Alex Jones
Alex Jones was born in Dallas, Texas, United States on February 11th, 1974 and is the Radio Host. At the age of 50, Alex Jones biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 50 years old, Alex Jones physical status not available right now. We will update Alex Jones's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Alexander Emric (born February 11, 1974) Jones, the American radio show host and far-right conspiracy theorist, is a scholar from the United States.
He hosts The Alex Jones Show from Austin, Texas, which airs on the Genesis Communications Network both in the United States and online.
InfoWars, a conspiracy theory and fake news website, and NewsWars and PrisonPlanet are among Jones' websites. Jones began working on a live TV station in the 1990s, later switching to radio.
He has been at the forefront of many scandals: he has endorsed conspiracy theories concerning the Sandy Hook Elementary School mass shooting.
In a discussion with Piers Morgan, he argued vehemently against gun control.
Jones has accused the US government of arranging the Oklahoma City bombing, the September 11 attacks, and incorrectly describing the 1969 Moon landing.
He has claimed that several governments and large companies conspired to create a "New World Order" through "manufactured economic difficulties, advanced surveillance technologies, and—above all—inside-job terror attacks that fuel exploitable hysteria."
Others like him as conservative, right-wing, alt-right, and far-right.
Jones has been dubbed "America's top conspiracy theorist" by a New York magazine, and the Southern Poverty Law Center names him as "America's most prolific conspiracy theorist in modern America."
Jones said he is "proud to be listed as a thought criminal against Big Brother" when he was asked about such labels.
Early life and influences
Jones was born in Dallas, Texas, on February 11, 1974, and was raised in Rockwall, Texas. His father was a dentist, and his mother was a homemaker. He claims that he is of Irish, Welsh, English, and Comanche descent. In Jones' sophomore year of high school, the family moved to Austin. He attended Anderson High School, where he played football and graduated in 1993. Jones briefly attended Austin Community College before dropping out.
He read None Dare Call It Conspiracy, a book by John Birch Society conspiracy theorist Gary Allen, which argues that global bankers manipulated American politics rather than elected officials as a youth. Allen's work was "the most-to-read primer on The New World Order," Jones has characterized.
Jones was impacted by the attack on the Branch Davidian complex near Waco, Texas, which had an effect on him. It came to an end in April 1993, just after Jones' senior year of high school, with a large fire and a significant number of deaths. These activities "merely confirmed his participation in the inexorable growth of unseen, malevolent powers," according to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). He started to host a call-in show on public access television (PACT/ACTV) in Austin around this time.
The blaming of the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19, 1995 was intended by perpetrator Timothy McVeigh as a retort to the federal involvement in the botched settlement of the Waco siege on its second anniversary. "I heard there's a kleptocracy in charge of psychopathic regimes," Jones began accusing the federal government of causing it: "I knew there were clutches of evil that know how to operate." He did not think the bombing was the fault of McVeigh and his colleague Terry Nichols. He made America Destroyed by Design, his first film since 1998.
Jones conceived a fruitful bid in 1998 to build a new Branch Davidian church as a monument to those who died in the 1993 fire. He often spoke about the project on his public-access television service. During the siege, David Koresh and his allies were nonviolent people who were assassinated by Attorney General Janet Reno and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms.
Personal life
Jones and his ex-wife Kelly Jones have three children. In March 2015, the couple married in March 2015. Due to her ex-husband's behavior, Kelly requested sole or joint custody of her children in 2017. She said "he is not a stable individual" and that "I'm worried that he is involved in criminal conduct, including assaulting a member of Congress." His counsel responded by claiming that "he's playing a role" and describing him as a "performance artist" and referring him to him as a "performance artist." Jones denied playing a character and called his show "the most bona fide, hard-core, and real McCoy thing there is, and everybody knows it,"; in court, Jones, he confirmed that he generally agreed with his counsel's conclusion, but that he did not agree with the media's interpretation of the term "performance artist." Kelly was granted the right to choose where their children live while still maintaining their visitation rights. A state district judge denied a request by Kelly to request custody of their children for the next two weeks after Jones led a rally in Washington, where he was greeted by supporters and labeled COVID-19 a joke.
Rex Jones, Jones' son, has worked with InfoWars.
Jones married Erika Wulff Jones in 2017 and they have one child.
Early broadcasting career
Jones began his career in Austin with a live, call-in television station. Jones went back to radio in 1996, hosting a show called The Final Edition on KJFK (98.9 FM). Jones, who phoned in to Jones' early shows, began to talk about the New World Order conspiracy theory at this time.
Ron Paul appeared on his show several times when running for Congress. As voted by readers of The Austin Chronicle in 1999, Jones tied for second place in the annual poll of "Best Austin Talk Radio Host." He was kicked from KJF-FM later this year for refusing to broaden his scope. Jones' viewpoints, according to the station's operations manager, made it impossible for the station to sell advertisements.