Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Harry and His Privacy, Nashville Shooting, MP Payrise?
Episode Date: March 27, 2023On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers speaks about Prince Harry's latest appearance and whether it waives his right to privacy. Piers then delves into what happened in Nashville as a ...shooter kills six people including three children. Piers also asks should we pay MPs more money after an undercover sting operation, unveils how much MPs charge an hour for their services. 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
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Tonight on Pittsburgh and unscensored Prince Privacy.
Harry turns the global spotlight again on himself
with a staged appearance at his latest privacy battle against the British press.
To someone who sells their own privacy to the highest bidder
and that of all his friends and family,
waive their right to privacy.
We'll debate that.
Horror in Nashville, America,
as a shooter kills six people, creating three children
in yet another school shooting.
Can we at least agree that image,
like this Christmas card from a local congressman probably don't help curb America's gun violence
epidemic. And as a string of failing MPs are caught flogging their services for thousands of pounds
in an unencumberg of sting, could the answer be to pay politicians a lot more money?
Constantine Kissing joins me live to argue that.
Live from London, this is Pearz Morgan Unsensored.
Well, good evening from London. Welcome to Pierce Morgan Unsensored.
who reveres his privacy, Prince Harry certainly has a knack for making himself the centre of global
attention. This is a show for fearless debate, so let's have a fearless debate about Prince
privacy. Harry is seemingly addicted to invading his privacy, invading the privacy of his friends
and families, and appearing in public places and making sure that everyone talks about them.
He's currently at the High Court in London. He's flown 5,000 miles, which is a good thing to do.
if you're an eco-warrier, of course, watching your carbon footprint,
to attend a case which involves the owners of a daily mail newspaper,
accusing him of breaching his privacy.
He's one of many celebrities that are down there.
The misage of a court case is all about procedure.
There are no witnesses, no evidence, no box office material.
The hearings take place today and yesterday,
and could have passed without anyone really noticing.
But Harry wanted everyone to see him.
He wanted to make the front-page news,
and he arrived turning up with a big grin on his face
and leaving with a big grin on his face,
looking like he's rather enjoying it all,
which is probably not the best look for someone
who's wanting us to believe that he's in trauma
because of the invasion into his privacy,
which came just before his own grotesque invasion
of other people's privacy.
So it's a little bit complicated, isn't it?
And he didn't slip in quietly through the side entrance
like some of the others involved in this case.
He chose to parade past the TV camera,
barging past some paparazzi
and marched through the front gates,
using the media that he loaves to invade his privacy.
You see the problem,
here. And he's laughing here. Look at him. Grinning away. What a laugh. Nothing better than the cost
living crisis. They're watching multi-millionaires rocking up in court wanting money for invasions
of privacy just after they've invaded their own. So Harry seems to me to be rather confused about
his treatment by the media. It's almost like he wants to keep his privacy so he can invade it
when he's invading everybody else's. Even our fair-minded peers on neighbouring networks
appeared to have woken up and sniffed the hypocritical coffee.
He has been taken lots of notes again today.
There's no need for him to be here
because all of the evidence that's being presented
on behalf of the claimants is written.
So it really is the fact that he's appeared today
was about sort of being seen publicly.
Of course.
Well, Harry's hatred of the media
was laid bare in six hours of media bashing for Netflix,
which ironically is the same media company
that just happens to paid him $100 million.
And of course is also,
airing the Crown, which invades the privacy of his entire family on a minute-by-minute basis,
and often grotesquely mischaracterizes the truth.
But no matter, there's money, so he'll keep quiet about that.
But there's a major flaw also in Harry's campaign against press invasion to the privacy,
and it's this.
He's made his own privacy a ruthless public commodity,
trading in his secrets and those of his family and his friends,
and sometimes even the people he lost his virginity to,
to the highest bidders, the prince who's.
fled Britain to protect, apparently, his family's privacy,
has laid bare every tawdry detail of his private life and theirs in this tell-all memoir,
from drug abuse to intimate conversations with his father of the king at his grandfather's funeral.
He gave exclusive access to images of his children to the Netflix cameras.
He taught TV studios discussing his frost-spitten todger to sell copies of his book.
He charged Royal Watches $30 each to watch a live stream of a therapy session
in which he again boasted about his drug use.
how much self-destruction of your own privacy
can a public figure get away with
before they abrogate their right to privacy?
But privacy isn't really at the heart of Harry's crusade.
He's made that crystal clear by selling it to the highest bidders.
Now, what Harry really wants is control.
He can control the narrative in Netflix shows.
He can control the questions he's asked in publicity junkies.
He can't control his version of a truth in his book or books.
What he cannot control is a fact.
free press, and yet a free press, warts and all, good, bad and ugly of the type we have in this
country is the very cornerstone of a democracy. And that's why Harry, who wants complete control
over everything that said and written about him, is so afraid of our free press. Well,
you're doing me now as a broadcaster Trisha Goddard and professor for politics and author Matt Goodwin.
Okay, Trisha, you're the case for the defence. Off you go. Am I wrong about this point? I don't want to get
into the minutiae of the individual cases.
One of them involves the mirror group,
and I'm sure he'll have a good old whack at me
while he's doing it. I don't want to get into that
because we can't for the legal reasons.
However, on the general point I'm making,
which is, yeah, of course,
as a member of the royal family, he's had his private
life raked over the coals for decades.
Of course, they all have. And in return,
the others all accept
that the deal is that you get the palaces,
the servants, the fancy life, you're the biggest
stars in the world, and the oppressor
like an annoying buzzard on the
backside of a bison.
Harry sees it in a much more malevolent way,
but then, of course, comes the hypocrisy of the book,
the Netflix series, everything else,
where he seems to just be relentlessly invading his own privacy,
that of his family, that of his friends,
that of people he's met on his life.
How can you have your cake, your privacy cake, and eat it?
Well, I'm in a difficult position
because I could say to a much lesser degree,
and I'm nothing like Harry as far as profile is concerned,
but I would be the same.
Because, for instance, when I was in hospital in 2008,
I think you know, one of the reasons I moved to the States was I didn't have any privacy there.
I didn't have privacy when I was in hospital.
I had journalists trying to pretend to deliver flowers.
My kids had to go through security and what have you.
Now, I'd written a book about my life, and I'd talked about my life in minutia.
And yet there was a line I didn't think it was fair to cross.
Now, we all have our own lines and our own boundaries,
and they might not make sense to other people.
But I think, as you're right, you're right in that.
If we feel we're controlling the narrative,
if I wanted to talk about my hospital experience,
which I did to a certain amount of me, that's fine.
If somebody wants that be underhand and pretend to be delivering flowers
and get surreptitious pictures of me when I'm going through chemotherapy,
that is something else.
So I think this whole court case, I think, is the difference between Harry having,
and you're right there, control,
and underhand, alleged underhand methods of people getting another narrative.
I think we all have a public face, we all have a private face.
Okay. Matthew Goodwin, your response to this.
Does Harry have any right to privacy now?
Can he go and have court battles over his private life, given what he's now done to his private life?
Well, I think as a couple, they've made a conscious decision to put themselves out there.
And I think there's something else that Harry can't control.
which is what do people think about him.
And if you look at the polls on Harry and Megan,
and I spend a lot of my time looking at the polls,
well, I've never seen a brand collapse this hard, this quickly.
Since the end of last year, both Harry and Megan are down 40 points.
We've just had a poll in America,
which shows he's less popular now than Prince Andrew in America.
So as a brand...
And just anecdotally, I've been bouncing this lady's thing off people.
They're like, let me get me straight.
He's phone all the way from L.A.
for a part of the process he doesn't need to be at,
just to be in the papers,
going through the front entrance,
and he's laughing.
What kind of thing is he thinking he's representing here?
What image is he putting forward?
I think they think they're the underdogs
going up against the system.
But the public won't see that.
In the middle of a cost of living crisis,
we haven't had in 100 years.
I don't think is any going to be any sympathy,
honestly, I don't for Harry right now.
Is he looking for sympathy?
I mean, he's not the only one who's made...
Well, he's looking for vengeance.
But, well, he's not the only one who's very visible in this.
And as you mentioned, there are other people, David Furnish, Elton John and Dorian Lawrence.
Doreen Lawrence, if Doreen Lawrence is pretty much saying exactly the same thing as Harry,
and I'm sorry, with Doreen Lawrence, that infuriates me.
Now, everybody is saying the same thing.
Well, on Doreen Lawrence, we have to be clear that the male have issued a robust denial of all these allegations,
and in particular about Doreen Lawrence.
I agree.
And there is a messy situation.
involving some of the whistleblowers now recanting what they said.
So let's wait and see how this process goes out.
But what I'm saying is what they're saying,
what they're claiming is fairly similar,
but, you know, David Fenish or the rest of them.
So I think it is about control.
When you say about him laughing as he goes into court,
I don't know why, but it brings to mind somebody else,
Suella Bravenben laughing in Rwanda.
Inappropriate.
Yeah, inappropriate.
Sometimes people do stupid things in Syria.
There's also a sadness here, isn't it, Matthew?
And it is a sadness because he's over here and he's flown all this way to go and have
his little moment in the court and in the papers because he hates the press.
But he's not being seen by any of his family has been reported.
His father doesn't want to see him.
His brother doesn't want to see him.
We don't know that for a friend.
Well, it's been reported by the Telegraph.
He's pretty plugged into the Royals.
The king has no room in his schedule, right?
If my son flew 5,000 miles to the city I was in, I'd be seeing my sons.
any of them, right? So there's clearly a massive rift here.
Apparently, he and Megan haven't even said if they'll go to the coronation.
I don't know who they think they are to be keeping the king waiting on whether they come or not.
But it just seems, again, the priorities are completely warped here.
Yeah. I feel sorry for Harry, actually.
I think he's a deeply disturbed young man who needs a lot of support.
And I think if you look at the therapy session that he did in the US, that is not something
that I think somebody who is completely in command of themselves
and is getting good advice from public relations people
has a supportive team around them.
I don't think that's something that a person like that would do.
So when I look at him, I see someone actually who's quite lost.
Yeah, I agree. I agree with that.
Well, Tricia, you're an expert in people, right?
I mean, you are.
You've always been great at giving people advice.
No, I agree.
I actually agree with Matthew.
I think the people around him have given him crap advice.
I agree.
Really do.
And also, because there's a disconnect,
the people around him,
a lot of them are Americans.
Let's be clear about when you say that.
Look, I think the main driver
of a lot of this is Megan, his wife.
But even so, but here's the point about her.
But she's an American, it's a visual point.
She's an American who's probably got exactly what she wants out of it.
She's back in, living in the state she grew up in,
in a massive mansion with hundreds of millions of dollars coming in.
I still say it.
No, but I still say.
About the royal family or the monarchy or any of it.
Why would she?
But I don't.
But I don't know whether that is or not.
But I'm coming back to Matthew's point, the people around him,
we all come up with stupid ideas now and again if you're in the media.
Somebody says, oh, come on, shut up.
There is nobody around.
I think he's got a lot of enablers.
And they're fueling his kind of perpetual victimhood.
And when I watched him marching into court the last couple of days,
I don't see a victim at all.
I see a very...
I see a victim.
Do you?
I see a victim of circumstance, to echo you, of tragedy, of pain,
of not wearing...
knowing where they are, of being lost.
And there's many people in many families.
How much can you milk?
Yeah.
When you're actually born into gigantic privilege
and when so many millions of people are going through genuine life or death
hardship right now,
I just think there is a very limited pool of sympathy for Prince Harry right now in his country,
for watching him take on the media again and railing about privacy.
People are like, hang on, isn't he just on a book about all his private life?
Yeah, I see a symbol of everything that's wrong with our culture.
and to be honest, everything that's wrong with younger generations.
Well, you've written a good book about this, values, voice, and virtue, which touches on a lot of this, right?
Yeah, so basically it's about how have we got here as a country, how have we gone through the last 10 years of political turbulence?
And my argument in a nutshell is we now have a new elite in this country that has become dangerously disconnected from the values that are held by most people out there who feel that they don't have a voice in the conversation.
And they're looking at this elite, embracing this radical, woke ideology.
and they're saying, well, what on earth is this
and why do you keep undermining the things I love,
like the institution of the boy of family.
You're shaking your head, but I think instinctively you know
is a bit of truth to this.
This woke stuff's got completely out of hand.
I hate the misuse.
We're journalists, though let's not misuse the word woke
for what it was. Let's call it, I don't know what you want to call it,
but young people.
I think there's a disconnect.
I think there's a disconnect between the,
I agree there's a disconnect.
I think, I'm generalizing here,
between generations,
which isn't very different from the days of Bill Haley
and the Rockers and what have you.
But there is a, you know,
woe to me is a word that people use
when they, it's like a catcher
and it's nearly always misused.
I would say there's a disconnect between the,
when you call them the lead,
I'd say the politicians.
It's not just the politicians anymore, though.
At the moment, for the last 10 years,
we've had the same political people in power.
So if you're going to moan about,
immigration and everything else, we're, you know, they cooked it all up.
They cooked it all up.
On the left, on the right, but it's also the creative class, cultural institutions.
I also think, though, we've become, as a society, pathetically weak.
And we now celebrate victimhood.
And we celebrate weakness over strength and winning and ambition and aspiration.
And it's making us a weak society.
I really do believe that.
I don't think we're weak.
I think we are.
I don't think we are.
I think there's strength in class.
And I think Harry in a way personifies.
He's got all this privilege, all this money.
He went for freedom.
He doesn't seem happy other than when he's taking on the media.
And it's like, really, just get over yourself, mate.
Get on with your happy life in California.
Stay with your chickens.
Drop the royal titles because why would you want titles given to you by an institution you ate so much?
Right?
Drop it all.
And then you give your kids a title.
I mean, come on.
The whole thing is riddled with hypocrisy.
Anyway, thank you.
I'll be good to see.
Matthew, you're coming back a little later.
Thank you very much.
We're coming next tonight.
Six people, including three children, age just nine,
are killed in another school shooting in America.
How is this still happening?
What can happen to stop it?
Anything?
We'll debate that after the break.
Welcome back to Pierce Morgan on our sensitive.
It's only the 87th day of 2023,
but America's experience is 129th mass shooting of the year.
Three children aged us nine,
and three adults were killed at a school in Nashville, Tennessee.
A former student, Audrey Hale,
a biological woman who identifies as transgender
or did before she was killed and apparently used his male pronouns,
but frankly, who cares about the pronouns?
We're seen on the school's CCTV armed with two assault weapons and a handgun,
shooting at the school's front doors and then prowling around the school corridors
before killing six people.
Footage from police body cameras has been released showing the moment they approach
and kill the shooter and a warning some viewers might find this distressing.
Push to the LPVL, go right.
Move, move.
Watch out, watch out.
Move!
Watch left, watch left.
Suspect down, suspect down.
Well, certainly by comparison to the appalling cowardice shown by police at the Avalde mass shooting,
where you may remember, 20 were killed,
the police there deserved full credit for the courage that they showed in taking down that shooter.
Joining me now is Ashby Beasley,
who herself survived a mass shooting in Illinois only last year,
along with Fox News commentator and outkick host Tommy Layron,
who lives just minutes away from the...
the school scene of this latest shooting. Well, welcome to both of you. I want to start with you,
Ashby, if I may. Now, you and your 60-year-old son were present at a shooting at Highland Park,
Illinois last summer, where seven people were killed and 48 injured. And then by an extraordinary
coincidence, having campaign since then for gun law reforms, you happened to be on a family
vacation right in Nashville when this latest shooting happened. And you went down to the scene,
and you spoke incredibly movingly to the media that were there.
Let's take a look at this.
Aren't you guys tired of covering this?
Aren't you guys tired of being here and having to cover all of these mass shootings?
I'm from Highland Park, Illinois.
My son and I survived a mass shooting over the summer.
I am in Tennessee on a family vacation with my son,
visiting my sister-in-law.
I have been lobbying in D.C. since we survived a mass shooting in July.
I have met with over 130 lawmakers.
How is this still happening?
How are our children still dying?
And why are we failing them?
Well, they're good questions.
Ashby, thank you very much indeed for joining me.
What motivated you to go there and say such a passionate thing there to the media?
You know, only in America can someone like me who survived a mass shooting last year with my six-year-old son go to a rally in D.C.
That is being put on by the survivors of another mass shooting.
Newtown, Connecticut, and then stopped by to visit my sister-in-law in Nashville and meet up with a friend whose son was killed in a mass shooting in a Waffle House in Antioch, Tennessee, who I met in D.C. lobbying.
And only on the day when we plan to have lunch could another mass shooting happen down the street from that friend's son's school, a son who was at the mass shooting that killed his brother, only in America.
Can you find yourself in that kind of a situation?
I mean, just hearing, you know, when she called...
Right, I mean, just, sorry, just to interrupt,
but just to hear what you've just said,
I've got to say, sitting here in London,
that kind of sentence is just extraordinary to people here.
It's not to me, because I've lived and worked in America for a long time,
but it's just the relentlessness of these shootings,
and in particular, the relentlessness of school shootings.
There have been, I think, over 80 school shootings in America this year alone.
I mean, we had an appalling one in the UK,
in Dunblay in Scotland in 1996.
And we irrevocably changed a lot of our gun laws
and we didn't have the same amount of guns in circulation,
just to be clear, there's a different problem here.
This was the front page of the Daily Mirror at the time.
I was the editor.
I helped drive a campaign to make things safer.
And we've not had a school shooting since 1996.
America's had over 80 this year.
What do you think, Ashby, is the answer to this?
Because Congress, which would change the rule,
change the laws, seems completely locked on this, completely gridlocked, almost like nothing can be done.
Well, I'm glad that you said 1996 because since 1999, children in American schools have experienced gun violence.
Over 350,000 children have experienced gun violence in schools since 1999.
So you changed your laws in 96.
We haven't changed our laws since then, and the toll is just growing.
Our government needs to step in, our lawmakers need to step in, and they need to pass gun safety legislation.
The access to weapons of war, the easy access to guns is what's killing us.
It's what's killing our children.
And there is no other answer than passing gun safety legislation.
90% of American citizens support background checks, universal background checks.
Let's do it.
Let's get it done.
Right.
Let's bring in Tommy here.
Look, Tommy, you and I have discussed guns, I mean, it seems like, forever.
This is a Groundhog Day debate.
I'm not going to sit here as a Brit
and tell Americans how to lead their lives.
I tried that once.
It didn't go down very well.
So let's try a different tactic here,
which is, I think the key phrase which I heard there from Ashby
was rather than using gun control,
which is complete anathema to many Americans,
particularly in a British accent,
because as you rightly point out, drove us out with guns.
So you don't want to hear it from us.
I get it.
I get all that.
But you mentioned gun safety.
What can be done to,
to make things safer because things far from getting safer in America.
All what's happening is the number of guns in circulation are exponentially increasing.
Well over 400 million now.
And so the number of shootings are increasing, mass shootings, school shootings, everything's increasing.
You as an American citizen cannot be happy about that, surely.
What do we do about it?
Well, I will tell you this.
I want to talk about the mental health aspect of this in a moment.
But first, I want to address the gun rights and the gun safety debate in question.
So here in the United States, we use guns to protect everything that we hold near and dear
to protect our politicians, our celebrities, our red carpets, our jewelry stores, you name it,
everything that we deem important.
We put people with firearms that are trained to use those firearms to protect those entities and those individuals.
We do not protect our schools like we should.
And if you look into this shooter's background, you look into their manifesto, they had a map of this school
because what we use to protect our schools is a little sign that says gun-free zone.
So when you're looking at soft targets, if you are a psychopath, a freak, a monster, you look for places where you can go and cause carnage and damage where nobody will be able to stop you.
Now, thank God for our Nashville officers that responded so quickly and were able to neutralize that monster and that threat.
But had we had somebody outside of that school that was trained with a firearm, they could have neutralized that.
Well, hang on. Tommy, Tommy, Tommy.
We need to look into protecting our schools.
Okay.
We know what happened at Avale.
There were hundreds of good guys with guns.
none of them had the guts to go and anything about it and 20 kids got killed. So it's not a given
that actually if you have a load of people who are good people with guns in these schools,
it makes any difference. We saw what happened on the video here about what this person did.
But on a wider point, I tweeted today, for example, look, rather than get into the same old
debate, what about regulating guns in America as in the same way you regulate cars? And I got an unbelievable
amount of abuse immediately. Just endless abuse, as if I didn't know what I was talking about.
But when I actually then posted a piece by Nick Christoph, who was at the New York Times at the time,
and I explained what I meant, and I'm just going to pre-see what the piece was. It was a brilliant
piece. It was a few years ago. But he said, if we had the same also fatality rate today that we had in
1921, by my calculations, we'd have, we'd have, we'd have 75,000 Americans dying annually in
vehicle accidents. Instead, we've reduced that fatality rate by 95%, not by confiscating cars or taking
them away, but by regulating them and their drivers more sensibly. And then he goes into all the
things that have happened in that period, right? They talked about requiring driver licenses,
putting speed limits, registering vehicles. All of that was.
originally met with ridicule. When authorities in New York City sought in 1890 to ban
horseless carriages in the parks, the idea was lambasted as devoid of merit and impossible to maintain
by the New York Times. Yet over time, as more and more people were being killed by cars,
they brought in more and more regulation. By the 1920s, a lot of this stuff like car registration,
license requirements, other safety measures, and then over time, seatbelts, airbags, padded dashballs,
better bumpers, rules about drunken drivers, graduated licensing for young people, improved road
engineering, blah, blah, blah.
The upshot of all that was that there's now just over one car fatality per hundred million miles
driven.
And so it was a very well-argued point.
And at the centre of it was not a claim, which I know goes down very badly with gun owners
in America, that you want to ban guns or grab guns.
I'm always called a gun grabber.
I don't want your guns.
trust me. But about making it as safe as cars, doing what happened to cars, why not just do that
and see what happens? Well, here's the thing. Somebody that's going to go into a school and murder
children is not like your average driver who needs to obey a speed limit or wear a seatbelt.
Somebody that's going to go in to murder students clearly does not care about laws in general.
So what does making law-abiding citizens making it harder for us to have firearms? What does that do
to stop a monster, a psychopath, a freak. Now, I understand your argument here. So we need gun safety.
We need people to be trained how to use firearms to respect firearms and change the gun culture in
this country. I'll also say in the last 30 years, gun ownership in the United States really has
not changed much. What has? Our mental health situation. And now, thanks to the radical LGBTQ
movement in this country, we are exploiting mental illness, especially in young people.
So when you look at this particular shooter, you look at their background, you look at the mental health counseling and services, they were receiving probably gender affirmation because that's the new status quo now. Instead of saying this person has a real mental illness that needs to be addressed in an individual basis, we now cloud everything under the guise of gender affirmation and tolerance. The mental health aspect is very important here. We can have a discussion about gun safety, gun rights, but we have to address mental health and that's being glossed over. I couldn't agree more with you about mental health.
health. All I would point out is we have exactly the same mental health problems in this country
and in many European countries. And because we don't have the availability of guns, we don't
have 80,000 people a year dying from guns. We had, I think, one last year. So that's what I would say
in return to that. I want to come back to Ashby, finally, for this. The local congressman...
Can I just answer something that she said? Yeah, sure. Can I answer something that she said?
You know, statistically, we know that mass shooters,
77% of mass shooters get their guns legally.
That means that they don't have a criminal record.
That means that they're not doing the things wrong.
They're not on some sort of list.
77% of them get their guns legally.
Yeah, Ashby, I was going to make the point that this particular shooter
was a woman, transgender.
I'm not interested in that aspect of the story,
other than to say that she acquired seven guns legally
from five different stalls.
Right.
to which my, and apparently was at the same time receiving medical treatment from a doctor for being emotionally disturbed.
Now, to anyone with half a brain, this seems like an utterly lethal cocktail, but nothing in the system stopped her.
I'm interested also, Ashby, in this.
This is Congressman Andy Ogles, who is the congressman responsible for that district.
So he's a US lawmaker.
And in Christmas 2021, he tweeted this Christmas card to the world on his Twitter account.
Let's take a look at this.
That's him with his family all clutching guns, including young children.
Merry Christmas from the Ogles family, he wrote.
The atmosphere of firearms anywhere and everywhere restrains, evil interference.
They deserve a place of honor with all that's good.
As some people have pointed out,
that doesn't seem a particularly responsible or appropriate thing
for a US congressman to be doing.
And now we see, perhaps, in a disturbed mind,
what that kind of mindset can do.
Yes, and if I'm being honest, you know, I look at a picture like that and the glorifications
of weapon, the glorification of weapons of war, because the AR-15 was designed for combat in the
1950s, it is a gun that shoots smooth. It's an easy shot. I shot one recently. You can put
your eye on the barrel when you're firing an AR-15 and you will not lose your eye. It is designed
for ease, for killing. When I see a gun like that, in a picture like that, what I think of
as I think of Mexican cartels
and how Mexican cartels
are arming themselves with our guns.
They are arming themselves with our guns
over 200,000 weapons are being trafficked
into Mexico every single year.
Republicans like this Republican in this picture
is complaining about the fentanyl crisis
on a daily best basis,
but our assault weapons are enforcing
the frontal crisis and none of our lawmakers
are doing anything about it.
Yeah, I think the truth is
they're both hugely important issues in America.
They both have huge toll on life.
I just think it's completely inappropriate for a congressman to be putting Christmas cards out
with his kids all clutching rifles like that.
I'm not sure what message he's trying to send.
And I'm not saying he's responsible for what happened.
Yeah.
Look, Tommy, and Ashby, thank you both.
I mean, Tommy, you and I, we've discussed this a lot.
I just hate the Groundhog Day aspect.
I love America.
I love Americans.
I respect the Second Amendment.
I understand you can't take all the guns away.
There are too many of them.
This can't go on.
You can't just wake up every few weeks and have another school being shot up.
by people in combats with all these guns.
Something has to happen.
Something has to change.
And the thing I find most frustrating and dispiriting about it
is Americans are the most can-do people in the world.
They get stuff done.
And yet on this, this total paralysis.
And when we did the campaign in the UK after Dunblane,
there was no partisanship or political difference of opinion.
It was never political.
I never really understood how it's got that way in America.
Here, left and right came together
and went,
the lives of kids come above everything.
And I think until that is the starting point,
I don't think anything happens in America.
But look, I appreciate we all have different views on this.
I also appreciate I'm not American.
So I appreciate you both joining me, and thank you both very much.
Well, coming next, they're already on 84,000 pounds a year, not of money.
But should our politicians actually be paid a lot more?
Constantine Kistin joins me next to argue that point.
Well, you'll be unsurprised to hear that the disgraced former Health Secretary Matt Hancock
has disgraced himself again, as has the disgraced former Chancellor Quasi Quartet,
who were both caught up and undercover Sting, agreeing to work for a fake South Korean company
for thousands of pounds of day. Let's have a look at the footage from the campaign group led by
donkeys. So we were wondering, do you have a daily rate at the moment?
I do. I do, yes, it's 10,000 sterling. We would like to talk about arrangements of fees.
I mean, do you have a daily rate?
Now, a yearly rate?
Yes.
I mean, I would say as an MP,
obviously I don't need to create, you know,
a King's ransom.
But I'm looking, I would do anything less than for about $10,000 a month.
And so it went unedifyingly on.
MPs were allowed to have second jobs.
There's no suggestion of parliamentary rule breaking,
just pure greed.
So should MPs actually be paid more to stop them behaving?
grasping way in the first place.
Well, joining me now as the podcast host,
an author of An Immigrant's Love Letter to the West.
Constantine Kissing.
Welcome back to the program.
Great to do your podcast, by the way.
I've had a great reaction to it.
Good, bad and ugly,
which is the perfect reaction to any interviews.
Thanks for coming on.
When you watched all this in its full gory details,
it was so gruesome to watch.
And it was the usual suspects.
Hancock, Quarting,
didn't surprise me at all that Quarting
had very little grasp on reality of money.
I love the way it said,
yearly rate. Like he's upselling you already. I did enjoy that.
Your take away from that was that you have a belief that MP should be paid a lot more money.
I just say, I sort of share that view. I sort of think if you pay peanuts, you get monkeys, right?
And we're paying peanuts and getting people who just seem to me to be extremely low caliber politicians.
And we need to somehow raise that bar. Would money alone do that, do you think?
Well, the headline pay them more is what people took away from what I've been saying about this.
is yes, you pay them more, but you then also ban them from, you say they're allowed to have
second jobs, they're like to have third jobs and fourth jobs and fifth jobs. So as long as the
incentive structure is there, they're not getting paid a huge amount for the job that they're
doing. Obviously, compared to the ordinary person, they're being paid a fair chunk of money,
but compared to other people operating at the top of society, I mean, if you wanted your favorite
football club to be run by someone who's very good, you'd happily pay them three, four million
a year, right? And in Singapore, they pay apparently their politicians, a lot of money.
millions of dollars.
So they take your view that you then attract the best talent.
Your country benefits, it's actually a small price to pay.
You get what you pay for.
And I think with them, you have to ban the second, third and fourth jobs and so on.
And you have to make sure that they put their stocks and shares in the trust
where they don't get benefits from companies being traded in a certain way and whatever.
But the bottom line is, is you get what you pay for.
We have to get better people into Parliament.
Right.
Singapore, they get £672,000.
a year for an average member of parliament in Singapore. Spain is only 49,000, Germany, 108,000,
United States senators, 142,000 pounds, and France just under 80,000 pounds. So I guess by comparison
to most of Europe, ours get, you know, in the kind of middle range of that. But Singapore
dramatically different, and they believe over there, they really does attract a better calibre.
And that makes perfect sense to me. I just think one of the biggest problems with our politics
experiences, people think about tribe rather than results. And if you're tribal about this, you go,
well, you know, Hancock and Quarting, of course. But actually, cast your mind back to the Blair
government. It's not like they were all squeaky clean either. We have a system in which the
incentive structure encourages politicians not to take money from us and to serve us. We have a political
system where they take money from, in this case, some pretend Korean company. And who are they then
serving? Well, exactly. I completely agree. I want to switch for another story which I thought would
would probably get your interest.
The Guardian newspaper owners,
the Guardian being the most woke newspaper
on planet Earth,
absolutely beyond reproach.
And they've led council culture,
they've led wokeery,
they are purer than pure,
whiter than white,
in all things ethical.
And they've had an unfortunate moment today
because the Scott Trust that owns a Guardian
has had to issue a public apology
because it turns out the origins of the wealth
used to establish the Guardian
came from slavery.
A review found the papers, founder John Edward Taylor,
had links to slavery through partnerships in cotton manufacturing.
Obviously, the Guardian reaction is to fall on its knees,
beg for mercy,
announce all sorts of initiatives to prove they're not a bunch of racists
and so on.
You'd expect that from the Guardian.
But a comical irony that the paper that's driven
probably more than any publication of the world,
this kind of woke mentality
and been hectoring everybody else
about their own shortcomings gets caught.
like this. This is a very good example
of this whole thing more generally
where most of these people who claim
to be kind and compassionate, they behave
in the most awful ways towards the people that
they disagree with. And I think this is where
I'm not, I don't spend
a lot of time reading The Guardian, I'm not going to cancel
the God. It's actually bad for my mental health, so
I don't. But what I do
think is, you know, everyone lives
in a glass house to some extent, and I think what
I take out of this is we should all throw and
stops throwing rocks around. Because
I genuinely think that if you
dig down long enough, every one of us has some ancestor who did something wrong. And the less we
focus on things that happened 300 years ago, and the more we come together and try to solve
the problems of today, I think the better off we're going to be. I just think there's self-flagellation
over historical stuff, which current people had nothing to do with. What's the point? You know,
it's like this thing in San Francisco, we're looking to pay millions and millions of dollars
to every black person who lives in San Francisco as some kind of reparations from what
previous generations did hundreds of years ago. I don't understand how that.
that helps anybody. No, it doesn't. And as you know, I talk about it in the book and the issue of
slavery more broadly. I just think we've got stuck in the past and the way that's completely
unhelpful. Many of the conversations we have now in the West are about looking inward and going,
why are we so bad? Why are we so wrong? And the case I make in an immigrant's level led to the
West is we live in one of the most open, tolerant, genuinely progressive societies in the history
of humanity. Let's appreciate that. Let's at least notice that for God's sake. When do we stop celebrating
our country. Right? I feel the same way about America. New poll came out today saying the
majority of Americans, the first time I can remember, now no longer think it's the best country
in the world. Americans always used to do that, right? Now they don't. There's a kind of, again,
self-flagellation about the state of the countries now, whereas America and Britain, in many
ways, are two of the great countries of the world. Today, unquestionably. And to me, it's mind-boggling
that we're in this position. But beyond being sort of frustrated and go, oh, these pink-head idiots are
running around, ruin, whatever.
To me, this is a real threat, Pierce,
because if we in the West do not have the strength of our convictions,
we do not have the courage to stand up and say,
you know, our history is the same as the history of every other society.
We've done good and bad.
But on balance, we're good, we're good people,
we are people who are doing good in the world,
then other people will come and take over.
You know, the best people ever in the history of this planet
have all been flawed geniuses.
Right.
I'm talking to one and you're facing one.
Two prime examples.
Constantly, great to see it.
Immigrants love that as a West, really excellent book.
Making the points you just made.
Good to see it.
I appreciate it.
Thank you, Piss.
We're coming next to night.
Donald Trump hits out of the rival Ron DeSantis again,
Ron DeSan, as he calls him,
and campaigners reckon his time to ban sports terms like bullseye and hot dog.
Yes, our friends from Petter are on the march again.
We'll discuss that after the break.
Well, join me now.
I'll talk to you contributor to Paul Arone, Adrian,
Professor of Politics,
more than that. Goodwin's back with me and political journalist
Averson Tino joins me after we went viral
on our last debate, so good to have
you back to annoy me. Where should we start?
Let's start with digital blackface.
This is the weirdest thing, Paul.
CNN writer John Blake has written a whole
piece in which she talks about
a term called
digital blackface. Are going to white
people using black people in memes or
gifts to express comic relief or
other emotions is completely outrageous,
disgusting, sexes and so on.
Examples, the crying Michael Jordan,
the Tyra Banks, how dare you, the Will Smith crying meme and so on, right?
This is complete nonsense, isn't it?
Why doesn't the same apply to white people gifts and memes of which there are a gazillion?
First of all, you described it as being weird.
And secondly, your presentation in regards to introducing this topic is as if you don't care.
I don't.
And you should care.
Why?
And that's exactly why.
Why is a picture of Michael Jordan racist?
This article was written, because we need all to understand what's happening here and what's
happening is, is that there's this insiduous, toxic, poisonous racism that just underlies...
What's racist about Michael Jordan crying?
Is it greatest athlete in history?
...underlies this very issue and why it's important for us to explore it.
Why is it poisonous to have a picture of Michael Jordan crying as a meme?
So it's not the picture per se.
Oh, it's not?
You understand, because I'm sure you would have read the article.
I think.
I thought the article was complete nonsense.
You understand that what this is actually about is about how the picture is presented
and the context that it's presented in.
Matthew, I'm sorry, I just think it's all complete nonsense.
Yeah, I mean, my personal view,
I think we've entered a culture where everybody's become far too sensitive
on issues around race-nessy.
Can you think Michael Jordan cares?
Anyone's doing a meme of him that is?
He cries at the size of his bank balance.
Yeah, but everything, it's everybody's feelings,
everybody's lived experience before, you know, objectivity and the ability of...
I'm still waiting to hear why that's weird or that's a bad...
And I'm asking you, though, why is it okay to use memes of famous white people,
but not black people?
That was the argument.
The argument is that you should actually use wipe.
And the point being that particularly...
We do.
There's a white that's all the time.
Particularly boomers who deploy these memes.
It's not really something that Gen Z do anymore or even millennials.
You know, they are more racist.
They are.
There are more racist age category.
I'm sorry.
And they are typically maybe not as funny and they deploy all angry.
And they deploy these memes to convey emotions that are exacerbated.
Any other...
Well, look, I think you do know.
It's very ages, you don't mind me saying.
understand, don't you, that in terms of...
No, I don't.
Well, then let me help you.
No, I don't think you can.
In understanding race and in understanding racism, we learn it's a journey in terms of education.
You no longer refer to me as the N-word.
You no longer refer to me as coloured.
It's a journey.
I never did.
And my generation never did.
Well, I'm struggling with that one, Piz, and I think some of your viewers might be as well.
You can generalise if you want.
Well, I said some, so I'm not generalising.
And I'm also talking about my personal experience.
And so what this author of this...
How is any of that affected by a picture of Michael Jordan,
one of the world's greatest athletes,
crying as a meme which is used in humour?
Well, you oversimplify the point.
Then you actually kind of willfully miss it.
What we're saying is that, you know, when you exacerbate emotions...
Let's move on.
I'm a vegan.
I'm a vegetarian.
All right, this is all the same to me.
Petter, they like calling themselves Peter,
but before calling them Petter because it annoys them.
They've brought out another list of things
we're not allowed to use now, sporting terms.
Bullseye, worm burner and gold.
catch a crab rowing.
We can't use any of these terms
because it implies degradation
and mistreatment of animals.
They call it speciesism.
I think this is deeply unhelpful.
I definitely think we should be talking about
consuming less meat.
I think we should be talking about.
Wait a minute.
But I can't imagine
that this would convince anyone
to think more carefully about animals.
So you think this is pathetic virtue signaling?
I didn't say that. I said I think it's
deeply unhelpful.
Pathetic virtue signaling?
No.
How's that nonsense and sharing memes
is...
Yeah, exactly.
I don't understand it.
My students share means all the time.
I mean, I don't think it's a generation thing.
What we've got, we're living through a cultural revolution.
These are people that are trying to change.
It's a war on language.
You said that twice.
I don't know why you're so fearful of language
or people exploring new knowledge.
Well, there we go.
Why don't we ask the Chinese?
You disagree yourself, how dangerous is it?
Why don't we ask the Chinese?
Why should we be worried about language editing?
Isn't important that we're discussing this?
Isn't important that Peter have come out and said,
look, this is what we're saying.
People need to be aware of it.
You don't defend this garbage, surely.
Even you.
The virtue signer in chief.
You want to dismiss it, but that doesn't mean
it's important to listen to.
No bull in the world is going to watch dark.
No bull is going to watch bulls eye and go,
how dare you, I'm offended.
You know why?
They don't speak English.
They don't understand.
They don't watch the darts, right?
No worm watches golf.
No crab watches the rowing and goes,
how dare you be so crabbing?
Not that I agree with this, but I think we obviously do know
that what they're talking about is that you're normalising the killing of animals
and then, you know, for children growing up and hearing that language.
Spoiler, animals kill each other.
Yeah.
Help me here.
It doesn't mean you have to breathe on.
You're a rose of common sense between virtue seemingly forms.
I think we're losing perspective.
I think, you know, generations in the past are looking at us and saying what is going on down there.
It's crazy.
I mean, I think we've lost all perspective.
We're evolving.
We're evolving.
We're not evolving.
We're not evolving.
We're not evolving.
And that's what's happening.
What do you mean?
And people who don't want to do that, shout and bang their fists and talk about fear.
I'm fearless and I think you should be as well.
Well, you seem very fearful of the bull being upset by the word bull's eye.
It seems to me a reign of terror, which is the like of which we've never seen.
I want to show you a picture of the Pope.
And I want you all, to be honest, when you first saw this, like me, did you think, wow, he looks cool and nearly post it, right?
I like it.
And then it turns out it's a fake, right?
It's an AI, not chat, GBT.
Trick the internet with a photo of the Pope and a white puffer jacket and sunglasses.
Pabia, it's quite a funny story.
Pablo Xavier, who created the image, told BuzzFeed,
he was tripping on mushrooms when he came up with the idea and just thought it would be funny.
Is that funny?
I like it.
Okay.
You find that funny?
It's funny, but...
I don't know.
And there's a but, there is a big butt.
Don't tell me, it's popist.
No, but as human beings...
I'm a Catholic.
On a serious note, we're human beings.
You found that funny.
And what we do is we do is we...
use our eyes to help us tell the truth.
Quick question. That worries me.
How are we going to tell the truth?
Paula, was it funny, though?
Yes. Okay, so you find it funny
mocking my Pope? I'm a Catholic.
I'm not mocking your Pope.
I'm not mocking your Pope should be sensitive.
You don't like, you don't like
memes of Michael Jordan, and you don't like
fools being oppressed by Bullseye.
But when it comes to mocking my Pope,
you're all in, aren't you, Paula? If you allow me to
answer, I'm not mocking your Pope.
I think Pope looks amazing.
Virtue signalling is it's a very
very selective business.
No, he's my Pope as well.
I'm a Catholic.
What did you think of that?
I think it's really funny.
But then I see the funny side of life here.
So did I.
But that's not the point.
Matthew, good to see you.
I have a good to see it.
Paul and good to see you.
Thank you.
Whatever you're up to,
don't go virtue signaling.
Keep it uncensored.
Good night.
