Ice Cube Blows Whistle on Media Elite, Tells Tucker Carlson They ‘Make a Lot of Money off of Races Fighting against Each Other’
Rap and movie legend Ice Cube, O’Shea Jackson, has blown the whistle on the divisive agenda of America’s corporate media elite. He sat down for an interview with Tucker Carlson where he took a few swipes at the Democrats’ media allies.
Ice Cube spoke about being blackballed by Oprah Winfrey and co-hosts of “The View” for being an “independent thinker.”
The rapper then revealed that race is used to divide Americans because the media elites make a lot of money off it.
He said, “I tried to go on The View and they wouldn’t have me” because “I am an independent thinker.
“Some of the co-hosts didn’t want me on.
“I have been excluded from Oprah.”
When the subject of race came up we know why “The View” blackballed him, he said:
“A lot of people make a lot of money off of the races fighting against each other and bickering, and they’re the ones who push it in our face all the time that we’re separate.
“It seems like you’re stuck in a bad movie and you can’t get out, you can’t find the exit and it continues to play on the screen.
“That’s what we’re caught in, a never-ending winless battle of race and color and we’re worried about where you’re from.
“There was a saying in early hiphop, I think Rakim coined this phrase: it ain’t where you’re from, it’s where you at,’ and I think that’s so true.
Asked by Carlson if it’s crazy to think that racial differences are being “pushed on us” more than in 1986, Cube said:
“Yes, I think so because in 1986 you had movies and television and it was all scripted and we knew this was a scripted show.
“But I think now you have so many so-called reality shows that basically push the same thing but in a reality-like setting, so you’ll watch a movie on race and flip the channel.
Ep. 11 Ice Cube X Tucker: the studio interview pic.twitter.com/fcSkF76l3a
— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) July 27, 2023
“Now you’re watching a somewhat-like documentary reality show that’s highlighting and magnifying race and status and where you belong in this country and where you don’t.
“We’re highlighting the bad guys here, we’re highlighting the good guys.
“It’s just always really showing controversy and pitting people against each other.
“Controversy sells, so they’re not showing people getting along.
“They want to get to the fighting, the conflict, the throwing of the bottles, the differences.”