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TUCKER CARLSON’S AND CANDACE OWENS’ TERRIFYING DESCENT INTO MADNESS

Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens have gone to the dark side. Disturbingly, their transition seems to have been planned so carefully that they were able to convince their fans not only to follow—but to run full speed ahead into the pit of hell.

Careers that began as critiques of establishment politics have devolved into outlandish conspiracy theories that blend New Age spirituality, esoteric metaphysics, and elaborate claims about the hidden masters of reality and society.  Plus virulent Anti-Semitism.

Coincidentally, both podcasters have fixated on giants lately—those biblical beings that have morphed into symbols of hidden knowledge and elite cover-ups—almost as if scripted from the same fringe playbook.

 

Both have also been discussing out-of-body experiences (OBEs), with Tucker focusing on psychic spies and Candace discussing astral projection (she claims both she and Charlie Kirk practiced astral projection, which is best described as the non-physical “self” traveling independently—and exploring the physical world as well as other dimensions on the astral plane.)

You can’t make this up, but they have.

Carlson’s recent podcast with AJ Gentile was titled, “Giants, Pyramids, the CIA’s Psychic Spies and The Ancient Civilizations More Advanced Than Ours.” And of course, the underlying theme was government suppression of everything.

This too is reflected in Candace’s world, where “the fed” is to blame for every problem she can’t pin on the Jews. Thanks to Candace, “the fed” has become the contemporary iteration of “The Man”—the archetypal embodiment of oppressive authority that the countercultural movements of the 1960s rallied against.

 

Candace Goes Full Creepy-Stalker

Candace’s recent video, “An Open Letter to Erika Kirk” contains references to occult practices that have sparked backlash from various corners of the internet.

Chloe Cole, one of the most visible public figures in the detransition movement, posted a clip of Candace’s video with the comment, “Candace Owens literally just came out as a witch.” Former MMA fighter turned evangelist, Daniel Adams, made a video condemning Candace’s comments on astral projection, the third eye, and a connection to sleep paralysis.

Candace’s recent rants are a symptom of a broader descent into madness that’s alienating allies and amplifying paranoia. Her recent attacks on Erika Kirk and TPUSA have people questioning if she’s officially entered “stalking” territory.

In her “Letter to Erika” video, Candace references details from a private meeting Erika had with a board member at TPUSA, adding, “Just send him my regards—because we’re everywhere and we’re watching and we’re listening.”

 

She’s also begun targeting Erika’s family, voicing doubts about whether Erika was truly accompanying her frail, hospitalized mother for medical treatment around the time of Charlie Kirk’s death (with the longstanding implication that she or TPUSA were somehow complicit in Charlie’s murder).

The key takeaway here is that Candace’s so-called investigations into Erika’s family have led her millions of followers to begin digitally stalking a grieving widow and her family—after her husband was the victim of the most watched assassination in history.

One TikToker, after revealing research done on Erika’s family, writes, “Tracing Erika Kirk’s family line—impossible! Why? What is the family hiding?” This even though Candace Owens hypocritically shields her own family’s privacy, coincidentally concealing her mother’s name—which doesn’t even appear on Wikipedia.

To be clear, I could not care less who her mother is, but to publicly urge people to dig up everything they can on someone else’s mother is the height of duplicity.

 

Meanwhile, Owens claims intimate, otherworldly bonds with Charlie Kirk, insisting they discussed his “third eye” abilities and portraying him as a “time traveler” who has come back from the dead to communicate with her in her dreams.

She tells us that Charlie was marked as gifted from his youth, with adults trying to drug him, but his mother wouldn’t let them. He eventually attended a secret “X-Men school” which of course links back to shadowy CIA programs—because it makes such a great story. It also seems to be earning her a good chunk of money as her views keep climbing. (Her channel currently has 5.78M subscribers.)

Last month she received a cease and desist letter from TPUSA, mocked it as “lawfare,” and ramped up the attacks. She seems hellbent on destroying Charlie Kirk’s legacy, Turning Point USA, Erika Kirk, and everyone associated with her. The trouble is, her fantasy narratives can escalate into real-world aggression toward Erika Kirk, members of her family, and Turning Point USA staff.

Is there no adult in the room that can stop this before it leads to tragedy?

 

Tucker Goes Full Pizzagate and Nephilim

Tucker Carlson’s trajectory is particularly alarming. Once a beloved host on Fox News Channel known for skewering liberal hypocrites, he’s now channeling David Icke. Lately he’s been covering remote viewing, government suppression of free energy, and questioning the moon landing (like Candace). It’s like he’s recycling Art Bell’s Coast-to-Coast shows from the 1990s.

He’s also resurrected Pizzagate—the rumor regarding elite child-trafficking rings centered around coded messages like “pizza.” In a recent interview with self-proclaimed independent researcher Ian Carroll, Carlson declared that the Epstein file dumps make Pizzagate “basically real,” linking it to a “demonic global crime network” involving ritualistic abuse.

And there may be some truth in that—humans have been trying to cover up evil since Cain killed Abel. But I don’t think we need to start reviving all the QAnon theories that have been a festering wound on the outskirts of conservative circles.

Carlson has scratched the scab off that wound, so I expect he’ll soon “confirm” that powerful elites, Hollywood celebrities, and politicians are kidnapping, torturing, and killing children and infants to harvest adrenochrome from their blood as a youth serum, drug, or elixir of life.

 

Carlson (also like Candace) erodes the line between journalism and delusion: He’ll drop a truth-bomb everyone nods at so listeners feel they can trust him on everything else. They may be thinking “maybe Pizzagate is real” then transition to “Israel is the real enemy” without noticing the slide.

During the Doha Forum in Qatar in December 2025, Carlson announced his intention to purchase a home there, praising the city’s cleanliness and safety while chirping like an impetuous child, “I’m an American and a free man, and I’ll be wherever I want to be.” This was likely in response to critics who accused him of being a tool of the Qatari government.

In recent episodes of his podcast, he’s ventured to the Middle East yet again, traveling to Qatar and Jordan with his production team to conduct interviews that seem intent on overturning Americans conventional views of Islam (Tucker says good) and Israel (Tucker says bad).

Carlson’s podcast titles are meant to draw clicks: “The Shocking Reality of the Treatment of Christians in the Holy Land by US-Funded Israel.”

 

These portrayals have sparked fierce backlash from critics who accuse Carlson of grossly misleading audiences by whitewashing Qatar’s suppression of Christian expression—including outright bans on public crosses, evangelism, and proselytizing (punishable by years in prison).

And in case you happen to have a small pamphlet from the Gospel Tract Society in your pocket, you’ll go to prison for two years and pay $2,700. Apostasy laws carry the death penalty.

In Jordan, he hosted interviews with prominent Christians, aggressively promoting a narrative of idyllic Christian-Muslim harmony in the kingdom and Palestine. He then sharply contrasted this with what he and his guests described as outright hostile and repressive treatment of Christians by Israel in Jerusalem and the West Bank.

A brilliant send-up of this was given by comedian Ami Kozak, who plays a Christian Arab priest replying to Carlson: “If you want to talk about violence against Christians … you’ve got Hamas, Hezbollah, Al-Qaeda, ISIS, Syria … Nigeria!”

 

Meanwhile, Carlson has drawn sharp criticism for labeling anti-Muslim sentiment in the U.S. as nothing more than an “Israeli government psyop” meant to manipulate American perceptions.

Just to elucidate—we’re being lectured about Islam and Israel by a guy that claimed to have been attacked by a demon in his bedroom: waking with bloody claw marks from an unseen entity that “mauled” him in bed, leaving scars he still bears.

And that encounter probably sparked Carlson’s “You See Demons?” interview with Mike Cernovich—who gave a profanity-laced recounting of his demonic visions from drinking a hallucinatory drink called ayahuasca.

Carlson’s tales of giants and obsession with demons echo Owens’s time-traveling X-Men fantasies, both pretending to reveal secret knowledge to their viewers. Yet, this isn’t harmless entertainment—it’s fostering division, hate, pathological Anti-Semitism, and a rejection of reality.

As their audiences grow or radicalize, one wonders: Have they truly crossed to the “dark side?” Is this the inevitable culmination of unchecked sensationalism? Either way, the madness is real, and it’s spreading.

 


Susan D. Harris writes for a number of conservative outs such as Daily Caller, Epoch Times, and American Thinker.

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