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Podcast host Joe Rogan defended Tucker Carlson and Alex Jones from attacks by CNN’s Brian Stelter this week, arguing that both hosts make “logical” points that are undeniably accurate.

Earlier this week, Stelter and Oliver Darcy ran a segment attempting to lay the groundwork to get Tucker Carlson de-platformed from Fox News by comparing what he says to Alex Jones.

WATCH: Joe Rogan Defends Tucker Carlson and Alex Jones

Speaking with “Podfather” Adam Curry, Rogan highlighted the fact that not everything Alex Jones says is so far from the truth and that he hits closer to home than the fake news pundits want to admit.

“The idea that they’re not monitoring Alex Jones is insane right?” Rogan said playing clips comparing Carlson’s statements to Jones’, going on to point out Edward Snowden’s NSA revelations which showed wide federal dragnet surveillance on most Americans’ electronic communications.

“So, whether or not they’re monitoring Tucker Carlson, I don’t know, I don’t know, but we know that they have the ability to do so. Edward Snowden exposed this. This is truth, right? They’ve admitted it. This is why he’s living in Russia now, right? This is why he’s on the run.”

Rogan went on to argue Tucker’s comments on vaccine side effects also aren’t untruthful, as depicted by CNN.

“Then Tucker Carlson said that there’s some risk to the vaccines. There’s a risk to every medication that people take. It’s a relatively small risk, like if a hundred seventy million people have been vaccinated, if it was just one percent died, we would have up a million seven hundred thousand deaths from the vaccine. That’s outrageous. And it’s not the case, so it’s a very small risk relatively.”

“So that’s true,” Rogan says, “So what he said is true. He didn’t say that it’s a terrible thing, ‘Don’t get it. It’s killing everybody.’ That’s not what he said. he said there is a risk.”

“Alex Jones says everybody knows someone who’s died or who’s been hurt by the vaccine. I know people that have had strokes. I know people that have had adverse reactions. That’s why the VAERS report exists. Now, do I know that they absolutely got those strokes from the vaccine? Of course I don’t. There’s a lot of correlation. Does that mean causation? We don’t know.”

Jones goes on to point out the logical fallacy employed by CNN in their attempts to discredit Jones and Tucker, while many things they’re saying are accurate.

“So, they’re comparing these things in this really weird, disingenuous way to try to make it look like everything that Tucker Carlson’s saying is insane because Alex jones says something as well,” Rogan says.

“If Alex Jones says, ‘Drink water and take vitamins,’ and I say, ‘Drink water, take vitamins,’ am I Alex jones? Like what does that mean?”

Rogan also breaks down CNN’s deception in pretending government docs don’t exist about un-indicted co-conspirators working with the FBI helping to infiltrate the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol.

“Now if there are government files that, if you could read these government papers, that actually do say that there were agent provocateurs that had something to do with the capitol hill attack… if Alex Jones says that, and Tucker Carlson says that, but yet the the fact remains that it’s true, who gives a fuck? And how are they making that connection? That connection is so weird, and the connection is just to try to discredit Tucker Carlson, but this is your news. This is coming from ‘America’s trusted news source.'”


Alex Jones Responds to Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy after Carlson Comparison



source https://www.infowars.com/posts/joe-rogan-defends-tucker-carlson-alex-jones-from-cnn-both-men-say-things-that-are-logical

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