French President Emmanuel Macron, 46, fires back for first time at claims wife, 70, was born a man

The universe is a constantly changing and moving. Some would say it’s a “living” thing because you never know what you are going to see on any given night of stargazing.

Conservative commentator Candace Owens said she would bet her career that French President Emmanuel Macron's wife Brigitte is a man.

"After looking into this, I would stake my entire professional reputation on the fact that Brigitte Macron is in fact a man," Owens wrote in a Tuesday post on X, formerly Twitter. "Any journalist or publication that is trying to dismiss this plausibility is immediately identifiable as establishment. I have never seen anything like this in my life. The implications here are terrifying."

Owens spoke in depth about the longstanding conspiracy theory during Monday's episode of her podcast, arguing that if Brigitte really wanted to debunk those claims, she could simply release photos from the first 30 years of her life. Analyzing a rare family photo of Brigitte as a baby, Owens said Brigitte was a "dead ringer" for her brother, and thus, they were really the same person.

Last year, a French court fined two women for promoting the conspiracy about Brigitte in a now-deleted YouTube video. In 2021, Psychic Amandine Roy and self-described freelance journalist Natacha Rey claimed in a four-hour video that the first lady was born as a boy by the name of Jean-Michel Trogneux, which is actually the name of her brother. They also claimed that she did not give birth to her children and that her first husband never existed.

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There is a lot of exciting stuff going on in the stars above us that makes astronomy so much fun. The universe is constantly changing and moving. Some would say it’s a “living” thing because you never know what you are going to see on any given night of stargazing.

There is a lot of exciting stuff going on in the stars above us that makes astronomy so much fun. The universe is constantly changing and moving.

There is a lot of exciting stuff going on in the stars above us that makes astronomy so much fun. The universe is constantly changing and moving. Some would say it’s a “living” thing because you never know what you are going to see on any given night of stargazing.

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There is a lot of exciting stuff going on in the stars above us that makes astronomy so much fun. The universe is constantly changing and moving. Some would say it’s a “living” thing because you never know what you are going to see on any given night of stargazing.

Of the many celestial phenomenons, there is probably none as exciting as when you see your first asteroid on the move in the heavens. To call asteroids the “rock stars” of astronomy is both a bad joke and an accurate depiction of how astronomy fans view them. Unlike suns, planets, and moons, asteroids are on the move, ever changing and, if they appear in the night sky, they are exciting and dynamic.

“To call asteroids the ‘rock stars’ of astronomy is simultaneously a bad joke but an accurate depiction of how astronomy fans view them.”
There is a lot of exciting stuff going on in the stars above us that makes astronomy so much fun. The universe is constantly changing and moving. Some would say it’s a “living” thing because you never know what you are going to see on any given night of stargazing.

Of the many celestial phenomenons, there is probably none as exciting as when you see your first asteroid on the move in the heavens. To call asteroids the “rock stars” of astronomy is both a bad joke and an accurate depiction of how astronomy fans view them. Unlike suns, planets, and moons, asteroids are on the move, ever changing and, if they appear in the night sky, they are exciting and dynamic.