Tucker can't seem to find QAnon: "It's not even a website!"

After accusing liberals of believing false narratives about police officers killing unarmed African-Americans, Carlson mockingly said he wanted to know “where the public is getting all this false information,” prompting him to then dismiss QAnon as a nonexistent issue.

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“We spent all day trying to locate the famous QAnon, which in the end we learned is not even a website,” Carlon snarked. “If it’s out there, we could not find it.”

He also invoked Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), the QAnon-friendly congresswoman recently stripped of her House committee assignments over her violent rhetoric, to make his case that evidence of the conspiracy couldn’t be found.

“Then we checked Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Twitter feed because we have heard she traffics in disinformation, CNN told us, but nothing there,” he sarcastically declared. “Next we called our many friends in the tight-knit intel community. Could Vladimir Putin be putting this stuff out there? The Proud Boys? Alex Jones?”

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