
Candace Owens kicked up yet another firestorm of anger this week when she went all in on pushing the conspiracy theory that Israel was behind the terrorist attacks that killed some 3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001.
On Wednesday morning, Owens replied to a clip of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaking the day before about the ongoing U.S.-Israeli airstrikes against Iran. The clip was captioned, “Netanyahu: You see the difference. The tyrants of Tehran target civilians. We target the tyrants of Tehran to protect civilians.”
Owens shared the clip and added, “You murdered 3,000 Americans on 9/11. For starters.”
On Tuesday, Owens posted several additional statements suggesting that Israel was behind the most deadly terrorist attacks in U.S. history. Owens shared a clip from Tucker Carlson spinning an anti-Israel conspiracy theory and added, “From 9/11 to the Lavon Affair and many [sic] inbetween, false-flags are the Israeli way. Mossad agents are taught that they will inherit the earth ‘by way of deception’. Bibi wants a third world war so they can hit a global reset— as they have done everytime people start noticing.”
Owens, who hosts one of the most popular podcasts in the country, also spent Tuesday attacking Blake Neff, the producer of The Charlie Kirk Show and a close friend of the assassinated MAGA influencer. “Of everything I have said on the show— Blake Neff has chosen to author a long-winded response to my OBVIOUS joke about Erika’s Shabbat Shalom world tour,” she wrote, sharing a screenshot of Neff’s reply to Owens’s ongoing attacks against Erika Kirk, who is promoting her late husband’s final book, Stop in the Name of God, which was about his love of observing Shabbat.
“This is what they NEEDED to clarify. They need the world to know that Charlie loved Shabbat. We are beyond parody,” concluded Owens, who has suggested in the past that Israelis may have played a part in Kirk’s killing. Owens has long grabbed headlines for her outlandish conspiracy theories, once going so far as to stake her entire career on her claim that the first lady of France is actually a man.