The lawsuits are coming.
Last night Tucker Carlson was joined by Kyle Rittenhouse, known for defending both Kenosha and his own life against a violent mob of rioters who were part of a greater movement that resulted in the deaths of at least 25 Americans and caused billions of dollars in property damage nationwide in the summer of 2020. Contrary to reality, and learning nothing from the Covington Catholic debacle, the media managed to spin a tale that Kyle, who only shot white people (one of whom was a child rapist), did so in the name of white supremacy (among countless other lies about the circumstances that night).
The media’s lies aren’t going to stop without a penalty for them, and Rittenhouse is spearheading the effort to hold them accountable.
“Me and my team have decided to launch The Media Accountability Project as a tool to help fundraise and hold the media accountable for the lies they said and deal with them in court,” Rittenhouse told Tucker. “I don’t want to see anybody else have to deal with what I went through. So I want to hold them accountable for what they did to me, because I don’t want to see anybody have to go through what I went through.”
Rittenhouse named two people he’ll be suing first; The Young Turks’ Cenk Uygur, and Holocaust scholar Whoopi Goldberg.
“Well, right now, we’re looking at quite a few politicians, celebrities, athletes, Whoopi Goldberg’s on the list. She called me a ‘murderer’ after I was acquitted by a jury of my peers. She went on to still say that.” He then mentioned Uygur continuing to call him a murderer, and added “We’re going to hold everybody who lied about me accountable, such as everybody who lied called me a White supremacist. They’re all going to be held accountable. And we’re going to handle them in a courtroom.”
Matt Palumbo is the author of The Man Behind the Curtain: Inside the Secret Network of George Soros