We are frequent viewers Tucker Carlson TonightYou may have seen Carlson’s recurring segment on Fox News Channel, where he exposes NPR’s insane behavior over the past years. They are no longer a boring liberal radio station. Instead, they have become a leftist woke outlet who rails against the United States of America and its founders while also finding some things to offend.
The latest installment of Carlson’s “what happened to NPR” segment came Friday night when Carlson aired soundbites of a June NPR segment claiming dinosaur emojis belong to the transgender community and if you use them that makes you transphobic.
“Now, you might think energy prices, the stock market, the pending worldwide food shortage, impending nuclear war with Russia might be something a national news organization would cover but not at NPR,” Carlson said setting up the segment.
Continuing to mock the leftist taxpayer-funded station, Carlson said: “NPR is always focused on the bigger issues, the ones that matter. Issues so grave we couldn’t even invent them if we wanted to because we lack the imagination.”
Proving his thesis, Carlson proclaimed “this for example is an actual segment that aired on NPR last month” before airing the preposterous segment:
RILEY BLAKE: There are many people who identify as queer. It doesn’t matter if they are transgender or another form of genderqueer. We love dinosaurs.
BEN BROCK JOHNSON So we searched it. It was obvious that they were there. Online, we discovered dozens of queer paleoartists.
AMORY SIVERSTON. Type the word dinosaur in to the LGBT subreddit. You will get hundreds of results.
JOHNSON: Trans-ceratops.
Reacting to the lunacy, Carlson sarcastically said “oh the trans-ceratops! The segment went exactly where we expected it to, which was trans dinosaurs. Transgenderism isn’t something that appeared out of nowhere, bigot, it dates back to the Jurassic era, the trans-ceratops.”
“Sadly there will be no David Attenborough documentary on nonbinary two spirit t-rexes.” Instead, Carlson noted, “the segment turned, as all NPR segments inevitably do, towards self-love and its twin self-pity.”
BLACK: To see our social enemies, for lack of a better term, taking these symbols and trying to use it as their dog whistle, it was something where it’s just like, where is this even coming from? Also, dinosaurs belong to us. I do not hate to say that the whole trans community or genderqueer is wrong, but it’s true. We’ve already been wondering about them and drawing them and interested.
SIVERSTON – It can be very difficult for anyone to witness something they love being taken over. As TERFs continued to drop the emoji into users’ feeds, gender-queer supporters of dinos all around felt insecure.
After airing the second soundbite, Carlson laughed and noticed that “it’s all so crazy that you might be tempted to dismiss it but what it really is is what everything that side believes is.”
“Since when did dinosaurs belong to the trans community? Everybody knows about dinosaurs. But it makes sense actually because it’s NPR. Inappropriating pterodactyl emoticons is the opposite side basically killing dinosaurs again. That’s how much harm they’re causing. An extinction,” Carlson noted mockingly.
Tucker Carlson highlighted this absurd segment on NPR. It was made possible by NPR being funded in part through you, the American taxpayer.
To read the transcript of the July 15 Tucker Carlson Tonight segment click “expand”:
FNC’s Tucker Carlson Tonight
7/18/2022
Eastern, 8:27:40TUCKER CARSON: It’s been awhile since you got an update from National Public Radio. But rest assured that we have been listening to you every day. While you may think that energy prices and stock markets or the impending world food shortages, as well as the impending nuclear war between Russia and the United States, are topics that a national news media organization might cover, NPR does not. NPR is always focused upon the larger issues that are important. There are so many serious issues that we can’t imagine how we could solve them. For example, this segment aired last month on NPR. Listen.
[cuts to audio]
RILEY BLACK: There are many queers. It doesn’t matter if they are transgender or another form of genderqueer. We love dinosaurs.
BEN BROCK JOHNSON So we searched it. It was obvious that they were there. There are many queer paleoartists that we found online.
AMORY SIVERSTON. Type the word dinosaur in to the LGBT subreddit. You will get hundreds of results.
JOHNSON: Trans-ceratops.
[cuts back to live]
CARLSON – Oh, transceratops We thought that the segment would go to trans dinosaurs at first. Transgenderism doesn’t just appear out of the blue, bigot. It dates back to the Jurassic period, when the trans-ceratops were around. But that’s not actually where NPR went with it.
Unfortunately, there won’t be a David Attenborough documentary about nonbinary spirit t-rexes. As is the norm with NPR segments, it aimed at self-love as well as its twin, self-pity.
[cuts to audio]
BLACK: To see our social enemies, for lack of a better term, taking these symbols and trying to use it as their dog whistle, it was something where it’s just like, where is this even coming from? Also, dinosaurs belong to us. I do not hate to say that the whole trans community or genderqueer is wrong, but it’s true. We’ve already been wondering about them and drawing them and interested.
SIVERSTON – It can be very difficult to watch something you love being taken over. As TERFs continued to drop the emoji into users’ feeds, gender-queer supporters of dinos all around felt under attack.
[cuts back to live]
CARLSON: This is so insane that it’s tempting to ignore it. But what it is really about is the belief system of everyone on that side. It is an example of narcissism. We are the ones who own dinosaurs. Trans dinosaur expert complaining that someone took over a beloved quote. Some might consider that a case of projection.
What was the last time dinosaurs belonged to trans people? Everybody knows about dinosaurs. But it makes sense actually because it’s NPR. Inappropriating pterodactyl emoticons is the opposite side basically killing dinosaurs again. That’s how much harm they’re causing. An extinction! We’ll stay on the story by which we mean we will keep listening to NPR, the moment the dinosaur lobby has been decolonized we will let you know.