it. As we also learned last year, McCarthy had privately told colleagues that Trump’s behavior on January 6 was “atrocious and totally wrong”; that Trump was at fault for “inciting people” to attack the Capitol building; and that he was going to advise Trump to resign. But he refused to support the January 6 committee’s formation, and said that any probe that didn’t also look into unrelated antifa riots and protests against police brutality was a sham. All of which is to say, he’s never been a straight operator when it comes to the insurrection, and now, he’s decided to join forces with one of the most dangerous sources of misinformation about the attack on the Capitol.

    On Monday, Axios reported that McCarthy “has given Fox News’ Tucker Carlson exclusive access to 41,000 hours of Capitol surveillance footage from the Jan. 6 riot,” according to sources familiar with the matter. The outlet also revealed that “Carlson TV producers were on Capitol Hill last week to begin digging through the trove, which includes multiple camera angles from all over Capitol grounds. Excerpts will begin airing in the coming weeks.”

    But wait, you say—isn’t it possible that Carlson will simply air the footage in a straightforward manner and stick to the facts of what happened on that dark day in history? And the answer is: No! Of course he won’t! How do we know this? Let’s examine the Fox host’s record on the matter:

    • In 2021, Carlson produced Patriot Purge, a “documentary” about 1/6 in which he, NPR noted at the time, “strongly suggests that the insurrection was not orchestrated by former president Donald Trump’s fans, but by his foes, including violent leftist antifa groups and even the FBI and other national security divisions. He plants the idea that the siege was a ‘false flag’ operation to discredit Trump supporters.”
    • That “documentary” was so off the rails and divorced from reality that Carlson was publicly criticized by his own colleagues and at least two Fox News contributors resigned in protest; even the network attempted to distance itself from the project (Patriot Purge was aired on Fox Nation).
    • An actual thing Carlson said during the show: “The very same corrupt interests in Washington that pushed the Iraq war under false pretenses are now pushing the lie of a domestic white-terror army. They’re tying millions of law-abiding Americans to al-Qaida and ISIS. January 6 is being used as a pretext to strip millions of Americans—disfavored Americans—of their core constitutional rights and to defame them as domestic terrorists.”
    • When not claiming 1/6 was an inside job, Carlson has dubbed the violent riot, which left people dead, “a forgettably minor outbreak by recent standards” and a mere act of “vandalism.”
    • He proudly defended Fox News’ decision not to air the January 6 committee’s first prime-time hearing, saying, “This is the only hour on an American news channel that won’t be covering their propaganda live. They are lying and we are not going to help them do it.”
    • Despite telling his viewers not to listen to the committee, which spent more than a year investigating the attack, he claimed in an interview with Axios, “If there was ever a question that’s in the public’s interest to know, it’s what actually happened on January 6. By definition, this video will reveal it. It’s impossible for me to understand why any honest person would be bothered by that.”

    In a statement, January 6 committee chairman Bennie Thompson said, “If Speaker McCarthy has indeed granted Tucker Carlson—a Fox host who routinely spreads misinformation and [Russian president Vladimir] Putin’s poisonous propaganda—and his producers access to this sensitive footage, he owes the American people an explanation of why he has done so and what steps he has taken to address the significant security concerns at stake.”

    So why is McCarthy effectively giving Carlson his blessing to no doubt use the footage to even further push baseless conspiracy theories about what “actually happened”? Playbook offered a simple theory this morning, i.e. that the House Speaker is trying to get on Carlson’s good side, “offering an olive branch to one of his most high-profile skeptics”:

    It’s a strategy he has used in the past. In the previous Republican majority, McCarthy regularly received bad press from conservative outlets, with many on the right lambasting him as an establishment “RINO.” In recent years, as he sought to make allies in that community, McCarthy and his team gave such publications—as well as a select few mainstream reporters he hoped to cultivate for glowing coverage—vast access in hopes of getting positive press. For the most part, it has worked. We’ll see if it does with Carlson, too.

    Yes, it’s all very pathetic, which is in line with McCarthy’s MO, one that recently saw him giving in to the demands of the House Freedom Caucus to win the Speakership vote after a very sad 14 losses. And by the way, this isn’t the first time McCarthy has made it clear that he’ll do anything for Carlson’s approval. As my colleague Molly Jong-Fast wrote earlier this month, the House select subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government was basically “the brainchild of Carlson,” who urged Republicans to establish a new Church Committee to investigate what the FBI and intelligence agencies “have been doing to control domestic politics” alongside the chyron “How Badly Does Kevin McCarthy Want This Job?” 

    Seems like a less-than-ideal way to run the federal government. Like, from a democracy standpoint.

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    Bess Levin

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  • Maybe Tucker Carlson Meant “Demonic Force” in a Nice Way When He Likened Trump to Satan

    Maybe Tucker Carlson Meant “Demonic Force” in a Nice Way When He Likened Trump to Satan

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    Donald Trump has been called a lot of things by a lot of people over the last number of years. “Agent Orange.” “Sentient circus peanut.” “Staph infection on the ass of society.” Something that “came out of a clogged drain at the Wonka factory.” Still, no one expected the ex-president to be described in anything less than glowing terms by the gang over at Fox News, the network that effectively served as state TV while he was in office. And yet, at least one of Fox’s top talking heads likened him to none other than the devil back in 2021, all while slinging the guy’s election lies on live TV.

    In a text message to his producer, Alex Pfeiffer, sent the day of the January 6 insurrection, Tucker Carlsonfriend to war criminals and serial liars alikecalled Trump “a demonic force, a destroyer.” The host added: “But he’s not going to destroy us.” We know this thanks to a Thursday court filing from Dominion Voting Systems, the voting technology company currently suing Fox News for $1.6 billion over the network’s 2020 election coverage. The filing offers an inside glimpse at what the network’s top stars and executives were saying amongst themselves about Trump’s election lies—i.e., that they were bullshit—despite claiming that the election had been stolen with Dominion’s help.

    “From the top down, Fox knew ‘the dominion stuff’ was ‘total bs,’” the filing reads, citing “a mountain of direct evidence.” Positing that the reason the network “peddle[d] this false narrative to its viewers,” attorneys for Dominion said that “Fox’s correct call of Arizona for Joe Biden triggered a backlash among its audience and ‘the network [was] being rejected.’” For example, two days after the election, on November 5, 2020, Carlson texted Pfeiffer to claim that the team that had called Arizona for Biden was going to screw up his reputation as a right-wing crackpot (our words). “We worked really hard to build what we have,” Carlson said, according to the filing. “Those fuckers are destroying our credibility. It enrages me.” Pfeiffer then responded that “many on ‘our side’ are being reckless demagogues right now.” (“Our side” presumably refers to hosts like Carlson, Sean Hannity, and Laura Ingraham.) “Of course they are,” Carlson wrote back. “We’re not going to follow them.” He added that the then president was good at “destroying things. He’s the undisputed world champion of that. He could easily destroy us if we play it wrong.”

    The filing notes that, days later, Carlson wrote privately that Trump needed to admit “that there wasn’t enough fraud to change the outcome” of the election. Later, he wrote that Sidney Powell, one of Trump’s lawyers, was “lying” about having evidence of fraud. A few days after that, Carlson expressed similar ideas to Ingraham, saying, “Sidney Powell is lying by the way. I caught her. It’s insane.” Ingraham responded, “Sidney is a complete nut. No one will work with her. Ditto with Rudy.” Carlson replied, “It’s unbelievably offensive to me. Our viewers are good people and they believe it.”

    And yet, by mid-January, Carlson was apparently all in on publicly pushing Team Trump’s election lies on his viewers. Just weeks after the insurrection and his likening of Trump to the devil, the prime time host had Mike Lindell on his show, where, per the filing, the My Pillow founder “spouted…conspiracies on air after previewing them for Carlson’s staff during a pre-interview.”

    In a statement, Fox News said: “There will be a lot of noise and confusion generated by Dominion and their opportunistic private equity owners, but the core of this case remains about freedom of the press and freedom of speech, which are fundamental rights afforded by the Constitution and protected by New York Times v. Sullivan.” The network also insisted that Dominion “mischaracterized the record, cherry-picked quotes stripped of key context, and spilled considerable ink on facts that are irrelevant under black-letter principles of defamation law.” 

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    Bess Levin

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  • Tucker Carlson Hints AGAIN At Election Fraud And The Timing Is So, So Awkward

    Tucker Carlson Hints AGAIN At Election Fraud And The Timing Is So, So Awkward

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    On “Tucker Carlson Tonight” the Fox News host opened with musings on “what the hell is going on in our country.”

    “There are so many unanswered questions ― some of them lingering,” he said. “How, for example, did senile hermit Joe Biden get 15 million more votes than his former boss, rock star crowd-surfer Barack Obama? Results like that would seem to defy the laws of known physics and qualify instead as a miracle. Was the 2020 election a miracle? Honestly, we don’t know and we don’t expect to get an answer to it tonight.”

    Carlson’s questioning of the 2020 tally came hours after a legal filing showing that he and other Fox News hosts privately voiced strong doubts about the claims of Trump and his allies. He said that Sidney Powell, a Trump lawyer who unsuccessfully litigated claims that the vote was stolen, was “lying” about having evidence, according to the court filing in Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation lawsuit against Fox News.

    In addition, a Georgia grand jury found no evidence of “widespread fraud” in that state’s election favoring Biden, and believes some witnesses lied under oath, according to excerpts of the panel’s report released by a judge on Thursday.

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  • Chelsea Handler Taunts ‘Hate-Masturbating’ Tucker Carlson Over Latest Meltdown

    Chelsea Handler Taunts ‘Hate-Masturbating’ Tucker Carlson Over Latest Meltdown

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    Handler’s skit showed how she has practically superhuman powers because she doesn’t have children ― or at the very least can spend the day doing “whatever the fuck I feel like.”

    That triggered both Carlson and a guest on his show as well as others in right-wing media, and Handler said that proves her point.

    “Why would I even need my own children when I get to hear these crybabies all the time?” she asked.

    Then, she had a question just for Carlson.

    “Are you really upset about how much freedom I have ― or are you upset that you haven’t been able to take it away from me yet?” she asked, then promised to keep “triggering” him with more videos.

    “I think we both know that you are hate-masturbating to me, and I’m down with that,” she said:

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  • Boris Johnson Reveals What ‘Horrified’ Him After Meeting Republicans In DC

    Boris Johnson Reveals What ‘Horrified’ Him After Meeting Republicans In DC

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    After meeting Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill this week, former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson offered an observation: Why are they so afraid of Tucker Carlson?

    Johnson met with House and Senate GOP leadership and other Republican lawmakers on Tuesday to lobby support for the U.S. to sustain aid to Ukraine’s defense against the Russian invasion. The future of American aid to Ukraine has been up in the air since Republicans took control of the House, amid resistance from some members, and a sustained push of pro-Russia talking points from far-right personalities like Fox News’ Carlson.

    “I’ve been amazed and horrified by how many people are frightened of a guy called Tucker Carlson,” Johnson said Wednesday during a discussion at the Atlantic Council think tank. “Has anybody heard of Tucker Carlson? What is it with this guy?”

    “All these wonderful Republicans seem somehow intimidated by his perspective,” he said, adding that he was “struck by how often this comes up.”

    “Bad ideas,” Johnson said, are “starting to infect some of the thinking around the world” about what Russian President Vladimir Putin stands for and believes in.

    “It’s a disaster,” Johnson said. “He stands for war, aggression, systematic murder, rape and destruction. That’s what he stands for.”

    Johnson, who led the U.K. when Russia first invaded Ukraine, was a strong supporter of the latter during his tenure. He stepped down as prime minister in September following multiple scandals. Downing Street has distanced itself from Johnson’s U.S. trip, saying the former prime minister is acting in his own capacity.

    Carlson, who has a history of siding with Russia, has escalated his pro-Russia and anti-Ukraine rhetoric since the invasion last February, repeatedly parroting Kremlin propaganda and earning a rapport with Russian state media.

    He routinely vilifies the U.S. government for sending aid to Ukraine and pushes conspiratorial claims that support his messaging. In December, when Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited the U.S. in a bid for continued aid, Carlson complained that he was “dressed like the manager of a strip club” and said it was “humiliating” that he was allowed to address Congress.

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  • Mehdi Hasan Trashes ‘Far-Right Loon’ Tucker Carlson Over Paul Pelosi Conspiracy

    Mehdi Hasan Trashes ‘Far-Right Loon’ Tucker Carlson Over Paul Pelosi Conspiracy

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    “They spent so much time spreading homophobic conspiracy theories insinuating that there was some hidden secret story behind that assault,” he told fellow MSNBC host Ayman Mohyeldin on Sunday. “And they were obsessed with wanting to see the body cam footage.”

    Now released, that footage shows the attack on Pelosi by a hammer-wielding home invader looking for his wife, Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), who was speaker of the House at the time.

    The 82-year-old was hospitalized for nearly a week after suffering a fractured skull. Police say the alleged attacker, 42-year-old David DePape, wanted to kidnap the then-speaker, who was not at home.

    Hasan played a supercut of Carlson demanding the body cam footage.

    “We’re not the crazy people, you’re the liars,” Carlson ranted last year over the lack of footage.

    Hasan wondered if Carlson will apologize now that the footage has been released and doesn’t support any of the conspiracy theories.

    “No, of course not,” he said, answering his own question. “You simply cannot engage in good faith with these people.”

    Mohyeldin agreed, saying the footage was eventually released to appease the “far-right loons” and debunk the conspiracies… to no avail, since they’re already spinning new ones.

    “That’s the beauty, Ayman, of being a far-right loon, of being a conspiracy theorist,” Hasan concluded. “You don’t have to worry about evidence. Any evidence to the contrary just becomes part of the conspiracy.”

    See their full discussion below:

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  • M&M’s Spokescandies Catch a Literal Break

    M&M’s Spokescandies Catch a Literal Break

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    M&M’s tried to update its anthropomorphized candy’s characters and caused a meltdown. It’s a problem that can only be solved by one thing: a Super Bowl commercial starring Maya Rudolph.

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    Kenzie Bryant

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  • Tucker Carlson Gets All Giddy With Excitement As GOP Rep. Lights Up On His Show

    Tucker Carlson Gets All Giddy With Excitement As GOP Rep. Lights Up On His Show

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    Tucker Carlson on Friday defended the right of GOP House lawmakers to smoke inside their congressional offices following a reported increase in such behavior since their party won a razor-thin majority in the 2022 midterms.

    It was all about “freedom,” agreed Carlson and Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas).

    Toward the end of the interview, Nehls pulled a cigar from his pocket and appeared to light up (although no smoke immediately rose).

    Carlson was giddy with excitement and praised Nehls for “striking a blow for freedom.”

    “That is the smell of freedom,” Carlson added. “We appreciate your coming on tonight and standing up for Americanness.”

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  • Are Gas Stoves Doomed?

    Are Gas Stoves Doomed?

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    Somehow, in a few short days, gas stoves have gone from a thing that some people cook with to, depending on your politics, either a child-poisoning death machine or a treasured piece of national patrimony. Suddenly, everyone has an opinion. Gas stoves! Who could have predicted it?

    The roots of the present controversy can be traced back to late December, when scientists published a paper arguing that gas stoves are to blame for nearly 13 percent of childhood asthma cases in the U.S. This finding was striking but not really new: The scientific literature establishing the dangers of gas stoves—and the connection to childhood asthma in particular—goes back decades. Then, on Monday, the fracas got well and truly under way, when Richard Trumka Jr., a member of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, said in an interview with Bloomberg News that the commission would consider a full prohibition on gas stoves. “This is a hidden hazard,” he said. “Any option is on the table. Products that can’t be made safe can be banned.”

    Just like that, gas stoves became the newest front in America’s ever expanding culture wars. Politicians proceeded to completely lose their minds. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis tweeted a cartoon of two autographed—yes autographed—gas stoves. Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio declared simply: “God. Guns. Gas stoves.” Naturally, Tucker Carlson got involved. “I would counsel mass disobedience in the face of tyranny in this case,” he told a guest on his Fox News show.

    No matter that Democrats are more likely to have gas stoves than Republicans, and in fact the only states in which a majority of households use gas stoves—California, Nevada, Illinois, New York, New Jersey—are states that went blue in 2020. Why let a few pesky facts spoil a perfectly good opportunity to own the libs? The Biden administration, for its part, clarified yesterday that it has no intention of banning gas stoves. In the long run, though, this may prove to have been more a stay of execution than a pardon.

    Beyond the knee-jerk partisanship, the science of gas stoves is not entirely straightforward. Emily Oster, an economist at Brown University, suggested in her newsletter that the underlying data establishing the connection between gas-stove use and childhood asthma may not be as clear-cut as the new study makes it out to be. And because those data are merely correlational, we can’t draw any straightforward causal conclusions. This doesn’t mean gas stoves are safe, Oster told me, but it complicates the picture. Switching from gas to electric right this minute probably isn’t necessary, she said, but she would make the change if she happened to be redesigning her kitchen.

    Whatever the shortcomings of the available data, it’s clear that gas stoves are worse for the climate and fill our homes with pollutants we’re better off not inhaling. Brady Seals, a manager at the Rocky Mountain Institute and a lead author of the new paper, told me that even assuming the maximum amount of uncertainty, her work still suggests that more than 6 percent of childhood asthma cases in the U.S. are associated with gas stoves.

    Regardless of the exact science, gas stoves might be in trouble anyway. Statistically, they’re not all that deeply entrenched to begin with: Only about 40 percent of American households have one. Plus, induction stoves—a hyper-efficient option that generates heat using electromagnetism—are on the rise. “We’re not asking people to go back to janky coils,” said Leah Stokes, a political scientist at UC Santa Barbara who has provided testimony on the subject of gas stoves before the U.S. Senate, and who is currently in the process of installing an induction stove in her home.

    Rachelle Boucher, a chef who has worked in restaurants, in appliance showrooms, and as a private cook for such celebrity clients as George Lucas and Metallica, swears by induction. She started using it about 15 years ago and has since become a full-time evangelist. (In the past, Boucher has done promotions for electric-stove companies, though she doesn’t anymore.) Induction, she told me, tops gas in just about every way. For one thing, “the speed is remarkable.” An induction stovetop can boil a pot of water in just two minutes, twice as quickly as a gas burner. For another, it allows for far greater precision. When you adjust the heat, the change is nearly instantaneous. “Once you use that speed,” Boucher said, “it’s weird to go back and have everything be so much harder to control.” Induction stoves also emit virtually no excess heat, reducing air-conditioning costs and making it harder to burn yourself. And they’re also easier to clean.

    Induction stoves do have minor drawbacks. Because they are flat and use electromagnetism, they aren’t compatible with all cookware, meaning that if you make the switch, you may also have to buy yourself a new wok or kettle. Flambéing and charring will also take a little longer, Boucher told me, but few home cooks are deploying those techniques on a regular basis. In recent years, induction has received the endorsement of some of the world’s top chefs, who have tended to be ardent gas-stove users. Eric Ripert, whose restaurant Le Bernardin has three Michelin stars, switched his home kitchens from gas to induction. “After two days, I was in love,” he told The New York Times last year. At his San Francisco restaurant, Claude Le Tohic, a James Beard Award–winning chef, has made the switch to induction. The celebrity chef and food writer Alison Roman is also a convert: “I have an induction stove by choice AMA,” she tweeted yesterday.

    If it’s good enough for them, it’s probably good enough for us. At the moment, induction stoves are more expensive than the alternatives, although their efficiency and the fact that they don’t heat up the kitchen help offset the disparity. So, too, do the rebates included in last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, which should kick in later this year and can amount to as much as $840. The price has been falling in recent years, and as it continues to come down, Stokes told me, she expects induction to overtake gas. A 2022 Consumer Reports survey found that while 3 percent of Americans have induction stoves, nearly 70 might consider going induction the next time they buy new appliances. “I think the same thing’s going to happen for induction stoves” as happened with electric vehicles, Stokes told me. In the end, culture-war considerations will lose out to questions of cost and quality. The better product will win the day, plain and simple.

    Still, gas stoves’ foray into the culture wars likely means that at least some Republicans will probably scorn electric stoves now in the same way they have masks over the past few years. And this whole episode does have a distinctly post-pandemic feel to it: the concern about the air we’re breathing, the discussion of what precautions we ought to take, the panic and outrage in response. The new gas-stove controversy feels as though it has been jammed into a partisan framework established—or at least refined—during the pandemic. “I don’t know if this discourse that we’re seeing now could have happened five years ago,” Brady Seals told me. Whatever happens to gas stoves, the public-health culture wars don’t seem to be going anywhere.

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    Jacob Stern

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  • NOT REAL NEWS: A look at what didn’t happen this week

    NOT REAL NEWS: A look at what didn’t happen this week

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    A roundup of some of the most popular but completely untrue stories and visuals of the week. None of these are legit, even though they were shared widely on social media. The Associated Press checked them out. Here are the facts:

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    Claims baselessly link COVID vaccines to athlete deaths

    CLAIM: Two researchers found that more than 1,500 athletes have suffered cardiac arrest since COVID-19 vaccinations began, compared to a previous average of 29 athletes per year, suggesting the vaccines are causing a dramatic rise in such cardiac issues.

    THE FACTS: The researchers cited a number from a blog that lists news stories about recent deaths and medical emergencies among people of all ages, from all over the world — some of which were attributed to other causes. Following Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin’s cardiac arrest during a game Monday, social media posts and Fox News gave air to a long-circulating and faulty narrative that COVID-19 vaccines are causing a dramatic increase in athlete deaths. “Cardiologist Peter McCullough and researcher Panagis Polykretis looked into this trend in Europe, European sports leagues. They found that prior to COVID and the COVID-19 vaccines there were roughly 29 cardiac arrests in those European sports leagues per year,” Fox’s Tucker Carlson claimed in a segment Tuesday. “Since the vax campaign began, there have been more than 1,500 total cardiac arrests in those leagues and two-thirds of those were fatal.” Carlson was in fact referencing a letter, not a rigorous study, that McCullough and Polykretis published in a Scandinavian journal in late 2022. And that letter simply cites the blog goodsciencing.com. The blog’s list is a compilation of news reports about recent deaths and medical emergencies, and it includes cases not reported to be spurred by cardiac arrest: Some deaths, for example, were reportedly from cancer. The list also includes incidents from around the world and among people of all ages — including some in their 70s and 80s — not just athletes in “European sports leagues,” as Carlson claimed. “It’s not real research,” Dr. Matthew Martinez, director of sports cardiology at Atlantic Health System in Morristown Medical Center, told the AP. “Anybody can write a letter to the editor and then quote an article that has no academic rigor.” Dr. Jonathan Kim, chief of sports cardiology at Emory University School of Medicine, similarly said of the blog post: “It’s just shocking to use that as a citation.” “It’s scientific garbage, you can’t just pull a bunch of media reports,” he added. The letter by McCullough and Polykretis goes on to compare the blog’s questionable “1,598” figure of recent incidents to a 2006 study that found 1,101 reports of sudden cardiac death in athletes over a 38-year period, or an average of 29 per year. That analysis, however, reviewed literature specifically for reports of sudden cardiac death among athletes under the age of 35. The study also noted that its findings were limited because cases were likely underestimated.” Dr. Neel Chokshi, medical director of Penn Medicine’s Sports Cardiology and Fitness Program, said it would be “inaccurate” to make conclusions by comparing the 2006 study and the blog’s figures. “The data presented here does not support the notion that vaccines have caused an increase in sudden death,” he said. The COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna do carry a rare risk of myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart, though experts and officials say the benefits of vaccination outweigh the risks. Cardiologists have told the AP that they have not observed the dramatic increase in sudden cardiac arrest as alleged on social media. McCullough and Fox News did not return requests for comment.

    — Associated Press writer Angelo Fichera in Philadelphia contributed this report with additional reporting from Ali Swenson and Sophia Tulp in New York.

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    Video shows months-old interview with Tucker Carlson and Andrew Tate

    CLAIM: Social media personality Andrew Tate has been released from custody in Romania, an interview with Fox News host Tucker Carlson shows.

    THE FACTS: The Fox Nation interview was posted on Aug. 25, 2022, on Carlson’s social media accounts. Tate, along with three others, will be detained for 30 days in Romania during an investigation. Last week, Tate, a former professional kickboxer, was detained in Romania on charges of human trafficking and rape, according to officials. In the aftermath, multiple social media users resurfaced a months-old clip of Carlson interviewing Tate, claiming the video showed Tate after being released from custody. “ANDREW TATE and his Brother have been Released. NO CHARGES,” claims a tweet containing the video. In the shortened clip posted on social media, Carlson asks Tate whether he was arrested in Romania for human trafficking. Tate responds, “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. It’s where you call the police and you say somebody has a gun or there’s a hostage situation, and the swat team arrives.” But the clip was published months before Tate was detained last week. A longer clip of the interview was published on Carlson’s Facebook page on Aug. 25. On Dec. 29, Tate, a British citizen, was initially being held with his brother Tristan and two Romanians for 24 hours north of Romania’s capital, Bucharest. A judge extended their detention period to 30 days from their initial detention period, ​​said Ramona Bolla, a spokesperson for Romanian anti-organized crime agency DIICOT. Bolla said the decision wasn’t final and that all four suspects have already appealed the extension, the AP reported. Tate was previously banned from multiple social media platforms for expressing misogynistic views and hate speech.

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    COVID treatments weren’t suppressed to OK vaccines’ emergency use

    CLAIM: Ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine were suppressed as COVID-19 treatments because the vaccines couldn’t receive emergency use authorization if such treatments were available.

    THE FACTS: There is nothing in federal law or regulation that prohibits a preventative measure such as a vaccine from being authorized for emergency use because a treatment is available, experts and officials say. Social media users are sharing a conspiracy theory that posits that the drugs hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin were withheld as COVID-19 treatments by officials in order to greenlight vaccines under emergency use authorization. That’s wrong, experts and officials told the AP. The COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson were all initially made available under emergency use authorization by the Food and Drug Administration — though the Pfizer and Moderna shots were later fully approved for certain people. An emergency use authorization, the FDA explains, allows the use of unapproved medical products — or the unapproved uses of approved medical products — in emergency situations in which “there are no adequate, approved, and available alternatives.” But the FDA said in a statement that an “available treatment for COVID-19 does not preclude the FDA from authorizing a vaccine to prevent COVID-19.” Likewise, Ana Santos Rutschman, a law professor at Villanova University with expertise in vaccine law and policy, said there is nothing in federal law or FDA regulation indicating that the existence of a treatment for a particular disease means that an emergency use authorization can’t be issued for a preventative measure such as a vaccine. “These are two separate types of drugs and tools in the public health toolkit and there may be a need for one of these products or for both of them under an EUA situation,” she said in an email. The FDA also had approved the drug remdesivir for use in hospitalized COVID-19 patients in October 2020 — two months before the agency authorized the first COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use. In addition, the agency had issued an emergency use authorization for convalescent plasma to treat hospitalized COVID-19 patients before the vaccines were available, noted Dr. Aaron Kesselheim, a Harvard Medical School professor and expert on regulation. Hydroxychloroquine was in fact granted emergency use authorization for COVID-19 in 2020, too. The anti-malaria drug was authorized to be used for certain hospitalized COVID-19 patients, but the FDA revoked that authorization in June 2020, saying emerging data suggested it was “unlikely to be effective in treating COVID-19 for the authorized uses in the EUA.” Current COVID-19 treatment guidelines from the National Institutes of Health recommend against the use of ivermectin for treating the disease, except in clinical trials, because studies to date have not demonstrated efficacy for the anti-parasitic drug.

    — Angelo Fichera

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    Video of snow-covered deer is from Kazakhstan, not the US

    CLAIM: A video of people helping a deer whose head is covered in snow was recorded in the U.S. during a massive winter storm that killed at least 34 people in late December.

    THE FACTS: The video of the snow-covered deer was recorded in Kazakhstan and has been online since at least March 2021, when it was featured in a local news report. The video has circulated widely on social media in recent days, with many users claiming it was filmed amid the recent extreme weather in North America. In the footage, the deer can be seen standing in a road, and then laying on the ground while a person removes snow packed around the animal’s face. Claims that it was taken recently in the U.S. or Canada circulated in both English and Spanish. But the footage was recorded in Kazakhstan and has been online since at least March 2021. A media outlet in Kazakhstan published a news report featuring the video dated March 2, 2021. The report notes that it was filmed by one of two brothers who were driving in Kazakhstan. A Facebook user matching the name of one of the brothers identified in the report, Abylaikhan Kuandyk, shared a version of the video published by Russian news outlet RT on March 8, 2021 and wrote in the post, “Me and my Brother Nurzhan Makayev.” The Facebook user did not immediately respond to the AP’s request for comment. The deer shown in the video clip is likely a roe deer, Timothy Van Deelen, a professor of forest and wildlife ecology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told the AP. The species is prevalent in Eurasia and is not native to North America. The absence of a white throat patch or bright white hair on the belly of the deer in the video indicates that it is not a white-tailed deer, Van Deelen added. The deer in the video also appears to have white rump akin to that of a roe deer.

    — Associated Press writers Josh Kelety in Phoenix and León Ramírez in Mexico City contributed this report.

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    Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck

    ___

    Follow @APFactCheck on Twitter: https://twitter.com/APFactCheck

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  • Tucker Carlson Has Some Weird Ideas About Watergate In Latest Fox News Rant

    Tucker Carlson Has Some Weird Ideas About Watergate In Latest Fox News Rant

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    Instead, he said on Fox News on Tuesday that it was “an FBI operation to drive a sitting duly elected president from office.”

    Carlson made the claim during a nearly 20-minute segment on the discovery of classified documents in a private office used by President Joe Biden when he was vice president. The segment included clips of media figures speaking about the discovery of classified documents at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home last year.

    Carlson laughed after playing the clips.

    “The funniest part was Bernstein, formally of the Washington Post, who literally participated in an FBI operation ― not guessing, documented ― an FBI operation to drive a sitting duly elected president from office,” he said. “Carl Bernstein participated in that.”

    One of Woodward and Bernstein’s most famous sources during Watergate was a mysterious figure known for decades only as Deep Throat.

    Despite that, Carlson has tried to rewrite the history of the scandal, saying last year that “no one can explain” it.

    “That was clearly driven by government agencies, including the FBI,” Carlson insisted in September.

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  • The Right-Wing Media’s Coverage of Brazil’s Insurrection Is a Rerun of January 6

    The Right-Wing Media’s Coverage of Brazil’s Insurrection Is a Rerun of January 6

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    The right-wing media is taking a page right out of Donald Trump’s book in response to the Brazilian insurrection that erupted this past weekend, casting doubt over President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s October election and making vague allegations that the riot—fueled by unfounded claims of voter fraud from far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro—was a government conspiracy.

    On Monday, Fox News host Tucker Carlson characterized the attack as a backlash to “what was very clearly a rigged election” against Bolsonaro. “A convicted criminal called Lula da Silva is now the president of the most important country in South America,” he said without evidence. “Millions of people in Brazil understand exactly what happened. They know their democracy has been hijacked possibly forever.”

    Carlson’s outlandish remarks fell in line with those of Steve Bannon, who has spent months spreading conspiracy theories meant to undermine the results of the Brazilian election. “I’m not backing off one inch on this thing,” the former Trump adviser said in an interview with Politico. “Look at the report, the code, the tabulator, the machines and open them up…be transparent, let the citizens of Brazil see,” he added on the Monday edition of his popular podcast, echoing the exact talking points pushed by Trump and his allies to deny the 2020 election in the US.

    Bannon went on to praise the insurrectionists, who trashed Brazil’s presidential palace and ransacked other government buildings, as “freedom fighters” and accused Lula of being a “Marxist, Communist criminal.” Like the QAnon adherents who attacked the US Capitol two years ago—a mob that Bannon also helped whip up—some of Bolsonaro’s supporters were hoping the protest would trigger a military coup and the reinstatement of their defeated president. In both instances, that calculus did not pan out, and more than 1,500 people have been arrested in connection with Sunday’s violence.

    Elsewhere in conservative media, claims of CIA involvement have spread like a wildfire. InfoWars owner Alex Jones suggested that the riot was instigated by government informants disguised as Bolsonaro supporters—a theory similar to claims made by Trump-world portraying January 6 as a false flag operation. “It’d be very easy for provocateurs to force their way through dressed up in the yellow and green,” Jones said Monday. “Was it provocateured by Lula right after he knew Bolsonaro had left the country because they were going to arrest Bolsonaro on trumped-up charges?”

    On Telegram and Truth Social, Ali Alexander, who helped organize the pro-Trump “Stop the Steal” rallies on January 6, 2021, wrote that he supports “the real people of Brazil and not their fake CIA backed rigged election.” He then praised “unannounced impromptu Capitol tours by the people,” called for Bolsonaro supporters to “do whatever is necessary,” and used a heart emoji to bind the causes of “January Sixers” and “January Eighters.” Meanwhile, in a Monday interview on Charlie Kirk’s podcast, Matthew Tyrmand, a pro-Bolsonaro election denier who has appeared on Bannon’s show, theorized that the agency was directly involved in the Sunday riot. 

    To be sure, the CIA does have a long track record of staging coups in Latin America, but it has done so with the intent of dismantling leftist governments and installing far-right regimes—not the other way around.

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • How McCarthy’s unprecedented leadership battle is a reflection of Fox News and right-wing media | CNN Business

    How McCarthy’s unprecedented leadership battle is a reflection of Fox News and right-wing media | CNN Business

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    CNN
     — 

    It’s Tucker Carlson versus Sean Hannity in the Republican Party.

    The divisions inside the GOP, being laid bare on national television via the dramatic fight between Kevin McCarthy and a faction of rebels over the House speakership, mirror the rift that has been forming for some time in right-wing media and which is strikingly clear in Fox News primetime.

    Some corners of the right-wing media universe, represented by the Carlsons of the world, revel in the chaos. Carlson has made that clear on his broadcasts this week, effectively cheering on the Never Kevin camp in the House and arguing that what we are seeing on television — a paralyzed GOP unable after six votes to elect a House speaker — is healthy.

    A version of this article first appeared in the “Reliable Sources” newsletter. Sign up for the daily digest chronicling the evolving media landscape here.

    “If you prefer democracy to oligarchy, if you prefer real debates about issues that actually matter, it’s pretty refreshing to see it,” Carlson said of the public infighting taking place in the House, which is set to go back into session at noon on Thursday.

    Then there are the personalities and outlets that more closely align with Hannity, who has gone on record against the mutiny facing McCarthy and argued on the California congressman’s behalf.

    To be clear, Hannity hasn’t outright bashed the Republicans staging the rebellion against McCarthy. He’s mostly played polite. And he’s tried downplaying the friction, insisting it’s not a crisis. But Hannity has represented the wing of right-wing media — and the larger GOP — that would like to see Republicans unite and not be consumed by disorder.

    “Should Republicans have worked this all out in private, long before yesterday? Yeah, absolutely. And behind the scenes I spoke to many of them, and I urged them to work it out,” Hannity said Wednesday night. “They apparently did not listen to my advice.”

    After those comments, Hannity invited on Rep. Lauren Boebert for an interview which turned quite combative. The Fox News host repeatedly pressed the far-right congresswoman on what the rebel group plans to do, given that they are clearly a small minority of the GOP. Hannity at times noted that Boebert was evading and not answering his simple questions.

    “I asked you a simple question congresswoman. I feel like I’m getting an answer from a liberal,” an exasperated Hannity said toward the conclusion of the interview, in which Boebert repeatedly kept speaking over him.

    Of course, while Hannity, McCarthy, and others might be frustrated with the rebels now, they all played roles in bolstering their power in recent years. Which is the irony that cuts straight to the heart of the matter.

    Much like the Republican Party laid the groundwork over the years for the rise of Donald Trump, people like Hannity have laid the groundwork for the rise of people like Carlson. They’ve catered to their views, refused to call out their nonsense, and chosen to attack entities like the media instead of dealing with the own mess in their backyard.

    Now they’re reaping what they sowed: a party comprised of a growing number of erratic figures who don’t mind — and even perhaps prefer — watching the world burn.

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  • Kevin McCarthy’s Speakership Bid Has Fox News at War With Itself

    Kevin McCarthy’s Speakership Bid Has Fox News at War With Itself

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    The Republican battle over the next House Speaker has bled into the most vital media organ in conservative politics: the Fox News prime-time lineup. On one side stands Sean Hannity, who is urging the 20-or-so far-right holdouts to let Representative Kevin McCarthy claim the gavel. And on the other is Tucker Carlson, who has thrown his support behind that very group in an apparent pressure campaign to quash McCarthy’s bid.

    The disagreement boiled over Wednesday, when Hannity, who had urged the holdouts to “work it out,” confronted Representative Lauren Boebert, one of the anti-McCarthy ringleaders, on air. “So, if I’m gonna use your words and your methodology and your math, isn’t it time for you to pack it in, and your side to pack it in, considering he has over 200 and you have 20?” Hannity asked the lawmaker. Boebert responded by saying she understood “the frustration” but refused to capitulate amid the host’s grilling.

    Carlson, for his part, delivered an anti-McCarthy monologue Wednesday. “Oh, you’ve got reservations about Kevin McCarthy? You don’t want to be ruled by a man who wears a Ukrainian flag lapel pin and lives with Frank Luntz?” the host asked his audience, referencing McCarthy’s 2021 admission that he had rented a room from Luntz, an establishment Republican pollster. Carlson then argued that McCarthy was making no effort to reconcile with his detractors, most of whom are members of the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus. “Instead, like the left they purport to oppose, they’re using threats and fear to force people to support the candidate,” he said of McCarthy’s team. Carlson has also defended the cohort of insurgents from attacks made by fellow Republicans: After Representative Dan Crenshaw, a pro-McCarthy Republican from Texas, insisted that his party “cannot let the terrorists win,” the Fox host described the lawmaker as “the snarling face of the donor class.” Crenshaw replied by urging Carlson to “grow thicker skin.”

    Late Wednesday evening, after a sixth ballot failed to produce a Speaker, McCarthy offered a number of concessions to the 20 hard-liners blocking his path to the gavel. The new terms would acquiesce to many demands made by the holdouts, including allowing a rule change that would let one GOP member call a vote to oust the Speaker; granting Freedom Caucus members top committee assignments; and promising to bring likely nonviable border-security legislation to a floor vote, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    As far as Fox News goes, Carlson is in the minority. On Thursday, Fox & FriendsBrian Kilmeade had even harsher words for the holdouts than Hannity, calling the “Never McCarthy” set “insurrectionists”—a term he switched to “saboteurs” on the suggestion of his cohosts, Steve Doocy and Ainsley Earhardt. Doocy was similarly irate in another Fox & Friends segment Thursday. “I heard so many people say, ‘You know, that’s just how democracy works.’ This is not democracy. This is a televised hijacking,” he declared. “They are intent, simply, on blowing up the party, which they are doing, and this Congress. They do not care.”

    Still, Carlson did find a friend in Laura Ingraham, who ultimately sided with the exact group of conservatives whom Doocy criticized. “What looks chaotic and kind of seems counterproductive to many—it’s actually, in its own way, refreshing because it’s democracy in action,” Ingraham said Wednesday. Carlson trotted out the same line, calling the chaos a “refreshing” showcase of democracy that is only “embarrassing if you prefer the Soviet-style consensus of the Democratic Party’s internal elections.”

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • Tucker Carlson’s Newest Conspiracy Theory Is Ridiculous Even For Him

    Tucker Carlson’s Newest Conspiracy Theory Is Ridiculous Even For Him

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    The National Hockey League showed its support for trans women last week, and now Tucker Carlson is suggesting all professional sports are a vessel for left-wing “forces” to brainwash the masses.

    Carlson slipped the ridiculous new conspiracy theory into a Fox News segment Wednesday bashing the league after it supported a draft tournament in Wisconsin earlier this month comprised entirely of transgender and nonbinary players. In response to a critical tweet, the NHL’s Twitter account replied: “Trans women are women. Trans men are men. Nonbinary identity is real.”

    Apparently very miffed about this, the Fox News host bashed the NHL and professional sports in general as mouthpieces for so-called “woke” ideologies.

    “So clearly political forces hijack professional sports as a way to brainwash the young men who watch professional sports,” he said. “That’s, of course, the entire point of it. It’s strategic. But why does nobody push back?”

    Earlier in the segment, Carlson noted that the NHL has one of the most conservative fanbases of all major American professional sports, “so it’s a little weird … that the NHL has decided to push woke propaganda on its fans.” By “woke propaganda,” he was referring to the league’s efforts to increase diversity among its employees and fans.

    The NHL released results earlier this year of its first internal demographic study of its staff and 32 teams. Unsurprisingly, the report found that its workforce was made up overwhelmingly of white men: Its workforce is 83.6% white and 62% male. On the ice, more than 90% of players and nearly all coaches and officials are white. The league, eager to diversify its fanbase and increase its audience, has said the report will serve as a baseline so they can develop strategies to improve representation internally. Minority players have long called out systemic racism issues and complained that the league has been slow to adapt.

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  • Tucker Carlson Reportedly Threatens GOP House Campaign Chair In Flap Over Son Buckley Carlson

    Tucker Carlson Reportedly Threatens GOP House Campaign Chair In Flap Over Son Buckley Carlson

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    Fox News host Tucker Carlson made a veiled threat to Rep. Tom Emmer (R-Minn.), the National Republican Campaign Committee chair, after accusing Emmer of insulting his son, Buckley Carlson, Axios reported on Sunday.

    Some Republicans immediately took sides, with Donald Trump Jr. and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) backing Carlson amid the GOP infighting.

    Carlson was reacting to a Daily Beast story on Friday that quoted an unnamed GOP strategist who said potential Emmer rival Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) “dies to be liked by the Establishment. He hires Tucker Carlson’s son, a 24-year-old kid, to be his communications director.”

    The elder Carlson apparently took serious umbrage, calling up Emmer and demanding that he “either reveal which staff member took a swipe at Carlson’s son, a Capitol Hill aide … or the Fox host would assume Emmer himself was to blame for the quote,” Axios wrote.

    Emmer denied that his office was involved, but Carlson didn’t buy it and declared he now had a personal beef with the lawmaker, according to Axios.

    Tucker Carlson — pictured center next to Donald Trump, got support from Marjorie Taylor Greene and Donald Trump Jr. (right) — in his beef with Rep. Tom Emmer.

    Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

    The enormously popular Carlson holds sway among conservatives, so his reported anger over the apparent diss of Buckley Carlson could affect how the GOP power maneuvering plays out. Banks is expected to challenge Emmer and Drew Ferguson (R-Ga.) for the position of House Republican whip if Republicans win control of the House in the November elections, NBC News previously reported.

    Other prominent GOP figures got involved. Trump Jr. accused Emmer of having his “henchmen” attack Carlson’s son and “trying to throw the staff of another member of Congress under the bus to cover his own ass???”

    “I stand with Buckley Carlson,” Greene, the Georgia radical who claimed to be a contender for ex-President Trump’s 2024 running mate, tweeted Sunday.

    An NRCC spokesperson told Axios that Emmer was not to blame and that the “baseless accusations are meant to distract and divide Republicans. Our focus is on retaking the majority and firing Nancy Pelosi.”

    Fox News reps did not immediately respond to a request for Carlson’s comment.

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  • Tucker Carlson Incorrectly Claims CDC Mandating Kids Get Covid-19 Vaccine For School

    Tucker Carlson Incorrectly Claims CDC Mandating Kids Get Covid-19 Vaccine For School

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    Before you make a claim about what the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is going to do, maybe, just maybe, you should look at what the CDC can and can’t actually do. On October 18, FOX News host Tucker Carlson claimed on a tweet that “The CDC is about to add the Covid vaccine to the childhood immunization schedule, which would make the vax mandatory for kids to attend school.” Yet, the CDC clearly states on its website that “State laws establish vaccination requirements for school children.” And the CDC, by the way, ain’t one of the 50 states in the U.S.

    On the tweet, Carlson included a video of himself from his FOX News show named after himself “Tucker Carlson Tonight” essentially making the same claim:

    As you can see in the video, Carlson began the segment with, “So here’s an amazing story that’s been effectively buried.” Whoa. Buried? By whom and for what reason? And buried in what? In cheese? Carlson did not really specify any of these but went on to say, “This week the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is expected to add the Covid-19 vax to the list of required childhood vaccines. If this happens, your children will not be able to attend school without taking the Covid shot.” The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) is indeed meeting on October 18 and 19 in a virtual meeting that can be viewed on a webcast. The agenda does include a discussion about “Covid-19 vaccines in children.” The ACIP develops recommendations on the use vaccines that in turn are forwarded to CDC’s Director and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for approval. Once approved, these recommendations will be published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR). The ACIP consists of public health, medical, and scientific experts external to the CDC.

    While Carlson may be a number of things, he is neither a medical, public health, or scientific expert nor a lawyer. A number of real medical doctors, scientists, and other relevant experts pointed out the clear problems with Carlson’s statement. For example, Peter Hotez, MD, PhD, Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine, wrote, “Actually, the CDC clearly says that ‘state laws establish vaccination requirements’ and Fox News knows this. Guessing just another antivaccine dog whistle for their ratings,” in the following tweet:

    In his tweet, Hotez thanked @doritmi, who is Dorit Reiss, LLB, PhD, a Professor of Law at the University Of California (UC) Hastings School of Law and expert in these law-ish kind of things, for alerting him to Carlson’s claim.

    Later in his tweet thread, Hotez offered something that Carlson didn’t include in his tweet, verifiable official sources supporting what he was saying: links to CDC websites. Once of these websites clearly indicates that, “State laws establish vaccination requirements for school children. These laws often apply not only to children attending public schools but also to those attending private schools and day care facilities.”

    So does that make what Carlson tweeted a “swing and a mis,” as in misinformation? Well, Tara C. Smith, PhD, a Professor of Epidemiology at the Kent State University College of Public Health, used the word “misinformation” in the following tweet about Carlson’s tweet:

    So with a number of real experts out there who have had many research publications on vaccines and infectious diseases, whom did Carlson bring on as a guest? Well, he gave some air time to Martin Makary, M.D., M.P.H., a Professor of Surgery at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and whose stated areas of expertise on the Johns Hopkins website are things like abdominal Surgery, advanced laparoscopy, bile duct surgery, pancreatic surgery, and various other pancreas and gall bladder related procedures.

    So did this air time turn out to be hot air time? Well, in the video, Makary made some pretty strong statements without providing much evidence to support them. For example, he asserted that “the CDC’s committee that’s voting, I mean, that it is essentially a kangaroo court, you have to be an official ‘card-carrying vaccine fanatic’ to be on that committee. If you are not then they are basically not going to accept that some vaccines are important and others lack the evidence to support broad distribution.”

    Wow. Presumably by “kangaroo court,” Makary didn’t mean a court of actual kangaroos, which would be weird and fascinating at the same time. Dictionary.com defines a “kangaroo court” as a “self-appointed or mob-operated tribunal that disregards or parodies existing principles of law or human rights, especially one in a frontier area or among criminals in prison.” Hmm, isn’t calling the ACIP a “kangaroo court” jumping like a kangaroo to conclusions about the ACIP without providing real supporting evidence? Makary also mentioned a German study without clearly describing the study, pointing out its strengths and limitations, or providing enough information so that viewers could find the study themselves.

    There certainly have been plenty of problems with the Covid-19 response from the CDC, the Biden Administration, and the Trump Administration. Throughout the pandemic, communications and policies have often been very inconsistent. For example, the CDC relaxed their face mask recommendations in the Spring of 2021 and then again in the Spring of 2022 despite scientific studies showing the value of face masks in preventing transmission of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and other countries like Japan maintaining greater face mask use. In both cases, Covid-19 surges in the U.S. soon followed. Plus, in a number of situations, the Biden and Trump Administrations could have done more to push Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna to publicly release more of their Covid-19 vaccine data earlier.

    But suggesting that the CDC will be somehow making the Covid-19 vaccine mandatory for all kids to attend school around the U.S. and calling the ACIP a “kangaroo court” would be leaping way too far in a way that may court even more problems for our society. It could leave the very wrong impression that the CDC is somehow a dictatorial organization when the opposite may have been the case during the pandemic. Public health experts and scientists have raised concerns that the CDC has continued to bend to political pressure and prematurely relax Covid-19 precautions. mandating alling the

    If Carlson is really interested in seeing real science drive pubic health decision making then why not have a panel of real relevant scientists on his show. Such a panel could then provide real scientific facts that discount what Carlson has asserted. They could even say things like, “by the way, did you actually look at the CDC web site that says what the CDC can and can’t do. It’s on something called the Internet.”

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    Bruce Y. Lee, Senior Contributor

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