Tucker confronts alma mater, school where he sent his 3 kids, when it turns on him as ‘too dangerous’

Tucker Carlson said that he was banned from speaking at his prep school alma mater because staff members thought that he was “too dangerous” and claimed that “people could be killed.”

Carlson, who has arguably become the most important journalistic figure in America – if not the entire world – revealed his troubles with St. George’s School in Middletown, RI during a Zoom call with students that was posted to X.

Carlson attended the exclusive New England boarding school and has sent his three children there. But as a famous alum, he now apparently finds himself to be unacceptable over his political views and willingness to speak out against the rotten to the core American establishment.

Carlson told the students that the school wanted him to come and speak but he never heard back when trying to arrange a date and time for the appearance, saying he kept reaching out to get a “straight answer” and that he had spoken to the headmaster and a member of the board who said that it wasn’t safe for him to set foot on campus because “people could be killed.”

After discovering that the school didn’t have armed security, he offered to bring his own but was denied and informed of the “no guns” on campus policy at St. George’s.

“And I’m like, what? Your security aren’t armed? I sent three kids there. If I knew you didn’t have armed security, I wouldn’t have sent my kids there,” Carlson said.

The school reacted to the embarrassing revelations by Carlson by sending out a letter saying that he wrongly recorded the Zoom meeting.

“In accordance with school policy,” the school stated in the letter. “Mr. Carlson and his team agreed that there would be no recording of the students participating in the session given that most of the students in attendance would be minors.”

“It’s now apparent that the Zoom discussion was recorded by Mr. Carlson’s team and shared online in a clear violation of that agreement and our policies,” the letter reads, saying that administrators were “disappointed” by the transparency.

“I found, honestly, in my exchanges with the administration at St. George’s, a total resistance to having anybody who they don’t agree with even in the same world,” Carlson said, telling the students that the reason why they were deprived of the chance to see him speak in person was because the school hates his politics.

“I don’t think you should force your views on anyone. I don’t believe in that,” Tucker said. “They did it to me at St. George’s and I didn’t like it, and I said so at the time.”

Chris Donaldson

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