Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Brexit 3-Year Anniversary

Episode Date: February 2, 2023

On this episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers debates Brexit on it's 3-year anniversary and what this nightmare is doing to the British economy. Also Piers delves into whether Britain is top nucle...ar power? 78% of US parents believe teaching Under 9s, 'Pride' in Education is inappropriate, Piers analyses this with his pack. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the app.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Tonight, I'll Peersbork on our sense. Britain's economy is in the gutter. Even Russia will grow faster than us this year. Three years on today from Brexit, is that dream turning into a nightmare, we'll debate. Plus, the top US general criticizes the British Army a bit dire warnings of an ammunition shortage and a nuclear submarine fixed with super glue.
Starting point is 00:00:20 So is Britain still a top military power? We'll hear from our Defence Secretary and one of our great generals. Thus Donald Trump vows to ban schools and teaching children about gender ideology as a landmark court case brings that ferocious debate to Britain. So how young is too young for children to learn about things like gender and sex?
Starting point is 00:00:44 Live from London, this is Piers Morgan Uncensored. Well, good evening in London. Welcome to Piers Morgan Unscensored. Nothing in living memory has done more to defy this country and define our politics than Brexit. I didn't support it, but frankly, I do understand why 17.5 million people did. It wasn't, as the critics said about bigotry racism or hate in the most part.
Starting point is 00:01:07 It was about rolling the dice and striving for something better as they saw it for our freedom and independence. Project Fear warned the British people that their lives in their country would collapse if they dared to gamble on the unknown. And that's with Donald Trump in the US. Many people answered back by saying the status quo wasn't good enough anyway. The people promising the apocalypse were the same people who promised to make our lives infinitely better for years and failed. But exactly three years on, it's time for some cold, hard truths. The promises made pro-Brexit have also been broken. Democracy!
Starting point is 00:01:50 Is it not time we took back control of our immigration policy? Take back control of the £350 million that we sent to the European Union every week. The free trade agreement should be one of the easiest in human history. The UK has voted to leave the European Union. June the 23rd go down in our history as our Independence Day. Brexit means Brexit and we're going to make a success of it. We've got an oven-ready deal, put it in the microwave. Anybody turned that microwave on?
Starting point is 00:02:35 Today the IMF said that the UK economy will shrink this year. It will be worse off than any other significant economy, including Russia. Think about that. A nation pounded by Sanctuary. locked out of the global banking system, cast aside as the world's pariah will grow faster than we will in the UK. Britain's the only G7 economy that will actually shrink this year. That's the forecast. The US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan. They all had COVID lockdowns. They're all battling the same cost of living crisis caused by Putin's war.
Starting point is 00:03:06 So why are we worse off? Well, Bloomberg said today that Brexit's cost of the UK economy 100 billion pounds a year. The economy is 4% smaller than it would have been. been, but it never happened, they say. So where are the benefits? That's my big question. Vote leave promised 350 million pounds a week for the NHS, where the NHS is on its knees. Brexiteers said we'd take back control of our borders. Well, that's not happening. Immigration's rising. The borders are in chaos. Many industries are short of workers. Ask anyone in hospitality. They said we'd strike lucrative trade deals across the world, not least with the US. We haven't, haven't we? Disarray over Northern Ireland, anger in Scotland, the test in
Starting point is 00:03:45 existence of the United Kingdom, Britain frankly, feels like a bit of a basket case, lurching from shambles to chaos. Maybe that's why a staggering new poll published by unheard shows that 647 of the 650 UK constituencies now think Brexit was a mistake. I mean, voted for a main, I backed Brexit in the end because I believe in democracy and the will of the people. I didn't back the principle of it. I just backed the principle of you give the people of the country what they voted for. and the majority voted to leave the European Union. But the will of the people may now be changing.
Starting point is 00:04:23 Well, joining me now, political journalist Ava Santina, talked to the presenter Richard Tice, lawyer and activist Gina Miller, who took the government to court over the Brexit process and won twice, and the founder of the Black Farmer and Brexit backer at Wilfred Emmanuel Jones. So welcome to all of you. Richard Tice, here's my problem with Brexit. I wanted it to work. Didn't vote for it.
Starting point is 00:04:44 wasn't completely sure, if I'm honest. It was a complex debate, understood a bit of both sides, but in the end, voted Remain. Once I knew my side had lost, I voted for democracy. I voted actually for Boris Johnson's Conservative Party because they were the only party in that election
Starting point is 00:04:59 that said they would honour the result of the referendum. I thought that was more important than anything else. But as we sit here three years on from it actually coming into fruition, I'm really struggling to see any of the benefits that we were promised. And in fact, all I'm seeing is the opposite. It's become a millstone around this country's neck.
Starting point is 00:05:17 Hang, hang on. Right. Great intro. Lovely. Look, the first major benefit... Am I wrong? No, you're completely wrong. But the first major benefit was the vaccine rollout. Literally, Brexit saved lives because we order the vaccines. It's the truth, Gina. You know it. No other EU country.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Can we please put this lie? No, no. No, Gina, it's the truth. No other EU country... No. Okay, wait a minute. It's not true. It's not true. Can I explain why it's not true? Can I explain it? Okay, here's how much... That's the first benefit. Time out.
Starting point is 00:05:45 It's not true. It's even faster than I thought. It's not true. Okay, wait a minute. Here's what we're going to do. Let Richard say what he thinks happened. Okay. On the vaccines.
Starting point is 00:05:52 On the vaccine, then you can immediately respond. And by the way, I do know what happened. It'll be very interesting how this plays out. Richard. So, on the vaccines, we were able to order the vaccines early because we made the decision not to join the EU's own vaccine acquisition. Whereas some of the other countries, like Germany, like the Netherlands, they wanted to order their own vaccines,
Starting point is 00:06:11 and they were stopped by Brussels. That's what happens on the vaccine. That's not true for three reasons. One is we were in the transition period, so we were still under EU law. Secondly, no country, not even us or existing members, had to join the joint scheme that was not part of the agreement. The reason they did was not for sovereignty and it was not for law. The EU countries decided, for technical and medical reasons,
Starting point is 00:06:37 not to actually jointly roll out vaccines and not to go the route we did. It had nothing to do with sovereignty and it had nothing to do with law. Funny, isn't it? I'm sorry, it's the truth. We were under EU law at the time. We were in the transition period. And who ended up with the fastest vaccine?
Starting point is 00:06:52 The UK did it, save lives, Brexit's life life. But look, the reality is. No, no, that's true. But that was not because of Brexit. That's the lie. Funny, isn't it? All the other EU 27, they all had their own acquisition programme. But we could have done it down being in the EU.
Starting point is 00:07:07 Hang on. Hang on. But, Ava. No, but just the fact is we didn't need to be in the EU. We could have done it. exactly the same way. But we wouldn't have done. None of the other countries did. The problem with the Brexit discussion is that your argument is steeped in ideology and it's steeped in an ideology that harks back from 1950. And the problem with 1950 is that we had the empire and we were able to pillage other countries and we were able to take labor in from other countries.
Starting point is 00:07:31 But nowadays, but nowadays we have to go and entice people to come and work here. And our services do not function if we can't bring people in from the EU. What about getting our own people to work? We've got five million people. I hate that. It's such a silly argument. It's not. It's absolutely right. Look after your own people first.
Starting point is 00:07:46 How are you going to train people to work in the NHS right now, right now when we can't full vacancies? By the way, there is not a restaurant owner in the country who won't tell you that Brexit's been a disaster for recruiting staff and holding staff. Hang up here. We've just had record lawful immigration of over a million people last year. We haven't got a people shortage. We've got a willing worker shortage because we are too highly taxed in this country.
Starting point is 00:08:11 What the Tories have utterly failed to do, if you're going to do a job, do it probably. Give me two other benefits of Brexit. We should have cut taxes. No, give me two other benefits. There's two other benefits have happened. They haven't done this. There's that lawmower tax. So, wait on.
Starting point is 00:08:24 The good news is, we've still got the platform of opportunity. Hang on. You can't on the one hand say that my monologue was very eloquent but completely wrong when I say, where are the benefits of Brexit? And then when I pin you to the ground and say, well, what are these benefits? You say, well, they haven't happened yet. Because they haven't taken advantage of the opportunities. So I'm right then.
Starting point is 00:08:41 I'm not wrong. I'm right. Look, the point is... There have been no discernible benefits. So far, but the opportunity is still there. So how can you sound completely wrong? What I said was... I'm actually completely right. The point is that the country...
Starting point is 00:08:52 It's a bit like that picture of Prince Andrew in the bath. To prove that he couldn't have got up to anything in the bath, all it did was prove the opposite. But you're then saying after three years, therefore that means we should stop and we should go back... No, no. No. No. No. No. If you're going to say that... Here's what I'm asking. Here's what I'm asking. Here's what I'm asking. At what point, if you should...
Starting point is 00:09:11 we do not see discernible benefits. And we see a lot of negatives. What are the negatives? Well, a lot of negatives. Gina will explain them in a moment. But at what point do we as a country, if it looks more and more like an act of self-harm, do we at the very least consider going back to the country
Starting point is 00:09:27 and asking the country what they think? Because if that unheard map looks right, then that looks like a lot of people are having buyers remorse. No, I don't agree with you on that. I think that it was so destructive. Where we are at the moment is that we have to limit the damages being done.
Starting point is 00:09:43 Because the idea of some people say that we could actually, it will get better in 10, 15, 20, whenever it is years. That's not going to help people now who are suffering. That's not going to help people who are using food banks. So no second referendum. No second referendum. But all the tools to fix it, right? None.
Starting point is 00:09:58 What we need to do is fix the deal we have. And actually, forget about single market, going back in, renegotiating any other deal. Everything we have to do is already in the existing agreements that we signed. Both sides signed up to the Trade and Corporation Agreement and the Northern Ireland Protocol. Both of those bills, those acts and treaties and agreements are international, actually have clauses in them that could fix the things that are not working. But the problem is there's no political will on any party at the moment to go back.
Starting point is 00:10:29 All the clauses are there. We've just published an opinion from two of the leading lawyers in the EU called Addressing Brexit Problems. It's on our True and Fair Party website. It says exactly the question. clauses and how you can fix it. Okay, so is your view then that Brexit could work if they fix all the clauses? No, what I'm saying is we have to go sector by sector around the country.
Starting point is 00:10:50 But you think it could still work Brexit? We have no choice. Well, we have a choice. Well, listen, we had a choice because in a space of 40 years, we made one choice and then made the opposite choice. The EU are not going to let us back in. And it takes about 14 years. Well, actually, I'm not so sure about that.
Starting point is 00:11:05 I want to bring in the man who hasn't spoken yet. We're waiting very patiently. So Wilfred and Manuel Jones, the black farmer from the... Chippenham. You've been listening to this, Wilfred. You were, I think you voted Brexit. You've been a strong supporter of it. Yeah. But how are you feeling today, three years on, from it coming into play, given all the negative vibes about Brexit now? It's something else here now. Something new. From exclusively on Paramount Plus, it's the series Stephen King calls Scarious Hell.
Starting point is 00:11:37 Everything here is impossible, but it's also real. Sci-Fi Vision calls it the best show streaming right now. We're running out of time and we still don't know the rules. Don't miss what the movie blog calls something you need to watch. Saving those children is how we all go home. From Binge All episodes exclusively on Paramount Plus. Paul Richard has been giving a bit of a kicking, but I just think, look, any change. He did wipe out my time monologue and then a bit of the agreement.
Starting point is 00:12:07 No, he doesn't. No, no, no, he doesn't deserve it because I think what everybody's forgetting, any change involves pain. Those of us who are Brexiteers, we cannot stand here and says, actually, we are now at this particular moment seeing the benefit. It does not mean that in another five, ten years, we will then see the benefit. Is that anything is going to actually determine having some faith that the decision we made three years ago will pay off? And the reason why we're struggling at the moment, sometimes the strongest thing is, sometimes the strongest thing a country can do or leaders can do is just
Starting point is 00:12:47 admit when they got something wrong. We don't have to be demonized for it. We don't have to demonize people who voted for Brexit. Peers, peers. My question really is, this clock, is it open-ended? Does it go on forever? If in 10 years' time, Brexit has been a demonstrable disaster,
Starting point is 00:13:02 do we just carry on? Peers, let me talk. Yes, Wilfred. What I'm saying is that it's unfair to judge people three years in. I think we were having this conversation in five, ten years, I'm. Oh, yes, really. Because we don't really have the freedom
Starting point is 00:13:20 yet that we actually voted for. If we cannot even sort out the immigration problem because of all the restrictions. We've actually had, I would say, about eight years, right? Because we had a year before the referendum to get our ducks in a row about what Brexit would look like. The referendum happened in 2016. It's now 2023.
Starting point is 00:13:40 It's not three years, is it? It's eight years we've had. And so at an eight-year period, we now have to accept as we sit here, nothing's working. Even Richard Tyson who loves it. But one of the problems, it's not nothing to do with Brexit. It's because of the energy crisis. It's because of
Starting point is 00:13:56 the inflation. That's ridiculous. That's not. Nothing to do with Brexit. That is not what people are going to share. Come on, Piers, you know that. I will not be disingenuous and say, I don't think they're all contributive factors. It's one of the factors. But I also know that there are specific issues about Brexit.
Starting point is 00:14:10 which people will tell me who run restaurants and bars and all these things, they all say that Brexit has been a massive problem for them with staff. All of them say the same thing. There's two other things that Brexit has done. One is it has caused a labour shortage. Yes, we might get to somewhere where we get... We just had record immigration last year. It can't be a labour shortage.
Starting point is 00:14:28 It's a willing worker shortage because of the high taxes the country is facing. We've never had more popular people in this country. We've had more than a million people. It's the highest immigration. I know that. Right. So you've just agreed with me. No, I haven't. Excuse me. I haven't agreed with you on that. What I've said is they're not the people we need who are...
Starting point is 00:14:46 The people are coming in a million. Oh, so the wrong sort of people have come into the country. Yes, they are the people who are not picking fruit, who are not working the care service, who've left the NHS. We have... who are not in hospitality. Every area is suffering. But the thing that I get so upset about in all of this is that Wilfred says, you know, five, ten years. What about the businesses are going to go under in that time? What about the people who are going to die because there's nobody to care for them in the community? What about the children who have... have no teachers. This, we can't wait to fix these things until five, ten years.
Starting point is 00:15:14 And that will take time. That's not a bad idea, but it will take time. It's a great idea. Look after the British people. But it will take time. Be realistic. Is there a moment for you where if it demonstrably has not worked, you would say, okay, it hasn't worked? No, because look. Or is it just never ending?
Starting point is 00:15:29 Let me repeat what I just said, Pierce. The challenges the country is facing in terms of high energy prices, high taxes, high cost of you, has got nothing whatsoever to do with Brexit. You are deliberately conflating and confusing the two to suit your own argument. And let me just remind you. Hang on. Hang on. I would argue, I would argue those IMF numbers today make it. The IMF, the worst forecast.
Starting point is 00:15:54 Okay. But if you take the numbers at face value today, what they show is that we are underperforming a number of other senior countries in the G7 who all face the same challenges. All face COVID, all face to war in Ukraine. The common theme for them is that none of them had the additional problem of Brexit, which may explain why we are currently bottom of the class. You just agree with me.
Starting point is 00:16:18 Yeah, I just think it's obvious, isn't it? If you don't have trading links where you suddenly cut off a deal. We have got trading links. We've got a trade deal. We've got a... Richard, Richard. We haven't got an American trade deal. Well, nowhere near it.
Starting point is 00:16:28 Hang on, but, Piers, who we've got the biggest trading surplus with the United States? Right? Right. We've got 70 trade deals. With tariff. We've got 70 trade deals. Well, it's our biggest surplus. It's our biggest surplus.
Starting point is 00:16:38 It's our biggest. Have you read about steel? I mean, we have tariffs with the US. Wow. And we've got a big trading surplus with them. Which we have to pay for that cost businesses and extortion amount. Have increased by 16% since the end of the transition period. Ramonas and Remainers don't like to talk about it.
Starting point is 00:16:58 Let me bring in Wilfrey. It's the truth. Let me ask Wilfrid specifically. No, we haven't. Wilfred, are there any farmers that you've come across who genuinely believe Brexit has been brilliant for their business? At the moment, most people will tell you that Brexit has not been good for their business. But you don't make decisions based on...
Starting point is 00:17:18 But hold on. But hold on. But you do not make decisions based on the pain that you're feeling today. It's about having faith that the decision that we made three years ago in the long term is going to be a benefit. We are investing in our future. We made the decision in 2016. It actually only came into reality three years ago. Yeah, but we've had eight years to get this right. It's not a three-year thing, is it?
Starting point is 00:17:45 No, no, no. You're going back to your thing about sort of eight years ago. I don't think it's a small thing. Gina, final word to you? The other thing that Brexit has done is that people don't want to invest in our country because we're not seen as a stable, credible political system that we can't deal with crisis. And that's why we're not getting inward investment.
Starting point is 00:18:05 And that's going to affect growth. Well, he doesn't know when you had the farce of Liz Trust's destroying the economy. That's what I'm saying. So I think Brexit is exposed. That's because we're raising taxes when we should be cutting them. We should be going for growth. We're not raising. We're not going to cut.
Starting point is 00:18:17 You've got a tax. We have not got a business taxes. We have not got a business tax. People don't believe in us. They don't have confidence. That's our policy. It's one of the reasons that Rishi Sunak is slightly hesitant about that. He campaigned on not doing that against Liz Trust.
Starting point is 00:18:31 She campaigned on being the fairy godmother, cutting everyone's taxes. And the whole thing was a complete disaster. Because she didn't say how she was going to fund it. Of course, if you're going to cut taxes and go for growth, you say, how are you're going to fund it? Got to leave it that. Gina, thank you. We're losing you. We're losing you.
Starting point is 00:18:43 Wilfred, thank you. We're losing you. Fortunately, we're keeping Richard's eyes. He's very fired up this evening. So we'll get him on this. And maybe you're staying around as well. Next tonight, top US general, warns the British Army is no longer a top-level fighting force.
Starting point is 00:18:56 Is he right? Should we send Richard ties, perhaps, to any front line right now. We'll debate with the former head of the British Army, Lord Dannet next. Still, to come Donald Trump running for president again, wants to ban gender ideology being taught in schools the Miss Wiga South London Primary School is in court letting the kids participate in a pride gay parade.
Starting point is 00:19:24 It's a debate raging here and in the US. How young is too young? To be taught about issues like trans, gender, identity and gay sex, we'll debate all that. First, a worrying warning from a senior US general this week who claims a British army isn't fit for purpose and may not be able to protect the UK from Russian aggression. Is he right?
Starting point is 00:19:43 Or Eva and Richard are still with me. I'm delighted to be joined by the former head of the British Army, Lord Danet. Lord Dan it. Great to see you. Happy 2023. It's our first encounter of the new year. Pretty sobering reading this. I have to say, as someone who's had family in the military in recent years myself, to see the British Army described in that way was a bit disconcerting. What were your thoughts? Well, the anonymous American general isn't actually far wider the mark, as Ben Wallace and James Heeper, the Minister for the Armed Forces have both acknowledged.
Starting point is 00:20:19 the fact of the matter is that the army has received the lowest priority in terms of Ministry of Defence spending for the last 10 to 15 years. Huge history of underinvestment. So therefore it's not surprising that our capability is not what we would wish it to be. It's a matter of government choice, it's a matter of Ministry of Defence choice, and then eventually when push comes to shove, you have to deal with the consequences. But, you know, as long as the position is now being realised, there is a chance for Ben Wallace to argue the case for greater resources for defence,
Starting point is 00:20:49 to try and up the investment as quickly as possible. What did you make of Boris Johnson saying that Vladimir Putin had basically threatened him with a missile? Interesting, peers. I've heard Boris say quite a little things over the years. Whether he misheard that on the telephone call with Vladimir Putin, I don't know. I mean, the fact of the matter is that there is an accepted international code of conduct
Starting point is 00:21:18 between international leaders that they don't take each other out. So I think we take that half seriously and half of the pinch of salt. It was a good Boris line. It caught a good headline. And I think let's just move on. Are you suggesting that our recently dearly beloved departed Prime Minister can't be entirely relied upon when it comes to veracity of his rhetoric? Oh, I wouldn't suggest that, peers.
Starting point is 00:21:45 But what I would say is that it was quite colourful. It was very Boris. And I'm sure it was rooted in a grain of truth. it may have been slightly over-examplified to catch the headlines, which it duly did. We're now at a crucial stage in this war in Ukraine coming up to the first anniversary. Isabel Oaksha, our international editor at Talk TV, she interviewed Ben Wallace Defence Secretary. And we've got this particular clip to play to you if you just want to listen to this.
Starting point is 00:22:14 Sure. How seriously do you take the threat that he might use tactical nuclear weapons? Well, it is always a serious threat simply because it is in Russian doctor. They have an acceptable view that you can have such a thing as a strategic nuclear weapon and a tactical nuclear weapon. And their idea of a tactical nuclear weapon can be ten times the size of Hiroshima. I mean, that's, again, a sobering statement for the Defence Secretary to make. What is the likelihood or possibility that they cornered Vladimir Putin, if he feels like he is losing this war with all the dishonor that would then be heaped on him back home,
Starting point is 00:22:52 that he might be tempted to utilize what is still the biggest nuclear force in the world? Well, appears, let's just put Ben Wallace's comment into context. If a tactical nuclear weapon was 10 times the ferocity of Hiroshima and unleashed on Ukraine, Ukraine would then join Pluto and Mars somewhere in the stratosphere. I mean, that's just not going to happen. If we're talking about genuine tactical nuclear weapons, we're talking about a nuclear weapon which could cause destruction and damage
Starting point is 00:23:29 over, say, a three to five kilometre area. Now, how could that be employed? Let's just go back to last autumn when the Ukrainians mounted a very successful counter-offensive around Kharkiv and they broke through the Russian lines. That is the moment that if you're desperate, you then consider using a tactical nuclear weapon.
Starting point is 00:23:48 But just think about this one for a moment. Those four provinces into which the Ukrainians are now counter-attacking. Those four provinces were declared by Putin to be forever Russia. So here's the question. Why would Putin want to irradiate for the next 50 years some territory that he's declared forever Russia? It just doesn't stack up. Should the Ukrainians give one inch of any of their territory, including Crimea, which was seized from them illegally in 2014, and all the latest geographic grabs that Putin's made, should they see any of this in any kind of deal because they seem very determined not to?
Starting point is 00:24:29 No, I think the whole thing about this conflict now is that there is no basis for a resolution through negotiation. Zelensky's position is quite clear that every inch, every kilometre of Ukrainian sovereign territory should be Ukrainian. Putin, on the other hand, has got to show something that he has gained out of the war. He's got to gain some part of Ukrainian territory. So their positions are irreconcilable. Therefore, you have to come back to the conclusion that the only way this conflict is going to be resolved is on the battlefield, which is why it's really important that we have continued to supply Ukraine not only with weapons so they don't lose the war, but to give them the chance in a counteroffensive later this year to win this war.
Starting point is 00:25:12 And can they win it, General? Can they win it? Well, I don't know what's going to happen, but I would hazard that from all the evidence that we're seeing, the Russians having mobilized a lot of additional soldiers, 100, 150,000, maybe 200, poorly trained, poorly, poorly, led and terribly motivated, may well launch a new offensive. On the evidence of all that we've seen since the 24th of February, that offensive will fail in a very bloody way with a lot of Russian families having tragedies on their doorstep. At that point, the Ukrainians need to launch a counteroffensive with the additional weapons that we have given them and the training we've given them
Starting point is 00:25:53 with their determination to fight for their own country. And they could strike a number of successive blows which could break the morale of the Russian soldier and the backbone of the Russian army. Then it's game over for Putin, game over for Russia, and we're in a whole new ballgame. Finally, if Rishi Sumac is watching this, and I'm sure he will be,
Starting point is 00:26:12 I'm sure he's an avid viewer, appears Morgan unsensitive. If not, he should be, Prime Minister. If he is, what is your message to him about our own armed forces? and what he should be doing to bolster them? Well, the thing about our own armed forces is, notwithstanding what the American General said,
Starting point is 00:26:31 rubbishing our army. Our army is made up for fantastic people who are well-led and well-motivated, but they've got pretty old and pretty equipment, not across the peace, but in many areas. The thing is that the army has had the lowest priority in defence spending for quite some years. So two things have got to happen, one or the other.
Starting point is 00:26:50 Either priorities in the Ministry of Defence have got to change, to up the priority of the army and allocate more money to the army, our land forces. Let's face it, there's a land war going on in Europe that actually makes the case. Or otherwise, Ben Wallace has got to argue the toss with Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt
Starting point is 00:27:07 that the defence budget has got to go up from 2% of GDP to 2 and a half that Boris was talking about to 3% that Liz Trust was talking about. But currently it's pinned back to 2%. Actually, I think it's a very strong case to say, with a land
Starting point is 00:27:23 war in Europe, threatening the security of Europe, threatening our security, that actually the defence spend should go up from 2% to at least 2.5%. And a fair amount of that extra spend be sent on renewing, refurbishing, bringing up to the 21st century our land warfare capability. I just thought of another final question, actually, while I've got you, because I haven't heard you react yet to the revelations in Prince Harry's book that he killed 25 Taliban. I wondered that since you obviously knew Harry quite well and were the head of the British Army at the time this was all going on,
Starting point is 00:27:57 what your reaction was to him saying that. Well, Piers, it's a great question, and I thought you probably would ask it, but I'm afraid I'm going to say what I've said about 50 times and to other people who have asked me to comment. I'm not commenting on any of the Prince Harry stuff. So, peers, good question, well asked, no answer from Danette. You're showing an admirable discretion.
Starting point is 00:28:18 If only young Harry would do the same, Lord Danik. Great to talk to you. Thanks, Piers. Quick reaction from the pack. I could interview General Dunl for hours. He's such a smart guy, but your reaction to what he said there? So the difficulty is when he thinks that Russia may essentially lose on the battlefield, but I can't see Putin surrendering.
Starting point is 00:28:40 And this is why I'm so worried about we end up in a forever war where he just keeps sending bombs and shells just flattening the place more and more in a sort of long-term blitzkrieg, which is all just awful. Which is his way, right? Avery, I mean, this is what he's done throughout his tenure. This is how he grinds people down. And he hopes we all get bored and move on. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:29:00 I mean, that was incredibly sobering, listening to that. But I think there's one really important thing that Gieferhofstadt said, actually, which is that Putin may not have even invaded Ukraine had Europe not been in political chaos. And so that might be an argument against Brexit. He said only yesterday, didn't he said that he thought that within five years it's feasible that both the UK would return to the EU and Ukraine would also. come back in. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:29:24 It's got nothing to do with the EU. What has all to do with is NATO. It's interesting, isn't it? Putin hasn't invaded any of the other eastern states where NATO, where those states join NATO. The only one he invaded was Ukraine, not a member of NATO. You have to stand up to a bully.
Starting point is 00:29:38 Do you trust him? Putin, of course not. It's just the most appalling dictator that we've seen in our lifetime. Thank you, Pax. Stay with me. Coming up next, how young is too young to learn about trans, gender, identity and sex.
Starting point is 00:29:54 Is four too young? I would say that is too young. We'll debate that after the break. Welcome back to Piers, Walk on on Census. To all to come tonight, Burberry's Valentine's Day advert is accused of glamorizing mastectomy. Should brands be activists like this or distinct to selling handbags? We'll debate that later. But first, she's been nicknamed Christian Mum.
Starting point is 00:30:25 Izzy Montague launched legal action in 2019 against her son's London school over an LGBT pride parade. Tomorrow, her case goes to court. It's the first case of its kind of the UK. She will claim a prime parade held at the school promoted gay lifestyles and indoctrinated children. And her child was four at the time. It's a debate raging on both sides of the Atlantic. In the US, 78% of parents do not believe sexual orientation
Starting point is 00:30:48 or gender identity should be taught to young children. And now Donald Trump has, of course, got involved and said it's going to be a central part of his bid to return to the White House, branding gender ideology a cult. We're going to stop the left-wing radical racist, and perverts who are trying to indoctrinate our youth, and we're going to get their Marxist hands off of our children. We're going to defeat the cult of gender ideology
Starting point is 00:31:17 and reaffirm that God created two genders called men and women. Well, Ava, I can feel bristling to my side here. We've been joined also by Paula and Adrian. He's also bristling, Richard Tice, I don't know, probably nodding away. Also, we'll be now as LGBT rights campaigner, Peter Tatchel, And the Fox News contributor to Tommy Lerner. We'll welcome a stellar panel.
Starting point is 00:31:40 I've got to say for this. All right. Tommy Lairn, let me start with you. This has been a big burning issue in America now, raging away for quite some time. It's one of the reasons I think that Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, has seen such surging popularity,
Starting point is 00:31:55 potentially heading him to the White House in this battle over what you can teach at school with young people in relation to this kind of thing. What is your view? Listen, we do not need to be teaching this radical LGBT grooming agenda in schools. It's one thing. If parents want to do that on their own time, that is a parent's right to do that, with some exceptions, of course.
Starting point is 00:32:21 But to bring this in and bake this into a public school curriculum is wrong. And meanwhile, Chinese students are learning quantum physics, and we've got our students learning how to twerk from drag queens. It's not going to end well. This is grooming. This is ideological mind control. It's introducing this to a group. group of individuals, especially to young kids who have no business learning any of this sexually
Starting point is 00:32:43 explicit material. This is not about being anti-gay or as the incorrectly labeled Rhonda Sanders' bill, don't say gay. This is about keeping this out of the classroom because it does not belong there. This is a grooming agenda. It is extreme. It is explicit. It does not belong in front of young children at their school. They should be learning reading, writing and arithmetic, not this filth. Well, I think you've made your position quite clear there, Ms. Leran. I imagine British Tatchel you agree with every word of that? Well, here in Britain, we know from research that nearly half of all lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender pupils in our schools
Starting point is 00:33:21 have been bullied. Bullied, teased, sometimes subjected to physical violence, simply because of their sexuality or their gender identity. So this education in British schools is designed to combat bullying and to promote understanding and acceptance. None of the teaching in British schools is sexually explicit, nor is any of the material in United States schools. It is all about promoting understanding and tolerance. So what's just been said is a complete misrepresentation of the teaching.
Starting point is 00:33:54 And I think that any parent would want their child to be brought up in a school where understanding and acceptance of difference is valued, where people are not bullied because of their sexuality. Okay, here's what I would say to that, Peter. Look, I don't disagree with some of what you just said. I think the issue here is age. I've got four kids. You've all gone through, obviously, all this. I just think the idea that at four, any child should be exposed to anything like this is ridiculous.
Starting point is 00:34:22 I really do. There is nowhere near old enough to understand or even begin to understand any of the stuff that is being taught in this way. So although this woman in this court case did this on religious grounds, she's a Catholic, and this is what her...
Starting point is 00:34:37 You know, she believes her religion has taught her to believe. That's one debate. But actually, the wider debate for me is what age should we be teaching kids about things like gender identity? And should they be compelled to go on pride parades and so on at the age of four? I don't think so. No one is compelling any child to go on a pride parade anywhere, not in school, not in the street, nowhere. And when it comes to teaching, the teaching is not about sex at a young and. age, it's about relationships and the fact that some kids will be in married heterosexual
Starting point is 00:35:15 families, some will be in single families, some will be in extended families and some will be in same-sex families. It's all about different families that kids in our schools are part of. And of course all those kids should feel loved and appreciated. The essence of this teaching is about love and respect for other people. It's not about sex at all. Okay, let's bring in the panel here. Paul. Good evening. I completely agree with Peter, and I'm really concerned
Starting point is 00:35:45 that a commentator could use the words radical and grooming when we're having a very sensible conversation about helping children to understand who they are. Well, as we saw that poll, 78% of Americans would share a lot of the views that Tommy Lairn Express say. They do not want to see kids, age four,
Starting point is 00:36:04 getting bombarded with this kind of ideology at school. But what kind of ideology is? What exactly are we talking about? And if you listen to Peter, he explains it very carefully. I'll give an example. When you start teaching kids, I mean, the BBC, for example, had one of their teaching videos, said there were over 100 genders.
Starting point is 00:36:21 The BBC should not be teaching children. There are 100 genders. One of them was astragenda, which is an affinity with the stars, right? The ones flying around the moon. I'm sorry, I do actually think that children should not be exposed to that kind of clown track. I don't take the career.
Starting point is 00:36:38 Can we let children be children? Particularly at that age. Richard, they're growing up in households. There's an age, there's an appropriate... There's an appropriate... There's an appropriate age. There are millions of parents who are desperately concerned about what is being taught in primary school.
Starting point is 00:36:53 And the truth is, we don't know what's been taught. But you have just heard about the high percentage of children who suffer bullying, who are vulnerable. That's about... That's about... That's about... ...toe tolerance and empathy that's got nothing to do with gender ideology. You don't need to teach...
Starting point is 00:37:07 A pride parade. That's what this is about. It's not about being proud to be gay. It's about being proud to be you. You can teach tolerance and understanding, but not at 4, 5, 6, 6. Fine. We actually do do that. Aside from all of this, we actually teach sex quite explicitly
Starting point is 00:37:22 in heterosexual relationships from a really young age. You actually have children in nativity plays where you're playing a mother who has an immaculate conception and then gives birth to a baby. What are you teaching about? And how do they understand that? If you remember, as I have done four times, how kids have appeared in these things,
Starting point is 00:37:37 they've thought. They haven't got a Scooby-Doo what any of that means. Well, I grew up Catholic and only knew what sex was from a very young age. Well, I'm sure you did. But what's the purpose of that story? The purpose of that story is love. Yes. The purpose of that story is bringing people together. And that's what the four-year-old is being taught. Well, I want to bring back Tommy Lernerner, because we've had a really scandalous case in the last few days, Tommy, here in the UK, of a transgender person who committed two rapes when identified. as a man, rapes of women. Before the court case started,
Starting point is 00:38:14 had transitioned to become a woman and then was tried under a female name. And then when he's convicted, this person, I'm using that term deliberately, I think, because I'm unconvinced by this transition process, when this person was then convicted, the Scottish government had brought in a law which allowed this trans person
Starting point is 00:38:36 to then be put into a woman's prison. as a woman who had literally got a penis and raped two women. So not only were they being punished by being put into a place where they could attack other women, but they were being treated as if they were legitimately exactly the same as a woman born to a female biological body. What do you make of that? peers, you're wrong.
Starting point is 00:38:59 Yeah, this is a problem that we are encounter in the US. She was a USA. You can correct me, all right, well, hang on, let's go to Peter first. She was put in... She was put into a woman's prison, but in a segregation unit where she had no contact with other women.
Starting point is 00:39:18 But she shouldn't have been put in there at all. A rapist must never... A rapist should never have contact or be at potential risk to other woman. She's now been moved to a male prison, quite rightly. And again, she will have no contact with women. Why do you say she has been moved to a male prison quite rightly, though? because that immediately to me sounds incredibly confusing.
Starting point is 00:39:41 You're saying she, so you presumably think that she is a woman, and yet she is being moved to a male prison because nobody else actually now thinks she is actually a woman. She's a man with a penis who raped two women. I mean, that's the reality. Even her ex- or his or her or purse, whatever, their ex-wife said that this is all a complete scam to game the system and get into a softer prison.
Starting point is 00:40:05 Well, I think you're probably right. I think it does look like the person is gaming the system. But, you know, the fact is that the transfer to a woman's prison was not based on any new law introduced by the Scottish government. It was based on existing policy, which was to respect a person's gender identity, but not under any circumstances put someone who'd committed crimes against women in contact with other woman. and that's why she was in a segregation union. Yeah, look, I don't think what I said was wrong because by new law, by new law, I meant this is a law that's come in in recent years which allowed that gender identity
Starting point is 00:40:46 to be enforced in the way that it was enforced. And I told me, Larry, I just have a massive problem with people. This is what I've been saying from the start about this trans debate. The moment you open the door to this kind of abuse by people, it will happen. You know, it's a bit like cheating in sport. Once you allow it, everyone starts to cheat. You're going to get a load of people who, male rapists, male sex offenders.
Starting point is 00:41:09 What's utopia for them if they get convicted? Being taken from a men's prison with their pariahs and put into a woman's prison surrounded by people they can attack. But they're over 200. Yeah, so I want to be very clear about this. Not everybody who is transgender does something like this. My turn to talk. Not everybody who is transgender is going to do something like this. But you're opening the door for this.
Starting point is 00:41:31 And even beyond that, when we're not even talking about a women's or a men's prison, And let's just talk about here in the USA, and I know in the UK as well, when they're having biological men compete in women's sports using the same locker rooms, exposing themselves to the female athletes that are often in high school. It's inappropriate. It doesn't belong in schools. It doesn't belong in society. This free-for-all you can identify as anything, you can abuse the system, you can abuse this
Starting point is 00:41:54 whole notion of gender identity. It's gone too far. And to even criticize it now has been labeled bigotry. It's not. It's reality. We need to protect people. We need to especially protect people. protect young people.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Well, I actually agree with all that. Peter Tatchel, I mean, I've been watching some interviews you've been doing. I do think you've been, you know, on a mission of discovery yourself about the perils here of this, particularly in this case in Scotland of this rapist. But if I was to ask you now a question which has become the most dangerous controversial question in the world for some reason, you know, what is a woman to you? The Devil Where's Prada 2 is the perfect sequel that has audiences talking. She knows how did you blab?
Starting point is 00:42:33 It exceeds all expectations. I always knew that you would end up doing something great. See the movie that's fun, fierce, and well worth the weight. This is what runway does best. And now the devil is back in all her glory. My boss is badder than your boss. Don't miss the iconic movie event now playing Only in theaters. That's all.
Starting point is 00:42:52 The Devil Wares Prada 2. Now playing everywhere. A trans woman is a woman, but not the same as biological women. There's a difference between biological sex and gender identity. Both are equally valid, both equally deserve respect and equal rights. There should not be a competition between biological women and trans women. They both suffer from very elevated levels of domestic violence, sexual assault, including rape. That applies to both trans women and other women as well.
Starting point is 00:43:32 So let's find the common ground rather than fighting against. other. The enemy is misogyny. That's the enemy, not trans woman. Well, I think the enemy is misogyny in many ways, but I think the enemy is also virtue signalling because the idea that you can let trans women who have massively superior physical bodies compete in professional sport against women born to female inferior physical bodies, I think is for the birds. Actually, that's an unfortunate turn of phrase. I'm no offence to anyone who's offended by my use of the word birds. But thank you very much, Peter Tatchel.
Starting point is 00:44:08 Great to have you on the program. Thank you, Tommy Leran. Great to see you. You're packed. You're staying with me because after the break, we're going massively woke. I'll talk to the neuroscientists, accusing them of glamourizing breast removal.
Starting point is 00:44:32 Well, welcome back. Luxury brand Burberry's office to do with sitting clothes, but does sell an ideology. It features gender neutral models, one of whom appears to be a post-operative trans man bearing scars on their chest from a double mastectomy. Well, my pack's still with me,
Starting point is 00:44:45 and I'm joined by Dr. Deborah Soe, as a neuroscientist, the best-selling author, The End of Gender. Well, welcome to you, Dr. Soe. Your thoughts on Ms. Burberry campaign. Well, hi, Pierce. Thank you so much for having me.
Starting point is 00:44:58 Well, with this campaign, I have to say, we can't really say what Burberry's intentions were, but I am very concerned about this larger trend of non-binary or of young women
Starting point is 00:45:08 getting double mastectomies, presumably not for health conditions, but rather for an aesthetic or because they like to live as a gender that is in between male or female or neither male or female. There's no such thing as being non-binary or gender neutral. There are two genders, two sexes. I discussed the science of this in my book, The End of Gender, as you mentioned. And I am very concerned because in many cases, these young women have other psychological issues.
Starting point is 00:45:33 They have a history of sexual trauma. In some cases, they are on the autism spectrum. They are lesbian and not comfortable with their sexuality. Or in some cases, they've gone through puberty and they're just not fully comfortable in their new, more womanly body, which is completely normal. And I would say every single woman on this planet has had that experience of being uncomfortable in her body at some point in time, especially considering society in the way that society tends to sexualize women,
Starting point is 00:45:56 especially post-puberty. These are all things that we should be talking about, and especially for young women, we should be giving them that support. They should be getting a proper psychological assessment before they are deciding on surgery. And so I can't believe that we are now saying that as a society, yes, young women, if you are at all uncomfortable in your bodies, go ahead and cut off healthy tissue.
Starting point is 00:46:16 Right. I mean, look, it's a powerful statement about this. I just don't know, Richard, what are Burberry doing, getting into any of this anyway? It just seems to me the ultra-extreme end of the virtue-signalling woke world where who's this appealing to is a tiny, tiny number of people.
Starting point is 00:46:32 I don't know, just look. It's a fashion company, are they? Yeah, and I just thought the picture was awful, horrible. What's the appeal of that? I don't think you're the audience. I'm not being rude. No, God, imagine you. Who is the audience?
Starting point is 00:46:44 Well, I think it's a beautiful piece of art, actually, and I think it's high culture, and I think it's fashion. I think it's exciting. It's pushing boundaries. What, those scars on a body? I think it's exciting. I think it looks beautiful. Actually, I think, I think fashion.
Starting point is 00:46:57 Wow, it's a split in the wonkeys. Well, for a start, it's not woke. This is nothing to do with being woke. But it is, actually, because it all comes down to a life. It's all virtue signal. It's nothing about being awakened to an issue. This is about fashion. But when I was young Berber used to just basically
Starting point is 00:47:12 sell clothes and they used on size two models. Regular ways to do it. Who looked like they were on heroin, who looked like they was... I don't agree with that either. On, you know, on drugs or whatever it is, alcoholics. We are looking at the fashion industry as if
Starting point is 00:47:26 they are some kind of moral code. They are not, they never have been, they never will be. This is about Burberry attempting to be a little bit controversial to get us all talking and when really what they're doing is they're making one of the people placing in a dangerous situation.
Starting point is 00:47:41 I'm going to avoid the temptation. You should go to our fashion expert, Richard Tyson. Final word to Deborah. We've just got a few seconds left. But your final word after hearing a little debate there? Well, when you look at the scientific research at the moment in terms of how clinicians are being advised, it really is what the patient wants.
Starting point is 00:48:00 So the patient wants to take a bit of hormone here, a little bit there, remove this body part, add this body part in order to live by this so-called non-binary aesthetic. That is exactly what they should advise. And also from a scientific perspective, detransition 10 step in four years, post-transition. so we'll see what happens at the end. We're running out of time.
Starting point is 00:48:16 Thank you. I appreciate it. That's all for good tonight. Keep it not sensitive. Whatever you're doing, and I can try and get the words out. Good night. Thank you everyone.

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