Candace Owens: Macron, Harvey Weinstein, and Why “Christ Is King” Totally Broke People’s Brains

Candace Owens: Macron, Harvey Weinstein, and Why “Christ Is King” Totally Broke People’s Brains

From 🇺🇸 The Tucker Carlson Show, published at 2025-08-01 17:40

Audio: Candace Owens: Macron, Harvey Weinstein, and Why “Christ Is King” Totally Broke People’s Brains

Why the French President is Suing a Podcaster

  1. The Main Idea in a Nutshell

    • A political commentator named Candace Owens is being sued by the President of France because she made a podcast exploring a wild theory that his wife, Brigitte Macron, was born a man and is hiding her past.
  2. The Key Takeaways

    • The Big Claim: The podcast explores a rumor that France's first lady, Brigitte Macron, was born a man named Jean-Michel Trogneux and that there are no public records or photos of her for a 30-year period of her life.
    • The Lawsuit: Instead of ignoring the rumor, French President Emmanuel Macron is suing Candace Owens for defamation (which means lying to hurt someone's reputation). She thinks he's just trying to scare her into being quiet.
    • The Trump Call: Owens claims that President Macron personally asked former U.S. President Donald Trump to tell her to stop talking about his wife during a serious meeting about the war in Ukraine.
    • The Other Scandal: Even if the wild rumors aren't true, it's a fact that Brigitte was Emmanuel Macron's teacher when he was a teenager (around 15 years old) and they began a relationship, which Owens says is a major issue on its own.
    • Fun Facts & Key Numbers:
      • Fact: The lawsuit filed against Candace Owens is 200 pages long.
      • Fact: The relationship between Emmanuel and Brigitte Macron started when he was around 15 years old.
      • Fact: The theory claims there are no photos of Brigitte for a 30-year period of her life.
  3. Important Quotes, Explained

    • Quote: "> a president of a foreign country does not sue a mom that does her podcast in her basement because she spoke something that was not true. Like there's clearly something that they want hidden and so everyone's taking a closer look at the series."
    • What it Means: Candace Owens is saying that if her story was just a silly, made-up lie, a powerful world leader wouldn't bother with a huge lawsuit. She believes the lawsuit is a massive overreaction that actually makes her story seem more believable.
    • Why it Matters: This is her main defense. She's arguing that the lawsuit itself is evidence that she's onto something important, turning their legal attack into proof for her side.

    • Quote: "> ...what you have is a couple that is willfully getting away with at best like molestation, sexual perversion, and he runs the... That's not some random guy."

    • What it Means: Owens is saying that even if you ignore the wildest claims, it's a known fact that Macron's wife was his teacher and started a relationship with him when he was a young teen. She's saying this alone is a huge scandal that people should be concerned about, especially for a world leader.
    • Why it Matters: This shifts the focus. She argues that even the undisputed parts of the story are deeply troubling, suggesting a pattern of questionable behavior that goes beyond the main conspiracy theory.
  4. The Main Arguments (The 'Why')

    1. First, Owens argues that the lawsuit isn't a serious legal case but a clumsy attempt to silence her. She says it's full of mistakes and is just a PR move to scare her and other journalists away from the topic.
    2. Next, she provides evidence for her suspicion by pointing out that she and other journalists have asked for simple proof to debunk the rumor, like childhood photos of Brigitte Macron, but have received nothing. This refusal to provide easy answers makes her more suspicious.
    3. Finally, she points out that the confirmed story of the Macrons' relationship (a teacher with her 15-year-old student) is a major scandal on its own that powerful people have tried to downplay or ignore.
  5. Questions to Make You Think

    • Q: Did Candace Owens give the Macrons a chance to tell their side of the story before she made her podcast?
    • A: Yes. According to her, her team contacted the Macrons' lawyer before the series ran. She says they offered to stop the project if the Macrons would answer some simple yes-or-no questions and provide evidence like photos from Brigitte's past. She claims they refused.

    • Q: Is the lawsuit just about the claim that Brigitte Macron was born a man?

    • A: The text says no. Owens claims the lawsuit is very long and messy. She also says that in the lawsuit, the Macrons are now admitting that Emmanuel was a teenager when their relationship began, which she argues is a different but equally serious scandal.

    • Q: Why does Candace Owens think the French President would get Donald Trump involved?

    • A: She claims that President Macron brought it up during a high-stakes meeting about the war in Ukraine. An intermediary allegedly told her it was presented as a "condition" for negotiations, which made her wonder what really goes on behind the scenes in world politics.
  6. Why This Matters & What's Next

    • Why You Should Care: This story is about more than just a wild rumor. It raises big questions about freedom of speech, how powerful people might use their influence to silence critics, and what happens when journalists ask questions that leaders don't want to answer. It makes you think about what's true and who gets to control the story.
    • Learn More: If you're curious about the details, Candace Owens has a podcast series called "Becoming Brigitte" that covers the whole story. You can find clips and episodes on platforms like YouTube.

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