‘Ireland is a Powderkeg:’ Steve Bannon Reacts to Dublin Riots in Episode 41 of ‘Tucker on X’

Tucker on X ep. 41

In episode 41 of his newest production, “Tucker on X,” host Tucker Carlson interviewed Former Trump White House adviser Steve Bannon on the riots unfolding in Dublin, Ireland following a recent stabbing incident that took place outside of a school.

Last week, riots broke out in Dublin after an Algerian immigrant, who’s been living in Ireland for 23 at “public dispense,” as Carlson put it, stabbed five people – including three children – outside a school in the city.

“Many people in Ireland are absolutely sick of this – it’s happening by design,” Carlson said. “That country has been completely transformed by immigration – it’s not the Ireland you remember at all – and going forward, anyone who complains about that or questions government policy will be guilty of a felony. New hate speech laws are coming to Ireland – no complaining about it. And of course it’s not just Ireland, it’s across the West.”

Bannon said Ireland is experiencing a “national blowback” among its citizens due to the country’s mass migration and corrupt political class.

“Ireland is probably one of the worst – if not the worst – because the political class has totally sold out the people,” Bannon explained. “The Irish politicians are by far the worst that are bought off by the EU. They’re the biggest globalists, they’ve sold off the sovereignty of the Irish – and you’re seeing a national blowback. You’re seeing it among working class people in the cities – Irish nationals, Irish citizens whose family has been there for generations, and generations, and generations and have nothing to show for it – and also in the rural communities.”

“And so Ireland is a powderkeg,” Bannon added, noting how the Irish people – including former UFC fighter Conor McGregor – are being attacked by the authorities for wanting a plan of action over proclamations.

Bannon went on to acknowledge that what’s happening in Ireland is also happening across the West, saying it “started with mass immigration in the 60s and 70s, but really picked up since the Syrian civil war and what the Germans did back in 2014.”

Later in the interview while discussing the United States’ current immigration crisis, Bannon said it’s the same situation in both the U.S. and Ireland how people are “demonized” for simply expressing concern over the issue.

As of press time, the latest installment of Carlson’s video podcast, posted at 4:56 a.m. Central Standard Time on Monday by @TuckerCarlson, had nearly 1 million views.

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Kaitlin Housler is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Follow Kaitlin on X / Twitter

 

 

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