Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Dr Jordan Peterson
Episode Date: November 10, 2022Tonight on Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers is joined by Dr Jordan Peterson once again and gets uncensored on Elon Musk, Meghan Markle and Trump. Piers asks if remembrance poppies are a choice or obliga...tion. Piers discusses the crucially unclear results of the US midterm election and asks if both US political parties are stuck with ageing leaders that nobody wants. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 526, 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
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Tonight, up here's Morgan Unscensored.
Dr Jordan Peterson's interview on this show has been viewed 17 million times around the world.
Tonight, he's back for more.
Us millions of Brits pay tribute to our armed forces every year by wearing a poppy.
Is it right to shame those who don't?
We'll debate that with SAS Hero at Middleton.
And as crucial U.S. mid-term elections end with no clear winners or losers,
but Donald Trump, are both parties now stuck with aging leaders that nobody wants.
Live from London, this is...
Piers Morgan Uncensored.
Well, good evening from London.
Welcome to Piers Morgan Unsensored.
The right to protest is fundamental to any democracy.
We've got every right to make demands of the people who are supposed to service.
And every right to make a nuisance when they don't.
Protest movements gave us civil rights, gay rights, the female vote.
They shape the free world that we live in today.
But there's a kind of golden rule of protesting.
It's a pretty easy one to remember.
Don't be a dick.
Just as you have a right to protest, everybody else has the right to go on living their lives.
because the chances are they're not the people that you're protesting about.
The brats from Just Stop Oil have forgotten that golden rule.
They seem to be taking great pride and joy in causing daily havoc and misery
for British commuters by shutting down motorways.
And in some cases, the consequences have been appalling.
First, a police officer was injured and two lorries crashed,
trying to avoid a roadblock.
And then came this.
I was actually due to be a pallbearer on my father's coffin along with my son.
And we both got that taken away from us.
There's nothing that we could have done.
Someone that I don't know has taken that ability for me
to say farewell to my father away from me.
It's disgusting.
He went on to say, you'll never forgive them, and I don't blame him.
How could he?
He had to ring his mother and say he wasn't going to be there
at the funeral of his father where he was going to carry the coffin,
and nor could he bring his children.
That man's grandchildren.
They all missed the funeral.
You can't do it again.
What did he do wrong to deserve that?
What do any of the people who missed work, lost money, missed very important medical appointments?
What did they all do wrong?
Just stop oil wants more action on climate change.
So do I.
But they're the wrong victims and they're going about missed a wrong way.
The point of protest is to put pressure on the powerful to change calls.
To do that, you need to have public support.
It's democracy.
That's why we have civil rights, gay rights, and the female vote.
But what kind of protests like this, what it does is to infuriate and irritate the very people that is supposedly trying to persuade.
If Justop Oil wants anyone to listen to them, well, let me give them some very, very simple advice.
Stop being dicks.
Well, joining me now are environmentalist and author Stanley Johnson, Talk TV presenter, Richard Tyson, Talk TV, International Editor, Isabel Oshott.
And across the pond, Fox News contributor, Cat Tip,
who's on the hottest show on television, Goffeld.
And I know you claim all the credit for that, Kat, and quite rightly.
Well, come to in a moment, Kat, talking about the US midterms.
But first of all, Stanley Johnson, you're a big environmentalist.
I believe in climate change.
I think it's real.
I think it's dangerous.
I think that the world is heating up, and we have to do something about it.
But I think that what is going on now with these just-stop oil protests
is crossing a line, and it's not having any good impact.
They're not changing people's minds, if anything, they're alienating people.
I think what you say is pretty fair.
I, by the way, have addressed meetings in Trafalgar Square, wearing the Extinction Rebellion badge.
I think there is a case for peaceful process.
Some of the great achievements in this world have been achieved through peaceful process.
I looked at film this afternoon of the lady who threw herself under the King's Horse.
I think it was May 1913 in these things happened.
She went to prison.
You can't always keep everybody happy all the time.
But yes, I think you're absolutely right.
Who we're trying to influence.
We ought actually being trying to influence members of Parliament
who have a chance to do the right thing
in terms of influencing the government.
This is where the target ought to be.
And I think that the way organizations do go about it,
for example, I'm involved in a huge campaign
to try and stop the government's scrambling.
all the environmental laws, which they want to do.
But the way that has been done is by getting it lots and lots of people to write to their MPs.
So, yes, I think you're right about this.
You do alienate people, and you particularly alienate them if you break the law and break the law in a way that this...
Right, and Isabel, the problem is the police haven't really been tackling them hard enough in my estimation.
There are many other countries of the world, but this would not be happening.
If people's block motorways in many European countries, actually, they'd be...
in very short thrift, slung off.
But we seem oddly reluctant.
I mean, I'm not reluctant.
You know, you give me a water can,
and I'd be the first in there.
No, I think we've got to get much tougher.
This is going to go on and on.
They've made it very clear that they're going to go on and on doing it.
I mean, Stanley, you characterise this as peaceful protest.
I'm not sure that that actually is peaceful.
It's causing an immense amount of disruption.
It's not peaceful when policemen start being hit in car crashes, right?
But, Isabel, in Iran,
at the moment. A lot of ladies are taking off their scarves.
And I salute them for that.
Yes, but I'm sure the Iranian regime thinks that's illegal and causing a disruption.
You see what I mean?
Well, no, I don't.
I don't accept that as equivalence whatsoever.
And the whole suffragette thing is absolutely ridiculous.
A very clever piece of spin on the part of these protesters.
Absolutely no equivalence whatsoever.
The suffragettes were completely disenfranchised.
The just stop oil protesters have a vote.
There are other ways to change it.
Richard Tyson, they're also, a lot of what they're calling for is simply unworkable.
I mean, they want all fossil fuel work to stop overnight.
It's insane because the truth is.
We can't afford to do that, and it's not practically possible anyway.
Everybody accepts, who is frankly sane, that we're in a transition period.
We don't know how long that transition is.
It might be 30 years. It might be 40 years.
But, for example, gas and oil are the key fossil fuels that are part of that transition.
What they're asking for is impossible.
It's illogical.
and the truth is, would be much better actually to use our own fossil fuels
than importing them literally halfway across the world,
creating more CO2, more emissions, than actually using ourselves.
So what they're asking for is completely illogical.
Yes, the right to protest is sacrosanct,
but not the right to obstruct,
not the right to prevent people going about their daily lives
and, for example, going to a funeral of your parents.
Carrying your father's got off it.
I mean, I just think that the fact that man wasn't able,
to do that is really disgraceful.
Come back to Richard's point.
It's very nice to hear you say, Richard, you think that the climate change is important.
Now, as we speak today, they're trying to deal with this in Nagu Kara, in Sharmul Shake.
The answer is, globally, we are in sheer, in tremendous trouble.
What Glasgow said was we've got to keep it to 1.5.
Nowadays, it looks as they were heading firmly for 2.8.
What is happening in Sharmulshake at the moment is tremendously important.
Rishi Shunak was there, Boris was there.
It is. But the key thing, Stanley, this has to be done sensibly.
You can't just get rid of all use of fossil fuels overnight.
You have to move to green energy in a way which actually is practical, can happen.
You need a will of governments to do it.
But ultimately, it's got to be practical.
You can't just stop.
What do you mean by practical?
We know what the carbon budget is.
It's got to be affordable.
It's got to be proportionate.
And what you can't do is penalise the least well-off in society
who can't afford to heat.
they can't afford to eat.
Our businesses can't afford to be competitive
and therefore they're all going overseas.
And what you've got to be really careful of, Stanley,
is the only zero is the amount of money left in our bank accounts.
Right.
Okay.
Look, I want to move on.
I want to move on to Kat Temf over in New York.
Kat, the midterms of, they're still dragging on.
It's quite extraordinary to be.
In America, some of these votes take weeks or months to resolve, to count.
What's the matter with you?
Can't you count over there?
Yeah.
That's not my call.
I'm not involved in that aspect of things.
What do you make of the mid-
I remember we used to have election, like, what, go ahead.
What do you make of the mid-terms?
I mean, it seemed to me that the big loser
looked like it was Donald Trump.
Certainly the media has been playing that aggressively.
And there's clearly now a battle
for the soul of the Republican Party
between Trump and probably Ron DeSantis,
who had a fantastically successful election result.
What do you make of that?
I mean, Trump's got this big announcement coming
next week. Is he actually going to go ahead now and say he's going to run, or do you think
smarter, wiser voices may be able to persuade him to, at the very least wait?
It's been very difficult for anyone to persuade him of anything. I think when it comes to his
candidates, the strategy of focusing on, you know, election denial and saying the election was
stolen is not a good one. And a lot of people talk about how it's not a good one because if you
don't believe it, you might not want to vote for candidates who do believe it. But one thing that
people don't talk about, which I always think about is, what if people do believe it? Why would
they want to participate in an election that they think is going to be stolen anyway? Yeah.
And what we've seen in the wake of these midterms that we haven't seen before is the kinds of people
and the number of people who are saying Trump's got to stop this and if he can't stop it, he's got to go.
I mean, even Mike Sernovich was tweeting that. Former Trump advisors were tweeting that. It's not just
that what people are saying so much as the people who are actually saying this stuff that
always had his back in the past no matter what he said or no matter what he did.
Joe Biden would be 80 at the next election, but he's now dropping heavy hints he wants to
run again for another four years. I mean, assuming he even makes it to the next election,
which I think at the moment is an aspiration. I don't mean that to be unkind.
There's the condition he appears to be in when he appears in public is increasingly unsteady.
Is it good for America that you may end up with?
the president that old?
Yeah, there's things that you see are very impossible to ignore.
Not just him stumbling over his words, but we've seen him shaking hands with people who are not
there.
We've seen him looking for people who are already dead.
That's not something that inspires confidence in anyone.
I mean, my grandparents have about 10 years on Joe Biden, and I just saw them last weekend.
And if I saw them do any of those things, I would be deeply concerned in asking if they
needed to go to the hospital.
and they are not in control of the country.
Yes, I think that's the problem.
They're not in control of nuclear weapons.
That's what worries me.
Right.
Now, I want to talk to you about kangaroo testicles,
which I know, to your surprise,
you're probably your expert area.
I'll tell you why,
because a gentleman called Matt Hancock,
who may not have crossed over to the American zeitgeist
in quite the way he has here,
but he was the health secretary in the pandemic,
was pretty disastrous for much of,
of it, and then he got fired from his job
because he was caught having an affair
in government buildings, breaking his own lockdown rules.
He's now popped up in a reality television show
called I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here,
which is notorious for making, you know,
normally Zed-less celebrities
go into a jungle in Australia
and do disgustingly humiliating things
at the volition of the voting public,
including eating kangaroo testicles.
And he's doing this while he should be
serving his constituents back in West Suffolk as a member of parliament
for which he receives a salary of 84,000 pounds.
So I guess my question for you is,
if this was happening in America,
if you had a serving congressman or woman or senator
who basically took a month out, five weeks out,
to go to a jungle and eat kangaroo testicles,
what would be the reaction?
I would be torn.
I mean, with this guy,
it kind of sounds as though perhaps he'd be better off there
than influencing policy if he was a guy saying that
he was saying that you can't have gatherings of two people,
people couldn't see dying relatives,
but he could have an affair with his assistant.
I mean, an affair is never a good look
when you get busted for one,
especially not when you have to apologize
for, I'm sorry, I broke social distancing rules.
I don't know if people in Australia
would want him anywhere near the government.
They might be happy he's out in the jungle.
Well, I'm going to play a little montage now
for viewers who've not been caught up to some.
He went in last night
and we have a montage of the former health secretary.
Here he is.
You don't have to hold your breath.
Why don't?
Just him.
Matt Hancock.
Matt Hancock.
Matt Hancock.
The man that put the cock into Hancock.
Well, look, I'm not going to go at you again, Isabel,
about the fact you've done a book with him.
We'll save that when the book comes out.
But when I watched it last night,
I can see, you know, to my horror,
various people were messaging me saying,
actually, it's coming over OK.
which of course is exactly what he wants.
But if I'd lost a relative in the pandemic
and there hasn't even been a proper inquiry
yet into what the government did right or wrong in the pandemic,
this looks to me like just a running smack in the face
to those people, that he's making all this money,
doing humiliating things, making a total ass of himself, frankly,
but for, you know, self-promotional reasons
and fulfilling his bank balance.
And he's going to have to live with the consequences
of what was an incredibly high-risk decision.
And I think it will be really interesting.
I'm sure Stanley will have a perspective
on the dynamic in the jungle
to see how that plays out
because already last night,
and by the way, I've never watched
I'm a celebrity before this series.
I mean, the ratings are huge.
It's really good.
Everyone is tuning in to watch him get humiliated.
It's absolutely extraordinary.
But you can already see some tensions there.
There's Boy Georgian there who clearly his mother had been very ill.
I can see him brewing to have a good.
There's others. Mike Tindle didn't look too happy.
Charlie White lost a family.
Clearly the vibe in amongst the other celebrities
was pretty hostile to him.
So at some point, I don't know, is this going to blow up
or is it going to go the other way?
Because he's going to go the other way, isn't it?
Do you think so?
Yeah, I think it's going to go the other way.
We're going to warm to this guy.
I think I'm in a minority.
Again, I suspect here, but I think people are going to warn him.
First, they're going to think, actually,
who has put dyslexia on everybody's
You know.
Stanley, no one is talking about dyslexia.
He wants to pretend it's about dyslexia.
No one is talking about dyslexia.
Oh, I'm sorry.
We've been nothing but dyslexia being talking about recently.
Not to do with Matt Hancock.
Of course, he's put it on the agenda.
They're all talking about him being covered in slime and eating bugs.
No, honestly, that is absolutely racist.
That's A and B.
I think we are going to see people say, look, you know, he's doing a good job.
He's actually in the jungle, you mean.
Doing a good job in the jungle.
down into disgusting quarries of slime.
It's not a good job, Stanley.
I did 17 days there.
I did 17 days. Look at this.
This is a little bag which says, this is Stanley.
I think this is all the food we had for 17 days.
And I thought it was a good experience, good experience,
because you have nobody to talk to who is...
No, no, don't get me wrong.
He's perfectly entitled to have his good experience.
Richard Tice, my problem with this is the timing, right?
He's perfectly entitled to be a Z-List ex-politician going into a jungle.
But not before there's been a public inquiry into his handling of a pandemic,
which was the worst health crisis of our generation.
The winners here is ITV, because the viewing numbers are going through the roof.
People want to see and make a fool of himself.
If he wants to be a celebrity, then please resign.
Stand down from your seat, have a by-election, and go and be a Z-List celebrity.
That's his call.
But the reality, as you say, there's a public inquiry going on at the moment.
Millions of people suffered terribly.
as you say, losing relatives, not being able to go to care hands.
And they're suffering now in his constituency, from his cost of living crisis,
exacerbated by the Conservative government.
And where's their MP?
He's feathering his nest for hundreds of thousands of pounds in Australia.
He's not representing him in the House of Commons for which he is paid to do.
Right.
If this was Donald Trump and he was in a jungle and having despicable things done to him
in a very humiliating way, slime on his head and rats and tarantulas
and being hung upside down and he can vote as the American people
whether he should carry on doing this every night
and do these horrible humanism challenges.
It would probably be the biggest TV show of all time, wouldn't it?
Everybody would watch it.
Nobody would miss it.
And we all wrong.
But is it right, though, when you think this guy,
now you know a bit more about him,
is it right, you think?
I mean, if an American politician did this
while they were still serving as a politician,
I think they'd be outrage, wouldn't they?
Donald Trump?
Right.
I mean, of course it's not,
but I think that if you're going to actually,
you know that it's not.
And he knew there'd be backlash,
but going in and doing it anyway
proves how bad he thought things would be
if he was actually around
to take some questions about this stuff.
You know what?
I think that's absolutely spot on.
Kat, great to see you.
Thank you very much.
You're coming on.
Appreciate it.
Stanley.
Always good to lock horns with you.
Don't agree with almost anything
you ever say, but I love the way you say it.
Isabel, we'll return to you.
When your book comes out,
co-authored with Matt Hancock.
And Richard, thank you for coming on.
Appreciate it.
Well, certainly come, I'm wearing one out of choice tonight.
SCS soldier term presenter Anne Middleton
thinks I should have to wear a poppy
and only wokey warriors would refuse.
So next, we're going to debate that.
Also, back from Twitter for supposedly transphobia,
William Musk have him back.
Jordan Peterson returns.
Sue Piers Morgan Unsense.
Life. There he is.
He's great man.
Welcome back.
Well, clinical psychologist, Dr. Jordan Peterson,
one of the world's most famous and fascinating intellectuals,
books are instant bestsellers.
Tens of millions watch him online.
In fact, his last interview on Pierce Morgan Unsensitive is so far
been viewed more than 17 million times.
And I'm delighted to say that he joins me again now.
Jordan, great to have you back on the program.
Well, thanks, Pierce. It's good to see you again.
I was absolutely astonished, really.
Maybe I shouldn't have been,
but by the reaction to our last interview,
worldwide, the sheer volume of people that watch the whole interview,
the way the clips were disseminated on TikTok, on Facebook, on Twitter.
It was a really interesting insight, actually,
into a whole world that doesn't even involve actually conventional television anymore.
I guess you wouldn't be surprised because this happens to you a lot.
But I was.
What does it say about society that that number of people watching an interview on a computer or phone?
Well, I'm still continually surprised about it.
But, well, I think what it shows is that there's really no way that legacy TV in some real sense can compete with the absolutely wide open frontier of online video distribution, where the cost is low and people can access it everywhere.
It's fundamentally the consequence of a technological revolution.
And there's all sorts of good things about that.
And one of those would be the ability to widely disperse complex and sophisticated information, which YouTube has been particularly good at,
in the long form, but it's also problematic in that it produces all sorts of alterations in
social behavior that we're only, and some of them very dangerous, many of which we're only
just beginning to understand. Right. Elon Musk has just bought Twitter, and it's creating
a huge Ferrari, obviously, in many different ways. And he's admitted, I'm going to do lots of
things in the next few months, and we're going to get some wrong, and we're going to pull them
and try something else. He's going to try and work out a way of making it a sustainable business model,
but also he wants to bring back what he perceives to be genuine free speech on the platform.
Is it possible, Jordan, do you think, that he can do that?
Or are we now so entrenched in tribalism, particularly on social media,
that it's almost impossible to do what he wants to do?
Well, you couldn't have picked a better day to talk about this with me
because I just got a paper sent to me today by Jonathan Haidt.
He didn't write the paper.
It will be published.
It's published in a journal called Personality and Individual Differences,
and it's an examination of the personality traits associated with,
let's say, excessive and self-promoting internet usage.
And if you don't mind, I'd like to read you a couple of the descriptions of what the people found
because it's so absolutely spot on and relevant.
I don't think we are descending into tribalism.
I think what's happening is that the virtualization of the world is enabling
people who behave in a particular antisocial way,
in a self-grandizing and self-promoting antisocial way.
And I'll just read you the descriptions
that are taken directly from this paper.
So it was an actual study of online behavior.
Women characterized by high self-centered antagonism,
neurotic narcissism,
Machiavellian views,
Machiavellian tactics,
so that's manipulative, manipulativeness,
meanness,
disinhibition, physical sadism and indirect sadism,
used Instagram for a longer time and more frequently than did men.
In women, verbal sadism and emotionality was associated with longer,
while honesty, humility, and conscientiousness was with a shorter Facebook usage time.
Furthermore, women high in agentic extroversion, so that's manipulative self-promotion,
and indirect sadism used Facebook for a longer time and more frequently than men.
And so I've thought for a while that one of the things that's happening to us as we virtualize the world is that
we're enabling the small percentage of people.
It's usually about 3% in general populations who use manipulation and reputation savaging and denigration and self-promotion.
So the genuinely psychopathic types to dominate the social conversation,
and to spew their poisonous and manipulative venom into the public domain,
not only with no fear of being stopped and no inhibition,
which is almost all applied socially,
but also while being monetized and promoted by the people who run the social media channels.
And every society forever has had to contend with a small percentage of people
who will utilize all the benefits of society only for themselves.
They had to contend with the fact that those are,
people, if not brought under control, can demolish the structure of the entire society.
And I think the polarization that we're feeling is a consequence of their untrammeled expression
online, Instagram, Facebook, and in online comment forums like Twitter.
But that stuff you read out just said seem to be gender-specific to women.
Presumably it also applies in other ways to men as well on social media.
Oh yeah, well, I think the reason that it applied in this study in women is because Instagram is very heavy, heavy image use, it involves heavy use of images.
And there are reasons to assume that because of that, it attracts women who are directed towards short-term impulsive mating strategies.
And that's another sign of impulsive antisocial and psychopathic behavior.
I think you'd see the same thing in men.
In fact, I've been talking to psychologists, great psychologists, to make sure that I'm on the right.
track here about those who post repeatedly, say, in online forums, especially in relationship
to comments.
And you certainly see that same pattern of sadism, maccoyalianism, psychopathy and narcissism,
characterizing the men who are also incentivized to use what used to be classic female
antisocial strategies to advance themselves in the reputational hierarchy.
Exploiders fundamentally.
Right.
But the bottom line is that there is a small percentage of people generating a vast amount of noise.
What impact is that happening on society, do you think?
Well, I think it skews our perceptions of what normal people are like.
We assume that what we're getting, you know, when you sample the world when you're walking through it,
you make the assumption that you're getting an unbiased representation of the things going on around you.
And when you're on an online platform and say reading comments, you also have the assumption that what you're seeing is something like a sample of public opinion.
But it's not.
You know, because if 10 strangers came up to you randomly in the street, then you'd have a bit of a sample of what people randomly think.
But behavior online isn't random and the people who post aren't precisely normal.
And I have been talking with Jonathan Haidt and Gene Twenge.
about this and I think they might know more about it than anybody else in the world.
And it's pretty clear that the people who are dominating, say, online comment sections,
and I would especially say this is true of the people who post anonymously,
and there's other markers for this sort of behavior as well,
they dominate the political discourse.
And what's happening in some sense is that we have a new form of pollution
that's also corporate sponsored,
and it's pollution of the domain of public discourse.
And the pollution occurs because the source,
social media companies are either enabling or failing to control, you know, those known in the popular parlance as trolls.
But they're not just comical trolls, you know, using derision in some cute way and having their say in the free speech domain.
They're really poisonous individuals.
And they're poisoning the entire domain of discourse.
So what can Elon must do about it, do you think?
If you were advising him on this, I mean, ironically, at the moment, you're not on Twitter.
A, would you, do you want to come back?
now that Musk is in charge.
You think you should be restored.
Do you want to be back on Twitter?
And secondly, what would you advise him to do about this issue of the trolls and so on?
Well, the first thing I would advise,
and I'm going to be advising the political people I'll be talking to over the next few weeks of precisely this,
and I have talked it over with Twengi and Haid to make sure that I'm not, like I said,
off on a personal tangent.
I would say there's no excuse for including the anonymous posters.
with the real human beings.
And I think that social media platforms
who have a certain reach,
maybe it's a million subscribers,
and I don't really know what figure is appropriate,
should be required to implement
know your customer laws,
and then that the people who are posting
who are genuine, verified human beings
willing to abide by their words
with their personal reputation
should be put in one comment section,
and then the online anonymous,
cowardly, narcissistic,
pathological troll demons
who are polluting the public discourse
should be put in a different common section.
And if you want to go to hell and visit the troll demons
and see what they have to spew, you can.
But otherwise, you can be among the normal human beings
engaged in normal civil human discourse.
And that would separate the bloody psychopaths
from the bulk of decent normal people.
And, you know, 97% of people aren't psychopathic.
And so we are talking about a small minority here,
but they have the upper hand.
See, there's a percentage of people who...
I actually...
I had a psychopath test done on me, actually,
a lengthy questionnaire,
and they concluded I was a good psychopath.
And what did they mean by that example?
Apparently, I wasn't like the malevolent version.
It was slightly lost on me the nuance.
Okay, well...
Okay, look, look,
it's often the case that people in the industry
that you're in,
and this would be true for politics and journalism as well.
Anything with a public face
are more likely to be extroverted
and also more likely to be somewhat disagreeable.
And those personality traits can tilt you towards,
what would you say, a style of callous exploitation.
But there are other personality factors
that mediate against that, like conscientiousness.
And so people who are hardworking and reliable, for example,
aren't parasitic in the same way that a classic psychopath would be.
And so it's complicated.
And it isn't the case that extroversion
and even a certain degree of disagreeableness
in and of themselves are dangerous,
but they lead, like everybody's led to temptation
in the direction that's in accordance with their temperament
and the fact that you are a public-facing person
and that you like that would tilt you in one direction
of potential temptation, but that's not necessarily diagnostic.
Now, it is a problem because it probably is the case
that politics and journalism and entertainment
attract a disproportionate number of Machiavellians and psychopaths because of the status that goes along with those enterprises.
But it's not diagnostic.
It doesn't mean that if you're in that industry.
And, you know, you've had a long career.
And that's also another marker for failure or for lack of psychopathy.
Because in the normal world, psychopaths exploit and they get a reputation for doing so quite quickly.
and then people avoid them and stop working with them.
And so it doesn't work over the medium to the long run as a general rule.
Yeah, I get it.
Last time we spoke at length, you said after us,
we forgot to get around to Donald Trump.
And you were quite keen to talk about Donald Trump.
So we're going to take a short break.
And when we come back, I do want to talk about Trump
because the big question right now in America is, is Trump done?
So we'll talk about that after the break.
Raise your hand if you've ever been called
crazy. I don't think that
men can control crazy women.
Welcome back to Piersbroke's Organisanssen.
I'm still here with Dr. Jordan Peterson, my special guest
tonight. Jordan,
Donald Trump, what is
he? Is he a narcissist,
a sociopath, a psychopath,
all of those things, none of them?
I don't think that he's a
psychopath because
he's been
successful in repeated
enterprises over long
periods of time, and he has a
variety of people who remain intensely loyal to him. Now, he's definitely extroverted to a very great
degree and he's definitely disagreeable. And so that gives him some of the traits that are associated
with those personality features. But from what I've been able to understand, he's also
very conscientious and hardworking, for example. And so that's a real mitigating factor.
And so I think it's very easy to demonize someone that you don't approve of, let's say. And certainly
Trump has been subject, I would say to more demonization than any political leader in the West
that I can remember in my entire lifetime, including Richard Nixon. And so that's also set him back
on his heels and made him somewhat embattled and defensive, which I don't think did any great
things for his personality in some real sense. So I think it's a mistake to assume that Trump is a
psychopath. I think it's a big mistake. I think it's a big mistake to assume that Putin is a
psychopath. It's easy to do that, but I don't think the evidence suggests that. You don't want to
throw those labels around casually. And, you know, if Trump was psychopathic, well, he did a pretty
good job of keeping the United States clear of war for four years. That's pretty damn remarkable.
And he did have a big hand in promoting the Abraham Peace Accords, and that was pretty remarkable.
And those aren't the sorts of things that you would expect from a psychopath. He also seems to have a
pretty good hand with the working class. So
I don't think it's
those are reasonable diagnostic labels
to... You're sounding like a...
I don't want to put words in your mouth, but you sound like you're
a bit of a fan of Donald Trump. Would you like
him to run again? Would it be good for America,
do you think? No, I don't
think it would be good for America.
Would it be good for him to run? That's a
difficult question, because it might
be that it would be good for America
to have whether or not
Donald Trump should be president, sort it
in the public sphere, debated intensely and subject to an election.
So it might be very interesting to see him put himself forward on the Republican ticket.
If I had my druthers, and I say this, I hope with due care,
I would rather see someone like DeSantis step forward who shares some of that forthright
strength, let's say, that characterizes Trump at his best,
but seems to be a more cautious administrator and a less,
divisive figure. I think that would be better because Trump, for whatever virtues he might have,
and I think he has the virtues of a Washington outsider, I think that's quite clear. I think that
his behavior in the political realm raises the political temperature to a dangerous degree.
And, you know, I say that while trying to give the devil as due and not casting careless aspersions
on his name. Yeah, no, exactly. I want to turn to somebody else who may well have
presidential ambitions and has been the subject of a lot of negativity.
Megan Markle, Prince Harry's wife, who does this podcast, Archiewell podcast or archetypes,
it's cool, and which she seems to perennally play the victim, the female victim of all
outrages.
And your name got dragged into this.
Let's take a listen to what she said.
Raise your hand if you've ever been called crazy or hysterical.
Or what about nuts, insane, out of your mind completely irrational?
I don't think that men can control crazy women.
The use of these labels has been drilled into us from movies and TV, from friends and family,
and even from random strangers.
And the fact is, no one wants this label.
What did you make of that, Jordan, to be suddenly appearing on Megan Markle's podcast as a villain?
The first thing I make of it is that she...
Yeah, well, the first thing I make of it is that her voice drips with the same falsehood
that the voice of Kamala Harris drips with.
It's this sanctimonious, faux compassionate, talking down to her audience and trying to be sure
that we're all really on the same compassionate page here.
And we're all being victimized by terrible forces that are arrayed against us.
None of that's really fair.
And it's just grates on me.
And I do believe you played a bit of a clip from me when I was talking to Pallia, Camille Pellia, the literary critic.
And I do believe that it is the case that it's very difficult to control female antisocial behavior, often of the type that's being pilloried as hysterical.
And I think that there is no shortage of clinical evidence to support precisely that.
claim. It's very difficult for women to control female antisocial behavior and females who are antisocial.
That feminine pattern is reputation savaging under the guise of compassionate care.
And it's extraordinarily destructive.
And so I stand by my words.
Absolutely.
And I do think it scales online because you can use anonymous reputation savaging to unbelievably great effect online with absolutely no punishment.
for your sins, so to speak, and that is certainly one of the things that's contributing to so-called cancel culture,
and there's no shortage of that coming from the female side. Now, men can engage in exactly the same
strategies, and they do so online, and that's enabled. But it's definitely, see, with men, and I've said
this before, and I do believe this to be the case, the ever-present threat of the potential for
physical violence keeps men from doing that to each other most of the time.
in person. And that all disappears online. And that means that those who are prone to do such
things, to use corrosive and denigrating derision, for example, and reputation savaging can have a
free hand at it. And that includes no shortage of women. And women are often, very, very often,
the targets of that behavior from their own, from their own fellows, so to speak.
We've talked about Trump and Megamark. I wanted to just ask you again about Elon Musk,
about what you thought of him as a character.
He seems to me a fascinating individual,
whether he's slightly on the spectrum
or I'm not sure what his makeup is psychologically,
but he's certainly a creative genius,
a whirlwind, a life force,
who's done remarkable things.
What do you make of him?
Well, I know people who know him very well
and have worked with him very closely,
and these are very solid people,
extremely competent and extremely creative,
and their admirers of Musk,
I talked with my brother-in-law, Jim Keller, who's one of the world's great chip engineers,
and he worked very closely with Musk for years.
And he believes that he's in many ways exactly what you'd think he was.
He's a genius, but he's also, like a visionary genius,
but he's also someone who's very, very good at implementing,
very good at running companies, as you can tell,
because he has a multitude of impossible, successful companies.
And so he goes into a company, and he cleans house and puts,
things in order and makes things work efficiently.
And maybe he can do that with Twitter.
I hope he can because
Musk is doing all sorts of things that appear to be useful and
difficult and it would be a catastrophe to see him derailed
in his efforts. And I think he's bitten off a lot to chew with Twitter.
Would you like to be back on Twitter?
You know, I was, I dipped into Twitter this morning
when I was looking at some of the research that I just shared
with you.
It instantly struck me the same way it struck me the last time I was in Twitter.
It's such a den of pathology that using it, I think, is psychologically damaging.
And if it's possible for Musk to get the trolls, and they're not trolls,
they're psychopathic, McEvelian, sadistic narcissists under control,
then it's possible that the platform might be useful.
I like to share information on it.
I like to follow people to see what they were up to,
a lot of the people that I've met over the years.
but man, it's a snake pit.
It is.
It isn't obvious to me
that we know what to do about it.
Before I let you go, Jordan,
you're wearing a poppy.
I'm wearing a poppy.
We're about to have a debate
after the break about whether people
should be compelled to wear poppies.
And I guess this goes to the wider thing
about general displays
of, I guess, signalling your virtue
in any way that you choose.
Should anyone be compelled to?
Whatever the cause,
whether it's a black square on Instagram
when George Floyd died
or a poppy for our Mr.
day or so on. Should people ever be compelled?
I think that compulsion, especially in matters of public policy, is a sign of bad policy.
If you can't get people on board voluntarily by motivating them with the proper story,
then you're a poor leader. And so I certainly, certainly would be opposed to anything
approximating legal compulsion. Now, we use social compulsion frequently to produce consensus,
let's say, and to enforce it. And that's never going to go away.
way and there's some utility in that. But my general take on the world is that people should
be allowed to go to hell in a handbasket pretty much any way they choose once they're adults,
although they might be encouraged not to do that and invited not to do that. But I'm not a fan
of compulsion for any reason. I think it is a sign of bad policy. If you and I can't play
together voluntarily, then we don't have a very good relationship. And it's not going to be efficient
and productive. It's going to require force to continue. I will take that analysis to commence on
debate. Dr. Jordan Peterson, as always, fascinating. Thank you very much indeed for joining me.
Really good to talk to you again, Pearson. And good to see you. And thank you to everyone
watching and listening. They always thoroughly enjoy it. Come back soon. Thank you very much.
Well, coming next. So, is it offensive not to wear a poppy? Former S.A.S. Soldier at Middleton
goes head-to-head with Amirous Kevin McGuire, who refuses to wear one. It should be lively.
Welcome back to Pierce Morgan Nause. The Poppy is Britain's national symbol of remembrance for
armed forces heroes who lose their lives in service of their country.
Most people wear it with pride, but some people, for their own reasons, refuse to,
and they're often savagely criticised.
But should any display of personal respect ever be mandatory?
Well, joining me now is Adventure in former Marine, Anne Middleton from the SBS,
plus Associate Editor of Daily Mirror,
Kevin McGuire.
So Kevin McGuire, you very sensibly, I noticed, not come into the studio
to tell this to Anne Middleton's face,
where he would break your face in, too.
And you're not wearing a poppy.
So explain to me why don't you wear a poppy
and why do you feel the way you do?
Piersanne is too disciplined to break my face.
He might want it, but he wouldn't do it.
Now look, I'm happy to buy a poppy and make my donation.
I realise the Royal British Legion make about £50 million a year,
or they did before COVID.
It's very important.
But it's the compulsion I bulk against.
And the poppy police finger pointing saying,
why aren't you wearing a poppy from the end of October
when TV stations compete a stick,
poppies in lapels of whoever appears on them?
It's almost like Christmas comes earlier every year.
It's that level of compulsion.
And I'm in Exeter,
which is why I'm not with you and in London.
And I've been doing my survey on the street,
because I knew we were going to discuss this,
most people are not wearing a poppy.
I would say at least nine in ten,
probably more than that.
I'm not wearing poppies.
They're not. They're just not doing it.
The argument from Kevin is...
Are they all disrespectful?
He doesn't want to wear one.
Why should he?
It's a symbol of respect. It's as simple as that.
It's a symbol of respect.
It's a symbol of remembrance.
For those that fall during World War II, World War I,
you name it, for those that are given the ultimate sacrifice
for us to live on this island,
for us to be in the UK,
to us to live in this privileged society that we live in,
and for us to even have the opportunity to not work,
wear the poppy or to wear the poppy.
To have that freedom of choice. I guarantee you, yeah, freedom of choice.
I guarantee you everyone has been affected by the World Wars.
You know, even the last generation, it's that close to us.
What about people like, there's an Irish footballer called James McLean who gets
regularly criticised and houndy for not wearing a poppy?
But he comes from dairy and he comes from a particular part of dairy where six people in that
community lost their lives on the Bloody Sunday shootings.
back in 1972, and he says, I cannot wear a poppy.
The poppy has nothing to do with...
But it does actually represent all military action by the British Armed Forces.
The puppy has nothing to do with Bloody Sunday.
It has...
The Irish fought with the Irish.
We fought with the Welsh.
We fought with the Scottish.
You know, this island came together to fight for the freedom,
for the people on the island and for the freedom of the United Kingdom.
Now, we fought together.
People are getting lost and confused with what it symbolises.
It symbolises the coming together personal sacrifice, remembering that personal sacrifice for us to live freely in this country.
Should they be forced to wear them?
No, no, no one should be forced to do anything.
No, it shouldn't be, but it should be strongly recommended.
Now, when we see people wearing the white poppy, it's like, no, you either wear one or you don't.
You know, the white poppy, that just causes divide.
It's absolutely ridiculous to even have a white poppy that's out there.
Kevin, I mean, to me, it's, look, I don't think people should be mandated to wear one.
But it does seem strange to me
that people seem to make more effort
not to wear one than they do to put one on.
It's almost a trend.
It's a few days every year
where you just remember
these horrendous world wars in particular
where so many millions of people lost their lives.
Is it too much to just put a poppy on
and say thank you and respect them?
I think there's a case, peers.
People don't like to be told what to do
and they don't like the finger pointing
by the poppy police
trying to name and share.
Shame. Charlene White, the ITN newsreader who's now in the jungle and I'm a
celeb. She didn't wear a poppy because she doesn't wear symbols for a lot of the other
charities she represents. She got terrible racist abuse. I know the James McLean story
because he's to play for Sunland. He's at Wigan now and he's from Derry and in Northern
Ireland and some parts of Great Britain too, the poppy is an issue that divides people
and it is because it's connected to the military and establishment,
although it's trademarked by the Royal British Legion,
who have the trademark, they get the money,
it doesn't go to other charities, it goes to them,
and it's very important.
It is this idea of not persuading people,
but pointing the finger and saying, you must wear it.
It's strongly recommended that.
Final word to you, analysts.
It's our history.
Like I said, our grandfathers and grandmothers were affected by it.
It's a mark of respect for them.
It's a mark of respect and remembrance.
remembrance for those who have given you're wearing one you're wearing one I'm wearing one
country and I actually think we fought for the right for people like Kevin McGuire they don't want to
wear one they don't have to but I would prefer they did and great to see you as always
that's it for me
