Recently released documents in Dominion Voting Systems’ $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox News provide another example of network star Tucker Carlson’s on-air rhetoric diverging from his private beliefs. This time the split is over the sprawling QAnon conspiracy theory, whose adherents claim that Donald Trump is on the verge of exposing and executing a global cabal of progressive leaders who participate in a child sex-trafficking ring.
In a January 7, 2021, message — the day after a violent Trumpist mob stormed the U.S. Capitol — an unnamed correspondent told Carlson, “This crazy q stuff has consequences.” The person added, “It also takes lots of demagogues for them to believe this stuff. Trump never disavowed this Q shit or Lin Wood or any of the insanity.”
After a redacted response from Carlson, the person passed on a message from “Theo” that “the Q movement is sincerely dangerous” and that “many of the people at the Capitol” during the previous day’s violent insurrection “wore Q t shirts”: