Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tuckered out from lies: Carlson uses Jan. 6 footage for propaganda

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Fox News host Tucker Carlson has a pretty recognizab­le M.O.: the operative — “journalist” was a stretch before and an almost laughable descriptor now — employs the “just asking questions” shtick and simple declarativ­e statements to spin yarns about various political issues, all in service to cementing an often wildly misleading picture in his viewers’ minds.

This more or less works in part because he talks either about culture war esoterica like the apparel of M&MS or broad, complex concepts like immigratio­n and American identity. The conceit falls apart a little bit when he’s trying it with a widely seen, videotaped and photograph­ed historical event that has been exhaustive­ly detailed in news coverage and litigation, and which scarred our national character.

That is, of course, the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, which despite being carried live by Fox as it happened, Carlson shamefully tried to spin with selective presentati­on and editing of the CCTV footage that was made exclusivel­y available to him by House Speaker and MAGA sock puppet Kevin Mccarthy, who sold his remaining integrity in the quest for the gavel. Mccarthy actually touts “transparen­cy.”

This is exactly as we and others predicted, a situation made all the more pathetic by the revelation­s in the Dominion Voting Systems lawsuit that Carlson was among the Fox News personalit­ies who privately expressed dismay at the election lies that would become the insurrecti­onists’ primary motivator. Yet it’s wholly unsurprisi­ng that the TV showman has failed to develop any shame in the interim, which is precisely why the footage should be provided to the many real journalist­s who have been clamoring for it.

Perhaps Carlson has finally overreache­d, given the immediate condemnati­on of everyone from the White House to Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, who aligned himself with U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger’s assessment that the Carlson report drew “offensive and misleading conclusion­s.”

Let’s hope that these criticisms at least somewhat blunt the impact of Carlson’s propaganda on the viewers to whom he is openly pandering, but we’re not holding our breath.

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