Left-wing MSNBC host Joy Reid proposed a strange a conspiracy theory regarding popular Fox News’ Tucker Carlson this week, claiming the rival host uses “fascist” codes “for conservative White men who need laser beams to make White babies.”
Reid claimed that a recent Carlson segment exploring reported declines in male testosterone levels was “far more nefarious,” referencing a “so-called decline in masculinity and the rise of the Left.”
“The ‘decline of real men’ is code for conservative White men who need lasers beams to make White babies,” Reid claimed after denouncing Carlson’s “blatantly fascist posturing.”
“What’s scarier is what the rhetoric translates into, from book banning to abortion bans and laws that regulate procreation in women’s bodies,” Reid warned. “And what is now an obsession with the false notion scary liberals are going to turn your kids, meaning your sons, trans.”
MSNBC’s @JoyAnnReid on @TuckerCarlson’s “blatantly fascist” segment on testosterone: “'The decline of real men' is code for conservative white men who need laser beams to make white babies” pic.twitter.com/1tP5YOSLNe
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) April 19, 2022
Reid’s comments about White men needing lasers beams “to make White babies” was pointed out by some critics as particularly ironic considering she expressed support for the false conspiracy theory that Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene blamed “Jewish space lasers” for the country’s woes.
The MSNBC host is not the only corporate television personality to voice complaints about Carlson in rcent weeks.
The View hosts Whoopi Goldberg and Ana Navarro advocated for the arrest of Tulsi Gabbard and Tucker Carlson for spreading “false Russian propaganda,” after the former Democrat presidential candidate and Fox News host both highlighted the facts surrounding the US-funded biolabs in Ukraine.
Ana Navarro demanded that the directors board of Fox News “step in” to punish Carlson, or risk Fox News becoming “Russian state TV.”
Joy Behar insinuated that Carlson was being paid to peddle the alleged “disinformation.”
“They used to arrest people for doing stuff like this,” Goldberg said. “If they thought you were colluding with a Russian agent, and if they thought you were putting out information or taking information and handing it over to Russia, they used to actually investigate stuff like this, and I guess now there seems to be no bars,” Goldberg said, seemingly yearning for the days of Joseph McCarthy and the Red Scare.”

































