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Candace Owens says Jada Smith has 'spiritually annihilated' Will, calls actor a 'broken man'

'For the first time, we saw the real Will Smith, not a Fresh Prince', said Candace Owens
UPDATED APR 1, 2022
Candace Owens analyzes Will Smith's response to Chris Rock's joke. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images and Jason Kempin/Getty Images)
Candace Owens analyzes Will Smith's response to Chris Rock's joke. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images and Jason Kempin/Getty Images)

Candace Owens has accused Jada Pinkett Smith of "spiritually annihilating" her husband, Will Smith, as she explained why she believes the actor smacked Chris Rock at the Oscars on Sunday, March 27. Smith surprised Oscars watchers and guests worldwide when he stormed onto the stage and smacked Rock across the face in retaliation for a joke he had made about Pinkett Smith.

"Jada, I love you. G.I. Jane 2, can't wait to see it, " he said, referring to Pinkett Smith's bald head. The actress has previously stated that her hair loss is caused by alopecia. "When Chris Rock first makes the joke, Will laughs, meaning that he takes the joke as it was intended—lightly," Owens stated in footage published on her Instagram account while recapping the night's events on her 'The Daily Wire' show on Tuesday, March 29.

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Owens added, "But then he looks over and sees that his wife does not find the joke funny and he immediately goes from an amused attendee to a thug-like husband, defending the honor of his wife's hair."



 

Following a more in-depth examination of the incident, Owens stated: "Through all of these jokes and the rampant commentary that is being offered, there is conversation that is being neglected—a truer assessment of what we observed on that Oscars stage."

She went on to say, "For the first time, we saw the real Will Smith, not a Fresh Prince, not a survivor of a zombie apocalypse in I Am Legend, not a crime-fighting cop in Bad Boys or a Hancock superhero, but the real Will Smith—an incredibly broken man and the residual product of a directionless society that is filled with them. The kind of society that produces men that look to their more domineering wives, with their tails planted firmly between their legs, for instruction on what and who they ought to be in every room."

Owens covered Pinkett Smith's 2020 revelation that she had a love affair with singer August Alsina, which she referred to as an "entanglement" on her show, 'Red Table Talk'. Owen said, "The truth is that off the big screen, Will Smith has been spiritually annihilated by his wife. Don't forget, it was Jada Pinkett Smith who openly shared with the world how she cheated on her husband, remember? And with who? Her son's friend."



 

Owens added, "Jada carried out an extramarital affair with a young man who was, at first, friends with her son. Then she dragged her puppy dog husband out onto the world stage and told the public while making him sit through it, listen to it and agree that she had the right to do what she did."

Pinkett Smith and Smith revealed on the 'Red Table Talk' special that their friendship with Alsina began while they were on break. As their relationship became non-monogamous, Smith later revealed that he sought intimacy outside of their marriage.

"The takeaway from this interview was that they together represented some newer, more progressive form of what it means to be in a marriage, which is to say, not being in a real marriage at all," Owens said. "Will Smith today is someone who should be pitied—not prosecuted in a courtroom, or even persecuted in the public eye—but pitied by every person who has the clarity to see how our society, as sponsored by the perversion of these Hollywood types, is falling apart. Will Smith is what [psychologist] Jordan Peterson cautions against. He's nothing more than a casualty in the great war against masculinity."



 

Continuing her evaluation of Pinkett Smith, Owens went on to explain why she thinks she'd be a good fit for a remake of the 1997 film G.I. Jane, which starred Demi Moore. Owens said that the film, "tells the story of a woman being integrated into the all-male space of the United States military. It is the inspired tale of a loss of one woman's femininity to meet the grueling physical demands of the more masculine environment that she finds herself in."

She added, "And so though not perhaps the punchline that Chris Rock had intended, I have to agree that yes, Jada Pinkett would be the perfect individual to play that role in a remake. And not because of her hair, obviously, but because of her success in stripping her husband of any trace understanding of what it means to be a real man. And let me tell you, Will, it isn't slapping a man across the face because your wife tells you to."

She concluded, "I'm sorry to say that real manhood is not won on a stage at the Oscars with a meaningless trophy. Rather, real manhood begins and ends in your own household. It starts with the first step of being able to accurately identify what a good man, what a good woman and what a good, meaningful relationship even is. And with that, we wish you luck Will on your real-life pursuit of happiness."



 



 



 



 

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