In a scathing rebuke, Fox News host and conservative commentator Tucker Carlson has strongly criticized recent comments made by former President Donald Trump, labeling them as “evil” and an affront to beauty and truth. The sharp rhetoric, which came in response to Trump’s Easter morning Twitter thread, has left many in the conservative and mainstream media camps grappling with the implications of the former president’s words.
Trump’s initial tweet, which contained a profanity and a veiled threat towards the civilian infrastructure of a perceived adversary, sparked widespread backlash. However, it was the latter part of the thread, in which Trump invoked the name of Allah in a seemingly unrelated context, that drew the ire of Carlson. The Fox News host took particular umbrage with Trump’s decision to use the Easter holiday as a platform for these remarks, which he characterized as a mockery of both Islam and Christianity.
“We’re not a theocracy,” Carlson asserted. “That’s not what our country is, and we shouldn’t pretend otherwise.” Carlson argued that Trump’s antics not only undermined the dignity of American democracy but also belied the very essence of the conservative movement, which has long prided itself on its commitment to faith-based values.
In his analysis, Carlson made a critical distinction between criticism of Islamic theocracies, which he suggested was a justifiable response to oppressive regimes, and Trump’s apparent attempt to mock Islam itself. “You’re not supposed to go to war with other theocracies to find out which one is more effective,” Carlson pointed out. “We don’t need to compete with Iran or Saudi Arabia in terms of who’s the most devout; that’s not what we’re about.”
For Carlson, Trump’s behavior was not simply a partisan or ideological issue but rather a moral failing of a profound order. “That’s not just a joke; that’s evil,” he said. “It’s an intentional desecration of beauty and truth.” The Fox News host’s critique of the former president has left many wondering whether Trump’s antics have finally crossed a line from bombastic rhetoric to outright harm, a notion that will doubtless fuel further debate and introspection within the Republican Party and beyond.
