Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Is there a migrant 'invasion'?

Episode Date: November 2, 2022

Tonight on Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers looks at the shocking police cowardice behind the Uvalde school massacre with former police detective Ted Williams. Piers questions the government's solutions... for fixing the migrant crisis and has a heated debate with Henry Bolton after he defends Suella Braverman's use of the word 'invasion' when talking about asylum seekers. Also, is it time for whining sports stars to stop complaining about Qatar holding the 'World Cup', and simply pull out instead? 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

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:02 Tonight appears more going uncensored. I don't want to see how these situations my dad taught me when I was a little girl. She didn't help some of my teachers are so alive with their shot. A child's heartbreaking 911 call exposes shocking police cowardice in the Avalde school massacre. Also tonight broken and out of control, the British government amidst there's a migrant crisis, but where are there ideas for fixing it? Plus, its protests intensify ahead of the World Cup in Qatar, Is it time for whining sports stars
Starting point is 00:00:33 rather shut up or pull out? Live from London, this is Pierce Morgan Uncensored. Well, good evening from London. Welcome to Pierce Morgan Unsensor when a country appears to lose control of its borders as we're seeing in Joe Biden's United States, for example, people feel unsafe and they feel resentful.
Starting point is 00:00:58 So as Britain lost control, as our own Home Secretary says. Well, look at some facts. 40,000 people have crossing this channel in small boats this year. It's already a record. Many of them are trafficked here by criminal gangs. You don't care if they live or drown. There's a backlog of 100,000 asylum cases.
Starting point is 00:01:13 A major migrant centre is four times its capacity with third world conditions and outbreaks of diphtheria. Another one was attacked with a petrol bomb. This doesn't look like control to me. In fact, quite the opposite. It's fast becoming the first crisis of what's been a reassuringly crisis-free start otherwise to Rishi Sunnah's Premiership.
Starting point is 00:01:30 Here's what Sakea Starrma said at Prime Minister's questions today. If the asylum system is broken and his lot have been in power for 12 years, how can it be anyone's fault but theirs? Well, he's right. They told us very clearly when we get Brexit done, we can control our borders. But we haven't. The numbers are going up, not down.
Starting point is 00:01:53 And we quite clearly do not have control. But what the Prime Minister said in response sums up the object mess that we're now in. Border control is a serious, complex issue. But not only does the party opposite, have a plan. They have opposed every single measure. We have taken to solve the problem. You can't attack a plan if you don't have a plan. Well, he's right, isn't it? It's very easy to throw rocks to stupid ideas. But what is Labor's
Starting point is 00:02:20 solution? I'm yet to hear a good one. Royal Navy patrols have failed. Throwing money to French and leaving it with them has also failed. Ludicrously threatening to fly everyone to Rwanda, which so far has cost 140 million pounds and resulted in precisely zero deportations, has also failed. And the worst thing of all, this is the woman currently in charge of fixing it. The British people deserve to know which party is serious
Starting point is 00:02:47 about stopping the invasion. Invasion? It's not invasion. An invasion is what Vladimir Putin's doing in Ukraine with tanks and rockets. So when a brotherman knew exactly what she was doing, deflecting attention from her own scandals and incompetence.
Starting point is 00:03:06 What Britain faces is the crisis of his own making, and a crisis of talentless leaders with no clue what to do about it. Sacking Leakey Sue might be a good place to start. But let's be also clear about another thing. Britain needs immigrants. They're the backbone of so much of this country, the NHS, hospitality. You name it, we rely a lot on immigrants from this country. They pay vast fees to study in our world-class universities.
Starting point is 00:03:32 They service in restaurants, barred, shops. They toil in our fields. These people work hard, often in... jobs nobody else wants to do and they pay taxes. We need more legal immigration. You ask anybody who works in these industries, we need more. But we also need to control illegal immigration. And these two things can go hand in hand. Well, joining me now is the chair of Brit PCUK and former politician Henry Bolton and broadcaster Jenny Clemen. Well, welcome to both of you. Henry Bolton. Whenceweller Braverman uses a phrase like invasion.
Starting point is 00:04:08 She does it to rally the right, to rally people who think we are literally being invaded by illegal immigrants. That's not true. We're not being invaded by illegal immigrants. They're not invading us. These are, in many cases, desperate people coming because they have nowhere else to be. They've been maybe in war-torn countries. Not all. Some are gaming the system. We know that. But to describe them as an invasion is such inflammatory stupid rhetoric. Peers, I'm going to partly agree with you and partly disagree. We talk about pitch invasions. Are we saying that that's inflammatory?
Starting point is 00:04:45 The answer is no. Well, you're comparing refugees and asylum seekers to football hooligans invading a pitch. I think, actually, I think actually, Piers, you're comparing the language that you'd use regarding an invasion of a football pitch with what the Home Secretary has said about what's happening on the South Coast. You've literally just compared refugees and asylum seekers to football hooligans.
Starting point is 00:05:06 What I'd say... And that again, Henry, that again is what I call needlessly inflammatory rhetoric. Yes, you've asked me a question. And you've asked it in an inflammatory way. Because you're now making an accusation about something that's not true. What I'm saying is that there is a hypocrisy amongst people in the media who are saying Suella Braverman is wrong to call this an invasion when actually one of the accepted definitions of invasion, for example,
Starting point is 00:05:34 you can have an invasion of flying ants. You can have a look in the dictionary, sorry, so you're now comparing refugees and asylum seekers to football hooligans and flying ass. Do you not understand Henry? No, do you not understand, Peters. How disgusting that sounds to these people. Do you not understand that the majority of people, as you said in your introduction,
Starting point is 00:05:53 are highly concerned about this? Yes. And the situation is that what we've got in the media is people focusing on whether the Home Secretary called it an invasion or whether or not instead of whether the government's got a plan to solve it. And what I agree with you on, is that the government doesn't have a plan. It hasn't had a plan for years.
Starting point is 00:06:10 And in this situation, it's been going on since 2001. But literally, that's what we should all be focusing on is the government developing plans. But the reason we're focusing on the use of language is precisely for what you've just done. You've just compared asylum seekers and refugees to football hooligans and to flying ants. And that is incredibly insulting. Pierce, 42% of the people who've come across the channel since May this year are our. Albanians, 95% of which are young men between ages 18 and 35. 70% of Albanians in the UK do not come from Albania.
Starting point is 00:06:46 Did you know that? I do, because I was a UN governor in Kosovo. I was advised to the Albanian Prime Minister, and I led the UK's efforts in the Republic of Macedonia next door to disrupt transnational... They're also perfectly entitled, Henry Bolm. They're perfectly entitled to try and come into this country. Yes, they are.
Starting point is 00:07:02 Then they should be processed. Then they should be processed for... For asylum, if they qualify for that. And they are at the moment. But they are not, for example, in Germany or France. Because Germany and France have said no, because Germany and France recognize that Albania is a safe country. And the reality is that we've got an issue here, which comes together.
Starting point is 00:07:23 And I've got Albanian friends. I've worked in Albanian friends. Don't try that line, I've got to come that with me. You're really being quite aggressive. You're trying to put an agenda here. I am because your language is bravest. like? No, my language is...
Starting point is 00:07:37 They're all a bunch of football hooligans invading us. There are a bunch of flying ants. They're not. They're real people. You did. You compared them to flying ants and homigans. Pierce, will you please let me get a word in? Yes.
Starting point is 00:07:48 Thank you. I said that I feel that it's a hypocrisy between the media who are perfectly happy using the word invasion in relation to football fans who go on the beach. And you are saying that bravolman's not right. You'll cause it a football invasion, but you... I'm sorry. Let me explain to you. We're going to ridiculous details.
Starting point is 00:08:08 Actually, we're not, actually. We've got 40,000 people. All right. We bring in Jenny. Bringing for 50,000. Coming to the south coast. That's the problem. Here's a problem.
Starting point is 00:08:15 The casual use of this kind of language and analogy is exactly part of the problem. Is that when you compare genuine refugees, which many of them will be, people seeking asylum, many coming from countries, which, by the way, have been war torn because we started a war there. Not in Albania, with you. No, but we have in places like Iraq, right? Not in Albania. Right. 12,000 people.
Starting point is 00:08:37 You made your views here about it. That's what we should be holding the government counter. We're going to explore that. But Jenny, on the use of inflammatory language, this is part of the problem. If you demonise all these people, that to me doesn't help anybody.
Starting point is 00:08:49 The point is you are deliberately either setting people up as your enemy that invades you or you're dehumanising them. Neither at which I'm doing. Ants or cockroaches or whatever it is. Suella Braverman, all she's got is rhetoric. Can you name a single thing that she's done in all the time
Starting point is 00:09:05 that she has been in the cabinet. She has nothing. She has no ideas. She has no plans. She just has language where she talks about her dream of sending people to Rwanda. She talks about tofu eating,
Starting point is 00:09:15 Wokorati. That's all she's got. Culture Wars. She uses this language to deflect from the fact that she doesn't have a plan. And the problem is not the invasion of migrants.
Starting point is 00:09:23 The problem is the backlog. And the backlog is caused by problems at the home office with processing people. Yes, there are a record numbers. I would agree with it. Yes. It's not an invasion.
Starting point is 00:09:32 14 governments to solve problems of nearly this scale. I agree. And my point, I would totally agree. There is no plan. The process is wrong. The law is wrong. There are these knee-jerk reactions coming out of the home office and the government,
Starting point is 00:09:45 such as you were quite right. I totally agree with you regarding the ridiculous idea of sending them to Rwanda. This is all ridiculous stuff. The fact is that there is no cohesive strategy, and without that strategy, there is not going to be a proper plan. Cross-government. But the very least things... But Henry, Role, the very least we should be doing
Starting point is 00:10:04 is treating these people with basic dignity and respect. I agree with it. If they're prepared to risk their lives, which many of them do, and many have lost their lines in the process, of coming over the channel in dinghies because vile traffickers have screwed them for however much money it may be,
Starting point is 00:10:20 the least we can do as a supposedly civilised, humane country is actually treat them with some form of dignity and respect. Can we not forget that there was a terrorist attack on an asylum centre on Sunday and we know that this kind of language, dehumanising language, treating these people as invaders, people who are coming to take over our country,
Starting point is 00:10:42 people who are insects, is the sort of thing that enables terrorists to commit these terrible attacks. Well, Henry, let me ask you something, Henry. Henry Bolton. You were very exercised about the Just Stop Oil activists, and you tweeted this, arrest, charge for criminal damage,
Starting point is 00:11:00 prosecute, sentence to whatever community service hours are required to clean it and fine for whatever it costs, jail for six months. Very strong, unequivocal. This is how we do with them, right? I'm a former police officer as well, Pierce, and I have arrested people for lesser criminal damage than that. Yeah. They've been, they've, the Crown Prosecution Service have made the decision to charge, they've gone to court, and they've been sent to jail and given community service and all. What was your reaction when, what was your reaction when a maniac through a petrol bomb at a Dover migrant sentence? I'm appalled. Really?
Starting point is 00:11:33 Let me remind you what you actually tweeted. Hang on. No, hang on. Twitter has 140 characters. Let me remind you of what you actually tweeted. Go ahead and let me comment on. Somebody threw petrol bombs at the Dover Migrant Center, which is on fire, then
Starting point is 00:11:45 took their own life. This shocking news shows the level of frustration. It does. It's shocking news because... Sorry? Level of frustration. You think it's not shocking? And you think that the public... This was an absolute racist lunatic.
Starting point is 00:11:59 Fine. Waging a terror campaign on innocent... migrants in a migrant centre. There is something that I think all three of us can agree on get this. You see more, you see more appalled and more draconian about a bunch of people spraying paint on buildings than you are about a bloke trying to murder people.
Starting point is 00:12:15 Now you're being ridiculous. Not they're your tweets. Literally your tweets within the space of two days. That is the context of what we, I think, all three can agree on is that the government doesn't have a properly cohesive and thought-through plan for this. And what I'm saying is that when you've got that level of frustration growing in the election, you're going to see these problems.
Starting point is 00:12:37 I'm not justifying, though. It feels like a justification. It doesn't. Unfortunately, you put it down to it shows how frustrated people are. People are frustrated. It shows there are murderous maniacs who are racist who want to kill migrants. Of course. That's what that showed.
Starting point is 00:12:52 Pierce, if you look at my career, I've spent most of it fighting people like that. You can understand people being confused, Henry. You can understand the... You see more angry about just off oil protesters. You may be confused. I am not. And you didn't say the just-stop-all protesters were frustrating. That's what led to them doing what they did.
Starting point is 00:13:09 You said, locked them up. I agree. Unfortunately, you can't lock that man up, can you? Right. What I am saying, what I'm trying to illustrate here is that there is a need to put pressure on the government to come up with a cohesive plan. And you cannot deny that there is severe frustration out down the public. I think we can all agree. Look, I think most sensible people can agree.
Starting point is 00:13:31 It is ridiculous these numbers. rocketing of people coming over illegally on dinghies, and it has to be dealt with, and nothing so far as word. But I think we can also agree that this country needs a good level of legal immigration of people who will enhance our country. And right now, if you speak to anybody in many industries like hospitality, for example, and so on NHS, they are crying out for people. Absolutely. My sister runs a restaurant she is trying to recruit from overseas because she cannot, she cannot recruit. Absolutely. It's a complete catastrophe. And if this is what taking back control is, I don't know what being out of control is, it is a
Starting point is 00:14:09 complete disaster. This is a problem of our own making. We could have done a lot better to control our borders if, for example, we hadn't been deliberately alienating the French by saying we didn't know whether or not they were our friends or our enemies. There is so much more that we could have done. This is entirely a failure of 12 years of Conservative government. Think about it. We've had the ridiculous, the hostile environments policy. We had the Rwanda policy. We had the whole windrush scandal. Scandal after scandal. It's all been a disaster. And what we need is proper leadership to actually sort the two problems out.
Starting point is 00:14:41 One, how do we stop people risking their lives and possibly dying being trafficked over the channel? And secondly, how do we have a better system of asylum and refugees, which actually deals with these applications quickly? But to do that. And we work out who should be here and who should because we actually lag quite far, far behind many European countries on how many we take in anyway. Good, competent Home Secretary to do that, though, one that is driven by practicalism. And, Piers, I think that's what the conversation that really we should be having and all of us putting pressure on the government to respond. I agree. I agree.
Starting point is 00:15:12 But, Henry, I'm going to end by how I started and saying that the use of language is very important. You do not get anywhere in this debate by demonising people by using subhuman language about them. And for my point, I would like to say that I agree with you. I do not and have not equated, however you'd like to put it, however you'd like to present it, I have not equated the refugees and the asylum seekers and migrants. Okay. Let me explain.
Starting point is 00:15:41 Okay. Or let me explain. Let me explain exactly how. They are simply a large number uncontrolled coming onto our coast. Exactly. And that's got to be dealt with. Let me explain exactly how you did compare them one more time. Because you said the use of the word invasion about refugees and asylum seekers was just
Starting point is 00:15:58 because we use it about football hooligans and flying eggs. I said it was a secret. And that, I'm afraid, is an analogy which is disgraceful. But I also posted the Oxford dictionary definition of what invasion is. And in that sense, it's difficult to deny that it was appropriate. No, it's not difficult. It's only difficult if actually you look at them as less than human. We've got to leave it there.
Starting point is 00:16:19 Jenny, Henry Bolton, thank you very much indeed. Still to come 18 days before the World Cup starts in Qatar. Is it time for the footballers to stop protesting? and focus on football. But next, shocking new details about cop-cowardism one of America's worst school gun tragedies. Welcome back to Pittsburgh and on Sensitive. Five months ago, a lone gunman
Starting point is 00:16:52 entered Rob Elementary School in Navaldi, Texas, altering two teachers and 19 children. It was the worst school shooting since Sandy Hook a decade ago. Now, shocking audio of 911 calls with a 10-year-old girl trapped inside has emerged, which shows the police waited more than 40 minutes before taking action. This is how that dreadful day
Starting point is 00:17:11 unfolded. 11.30m. CCTV footage shows the shooter entering the school. Moments later, you can hear him firing on the teachers and children inside. 10-year-old Chloe Torres is one of the children trapped. Here are some of the heartbreaking new 911 calls that have just emerged that she made at the time. I'm calling with a phone. Okay, yes. My mom. I'm at my school. You miss there. Are you with officers? Are you parricated somewhere. I'm in... What's the building in them? Chloe Torres, please,
Starting point is 00:17:58 there's a lot of dead body and little girl. They're inside of the building, okay? Do you need to take care of, see? Like the building. We just need to stay quiet. Well, Chloe survived,
Starting point is 00:18:38 and her parents gave permission for those audio tapes to be released to highlight the unbelievable failure by literally hundreds of armed police who were waiting outside. And what were these officers doing when she made that last call waiting in the corridors? They were standing there. They didn't do anything. For another 40 minutes, they didn't do anything after a 10-year-old girl makes that call. It's really, truly unconscionable. Well, eventually, they finally entered the classroom to tackle the shooter. Like I say, 40 minutes
Starting point is 00:19:15 after that call from Chloe. But by then, of course, the real damage had been done. Well, joining me now as former Washington homicide detective, Ted Williams and former FBI assistant director, Quisteker, who joins me from Carolina. Well, welcome to both of you. Ted Williams, I've got to say, I've always been supportive of the police.
Starting point is 00:19:37 Generally, I believe they're a force for good in America, in UK, in most countries. When you look at what happened here, and when you listen to the police, that heart-rending series of tapes from this poor little girl. I have a 10-year-old daughter myself, so it particularly resonated. I just cannot understand why, given how many armed police were literally standing outside, they didn't just rush inside and deal with this situation.
Starting point is 00:20:07 Can you? Pierce, I don't think any of us can understand. When we listen to this child pleading for help, and you have grown men and women, law enforcement officers with guns and armed, would not go into that classroom for 40 minutes. I can tell you, these law enforcement officers do not represent the best of law enforcement. The best of law enforcement would have gone in that classroom right away to try to save as many lives as possible. These cowards were more interested in saving their own lives and their own skin than helping those children. 19, 19 children, and two of their teachers died.
Starting point is 00:21:01 And you have a child in that classroom crying out, telling law enforcement what the hell is going on in there, that they're dead kids. and for 40 minutes they stood around twiddling their stums. It is just so embarrassing and unacceptable to good law enforcement officers. I completely agree. I mean, Chris Wecker, is there anything you could say to try and defend what happened that day in terms of the law enforcement conduct? No, I mean, first of all, this was, you mentioned the word failure. This was a failure of preparation.
Starting point is 00:21:37 It was a failure of leadership. it was a failure of execution. It was a failure of training. These officers act like they'd never been through this before, even in a drill. There is no, I can't offer up any mitigation other than to say that there may be officers in there that felt they were following orders. But as I study this incident, and I've studied Parkland and I've studied Columbine, the golden rule, as Detective Williams points out, is you go to the sound of gunfire. There's no more of this mustering up on the perimeter, getting shields, getting the perfect situation and then going in,
Starting point is 00:22:12 you go to the sound of the gunfire until that gunfire stops and you neutralize that threat. This is when the rubber meets the road for law enforcement. This is what you signed up to do. And if you're not up to that, you need to find another profession. I don't want to be too hard. You know, you don't want to judge these officers harshly other than the one mitigation I can say is that there were people on the scene
Starting point is 00:22:35 that seemed to be wanting to be the incident commander, you will, and issuing some orders to stay back. Now that, you know, that police chief of the school district now backs up and says, no, I wasn't in charge. Well, then he should have been in charge. He should have taken charge and done exactly what Detective Williams has said. You go in there and you confront the shooter and save lives. That's law enforcement. I mean, you say we shouldn't talk about them, or judge them harshly. Actually, I do want to judge them harshly. I want to judge them harshly at the time, and my anger has only increased since I heard these tapes this morning. I literally couldn't believe what I was hearing. A 10-year-old girl calmly detailing exactly what is
Starting point is 00:23:16 happening, explaining there are lots of dead people inside, and you have 400 armed law enforcement standing around. One of them we saw earlier at the start of all this a few months ago was actually washing his hands with hand sanitizer. As children were being used, murdered. So I'm afraid I do judge them harshly. In fact, I wrote a column for the New York Post at the time saying, I think they should all be fired. I mean, Ted Williams, if they can't go in to save children being blown to pieces by a maniac with guns, what are they doing as police officers? Why should they keep their jobs? They shouldn't keep their jobs. They should all be fired. They should all find some kind of other employment than law enforcement. Mr. Becker
Starting point is 00:24:09 is right. You serve and protect your community, and you have children, children dying. You know they're dying. You know that there are children in there that have been murdered by this bottom feeder. And yet you stand around and try to say that there is nobody in command. somebody should have taken charge. The fact that there isn't, there is no excuse. You cannot defend the indefensible in this manner. And as a result of that, they should all be fired. They shouldn't have anything to do with law enforcement.
Starting point is 00:24:47 They are an embarrassment to the good men and women who serve in law enforcement all over this country, who would have immediately, immediately gone in there to try to save law. Well, I would liken it, I would liken it, Chris Swecker, to the scenes on 9-11, when all those firefighters, it ran to what many of them must have thought might be certain death into the Twin Towers and lost their lives. They didn't hesitate for one moment to do their duty and do their jobs, and they were all heroes. None of this lot of heroes. They're the complete opposite of heroes. They're anti-heroes. They're people who, when they were finally tested, were the biggest test of their jobs.
Starting point is 00:25:29 careers, they utterly betrayed those children and the teachers and the families of those kids. No question about it. You know, again, those in law enforcement know the rule. They know the procedures these days. This is 2022. We've learned from a lot of these other mass shootings. One, there's a preparation aspect to this that falls on the law enforcement as well. But the execution aspect of it is clear cut. You go. That's all there is to it. And I get a little bit upset when I see these press conferences where after a mass shooting, law enforcement is standing up there, patting themselves on the back when, you know, that's not the focus and that's not the purpose. And this lot did it too. And this lot did it too. It turned out they were lying, right? I mean,
Starting point is 00:26:19 they literally spun a pack of lies praising themselves for their heroism in dealing with this shooter. later, thanks to some very good reporting, that we discovered the truth. And these tapes today, they're not just heartbreaking. They are, they are shameful. They shame American law enforcement.
Starting point is 00:26:41 It's not just an embarrassment. What is more shameful was the, what was more shameful was the, what I define as the cover up. They lied. They lied on a teacher, said that she left her door open. Or the governor says that he
Starting point is 00:26:57 had been given false information. But guess what? The governor hasn't taken any action against anybody. The chief of the Texas Rangers said that if any of his people were involved, that he would be
Starting point is 00:27:13 leaving. He hasn't left. Nobody has taken responsibility or accountability for the death of 19 students and two of their teachers. No, I completely agree. Ted Williams, thank you very much indeed for joining me and Chris Swecker.
Starting point is 00:27:31 It's honestly, it's enraging. It's an enraging story. It was enraging when it first happened. It's got more enraging over the months, the more we've learned about this sickening cowardice. But I appreciate you both joining me. Thank you very much. Well, still to come with the Qatar World Cup nearly upon us,
Starting point is 00:27:49 is it time for everyone to stop protesting, particularly the players, and either pull out of the tournament or shut up and get on with the football? We'll debate that next. And how do you pronounce Adele's name? Even she doesn't seem to know. But that might be because she's from Tom.
Starting point is 00:28:08 How's my? How's my name? How about Adele? How about it? Welcome back to Piers Morgan & Uncensit. My dazzling pack this evening is Kevin McGuire, with Deli Mirror, and the Times is legal sketchwriter Quentin. Let's welcome to both of you, a dazzling duo.
Starting point is 00:28:32 I just want to start by congratulating my eldest son, Spencer, who just texted me to say he's been playing football tonight. They won 11-7, and he said, scored nine goals. As he puts it, Gareth Southgate, where are you? Quite right. Well, play, son. Gentlemen, before we get into what we're going to talk about, that debate there about what happened at Evalde.
Starting point is 00:28:51 We thank God don't have to put up with this kind of endless cycle of mass shootings. And when we had one very similar to this at Dunblane, we changed our gun laws irrevocably. But when you see what happened there, all I could think about was when I was in America trying to challenge the gun law situation and getting nowhere.
Starting point is 00:29:11 I always remember the NRA would pop up and they'd say, if only you had good guys with guns at schools, none of this would happen they'd shoot the shooters. There were 400 supposedly good guys with guns and they let these kids die. It's the timidity of protocol, wasn't there? Yes. But also moral cowardice.
Starting point is 00:29:30 Well, yes, which is all... That was all part of it. It's too much part of obeying the set procedures and not being adaptable. It was extraordinary. I mean, Kevin, if any of us were in that situation, anyone, and you had a weapon and you knew there was someone in a classroom killing children, I think we'd all go in, but we...
Starting point is 00:29:49 You would want to, and you'd feel ashamed if you didn't. And someone said, but you can't, because of protocol, I think it would stuff your protocol. Well, it was almost as if... They were actually holding parents back outside the school. But it was almost as if there were too many armed police officers and no one was taking controlling and having the leadership. The former detective who was speaking... Very powerful, I thought.
Starting point is 00:30:07 I thought he was fantastic. Now, whether you sack them all or you retrain them, if you can, and change how you operate, I would possibly disagree with him over there because he was hardline, just sack him. But he was a type who would say, right, you've got to address it, you've got somebody. Just need someone to say, get in there and say these kids.
Starting point is 00:30:24 Lying, lying there, bleeding and dying. And as we now know, this young girl had the courage and presence of mind to phone them and tell them exactly what was happening. If Joe Biden has any sense, he'll get her into the White House. They should. Yeah. Try and affect some change.
Starting point is 00:30:37 But the National Rifle Association... No, but it's a visit and just to apologize. But your opponent, the National Rifle Association, facilitate the deaths of more Americans and terrorists have ever killed. Yeah, I think that's true. Quentin, let's talk about quickly Rishi Sunak. You wrote an interesting column I just read before I came in today. That's most unusual.
Starting point is 00:30:56 You're sketch. But you writing an interesting column, what's reading it? It's genuinely interested me. I can't have that one. He said there was a real, a quantitative difference after PMQs today, between what it felt like in the room and what actually then you watch back on television and that he was much more impressive as a television operator
Starting point is 00:31:15 that perhaps it seemed in the theatre. This was to do with the quality of his voice. It doesn't cut through the terrible noise in the Commons Chamber. And I sit up in the gallery almost opposite him. I found it really hard to hear him today. Because I was watching it live on TV and I thought he handled himself very well.
Starting point is 00:31:33 In fact, if I was Keir Stama, I think I'd be getting a bit twitchy about Rishi Sunnet for two reasons. One, they've got two years that they can wait until an election. They've got two years. As we know from the last three months, it's a very long time in politics.
Starting point is 00:31:46 And should there be a recession, but then we start to come out of it and Rishy Suna can position himself as the guy that got the ship back on track, that's not a bad election winner. But more importantly, Kevin... He was on the rack on migration. More importantly, he's not a buffoon, right?
Starting point is 00:31:59 He's not a half-wit. He's not someone who doesn't look like he's always talking about. He just seems a pretty... competent guy who's trying to go about sorting stuff out. Well, he's certainly better than the last one. The last three, I'd say. At least. Certainly the last one in terms of...
Starting point is 00:32:15 Trust Johnson or May. Johnson had big electoral appeal. He did, but I don't think he had the substance to go with the retortals. All I was trying to say about Sunak today was his voice works better. Yeah. For the TV, for the microphones, then it does... In this sort of the raw... No, I get that.
Starting point is 00:32:31 Of the commons. He slightly disappears because he's a bit too... Kevin, as a Labour... man, what do you think about Rishi Sunnah? Oh, I think it's more credible than I agree. He's three predecessors. He's certainly more credible. He's an adult. There's no doubt in a grown-ups. He's allowed to be treated differently.
Starting point is 00:32:45 But he was on the back foot on migration. Stama went on an area that the Tories are traditionally strong on and scored a lot of points. Who's been in power for 12 years? It's a good point, but I don't see any real answers from Labor. So my thing about the immigration, we have that debate earlier. I hate all the incendiary language. I think it's repellent.
Starting point is 00:33:03 I think Brabman in particular, seems to specialise. I dream of flying them all off to Rwanda. These are people invading our country. It's all just nonsense. Isn't it, Quentin? No, Pierce, I would just urge this caution. If you try to suppress the ordinary language
Starting point is 00:33:19 that you hear on the streets and say that we politicians talk a different sort of language, I think you then increase the gulf between politicians. I don't agree with that. I'll tell you why, because I actually think when leaders and senior politicians use inflammatory language, it whips up and encourages a lot more of it in the street.
Starting point is 00:33:37 And actually, the job of politicians ought to be, in my opinion, to use language which is not incendiary. They shouldn't be inflaming things. They can talk about the crisis that's here. Clearly, we have a massive problem in trying to deal with this. But they can do it without using dehumanizing language. I disagree. I think you get a disconnect, and I think that's where you get more tension.
Starting point is 00:34:00 Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, won't use the language she is. of invasion. She knows what she's doing. She diverted attention from her security breaches and incompetence by getting this argument around invasion. It'll incite some people, but you're inciting hate. And we saw the far-right terrorist firebombing. We've had two members of parliament murdered in the last six years of this country. You've just seen the US Speaker's husband brutally attacked by a lunatic who'd been whipped up to think Nancy Pelosi's the devil. You know, I can see a real connection. between inflammatory rhetoric.
Starting point is 00:34:35 You saw it with Trump a lot. You saw it with Boris occasionally, but Trump, I think, worse. When you use dehumanizing language, I don't think that helps any part of democratic debate at all. After Boris Johnson attack women wearing burgers, so they looked like bank robbers and postboxes. There was a spike in attacks on British Muslims.
Starting point is 00:34:55 Look, politicians have to have a responsibility in what they say. I think so. They shouldn't be like people on the street. Isn't that the point, Quentin Rueh? No. You can have a connection in terms of identifying a problem and saying, I'm going to solve it, but actually using incendiary language,
Starting point is 00:35:10 all that will do is encourage everybody else to. I think if you create this impression that the politicians are on a higher plane, that the politicians are a cleracy who take a higher view of things, I think you have a problem. Are we entitled to expect them to be on a slightly higher plane, given that they are elected officials who want power to serve over us? Are we entitled to expect a better standard? Let me answer.
Starting point is 00:35:33 I think it's very important on an issue like this where there has been, there is clearly a big difference between what the London political class things and what you get elsewhere in the country. I think you have to knit back those two a lot more. And the language has become a bit airy, very. Okay, let me just switch to another topic. This is, I've been watching, you know, I have a thing about the woke left just going increasingly insane. and actually in doing so, helping the right? And I say that as somebody probably slightly sent the left myself, or I used to be, before the left got so mad
Starting point is 00:36:08 that I now look like I'm right at the tail of the heart. Come home, come home, come home. Good morning Norway. Good morning Norway, which is God Morgan, Noggi, GMN. So I have a particular affinity with Good Morning Norway. Just had an interview with the Gerund Victoria Alma, 53, who's an able-bodied male who now identifies as a disabled woman. This is not a joke, Quentin.
Starting point is 00:36:30 This is actually happening. Elmi has sparked outrage on social media because it appeared as a disabled woman paralyzed from the waist down because they'd always wished this person to be a woman who was paralyzed from the waist down. Alma's a senior credit analyst for a big bank in Oslo and has actually received positive coverage
Starting point is 00:36:50 in Norwegian media since announcing trans disability publicly on Facebook. Now, this self-identity thing has been going to. increasingly nuts. This is completely insane. He scores a lot of points on every sort of register, double tops for being what, disabled and trans and Norwegian. Alma currently utilises a wheelchair almost all the time despite having no physical handicap given.
Starting point is 00:37:16 Well, if they want to get around in a wheelchair, then that's up to them, but to pretend you can't identify as a disabled woman. No. It's nuts. No, no, and you shouldn't. So it's too woke even for you. Don't bring nuts. My God, we finally! Finally, Craig McGuire.
Starting point is 00:37:30 I'm all for respect and being sensible and pragmatic. Now, disabled people will probably be cheesed off, should we say. But this is what happens. When you allow limitless self-identity, this is what happened. It's quite clever to find a new, a new niche. But don't, nobody else has thought of this. Almond is very invented. But this shouldn't be used as a broad attack on trans people or anybody else.
Starting point is 00:37:56 I think, you know, I'd just think when, when, It's not. It's not. He cares. It makes a mockery of the whole thing, as far as I was like I would have said. Tell us something about probably a little bit more serious. Director James Gray, defending his latest film Armageddon Time, because he's cast Anne Hathaway, Anthony Hopkins and Jeremy Strong as a real-life Jewish immigrant family, even though they're not Jewish, including Anthony Hopkins.
Starting point is 00:38:21 What do we think of it? I mean, I, again, have a problem with this, Quentin. I think you're right to have a problem. To me, actors act. That's the whole point. Yes. They don't have to have Irish people playing Irish people. They're going to have disabled people playing disabled people, gay people playing. We've never had to do with before.
Starting point is 00:38:40 Nobody's minded. Why suddenly are we obsessed that everybody who plays a character in a film or TV show has to be that person in real life? Because people are running scared of Twitter and social media and they're being stampeded by a few nutters. And I think they should be stood up to. But I'm afraid it seems to be going that way. And we'll never again, will you have someone like,
Starting point is 00:38:58 like Kenneth Moore playing Douglas Bader, because you've got to have an actor who's got no legs to do that. Tom Hanks in Philadelphia. Yeah, brilliant. Shone a massive light on AIDS and probably did enormous help. Are you going to do that with somebody who you've never heard of who might have AIDS in real life, who plays it purely to tick a box?
Starting point is 00:39:14 I have an autistic, we have autism in the family, and one of the most important films for me, personally, was Rain Man, Dustin Hoffman playing an autistic child. Who wasn't, of course, autistic. But he saw an amazing light on autism. Because he's a brilliant actor. Eddie Redmond and Benedict Cumberbatch both played Stephen Hawken. Is it Helen Mirren is going to play Golda Mir, the Israeli...
Starting point is 00:39:35 And why not? She's an actress. Yeah, I think it only becomes an issue, right? And I'm kind of agreeing with you, but only comes an issue where underrepresented groups, if they're there, on getting roles. If gay actors feel they're not or disabled actors... I think everybody should have the same opportunity. Yeah. Right? So it's like all these things.
Starting point is 00:39:57 Same opportunity football. Right? Everyone, if you're a disabled person, if you're gay, if you're trans, if you're black, if you're white, whatever, you just should be given the same opportunity. And where that opportunity is thwarted through a system, then change the system to make it more inclusive. But that doesn't mean you then have to cast every single specific role. No, no, no, no. But you have here, the disconnect again between the elite and the people. Yes, I agree. And even the language that is used to discuss these things is just, it's a minefield on which I repeatedly stand. Yeah, well, I deliberately step on it, because I think it's a ludicrous mind. Do all actors get equal opportunity?
Starting point is 00:40:34 Because there are fewer roles, say, for women, because of the way so many films and TV shows and play. But then the answer to that, the answer to that they're now doing, they want gender neutral awards. And all that will mean in the end is probably women win less awards. Because they were broadly, oh, it's like the Olympics. All right. You have the Olympics. Do you make it gender neutral? Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:40:53 Then you'll find no women win a gold medal again, right? More Norwegians in wheel. No, but... This guy would win the... The Brits have gone gender, gender, in acting and in music, it doesn't mean fewer women. All right.
Starting point is 00:41:11 Sport would, where it's just on equal. Let me just... Before let you go, how do you pronounce Adel? No, Adele. You just said it. Adele. Right, let's listen to Adel today. Where is she from Enfield or something?
Starting point is 00:41:23 Love that. She said my name perfectly. He came and asked me how I say my name and I was like, Adele. How's my? Adele. Adele. Now, you see, it's actually Adele. She just can't pronounce it because she's from Tottenham. And she's a Tottenham fan. And she pronounces her own name wrong. She was christened Adele. But she wants us to think it's Adele. Adele. Adele.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Adele. Because Adele. Well, have you on EastEnders soon. Because she's a Spurs fan. And I'm very, you can't, I don't think that's right. She shouldn't be to re-categorise her name. Well, she's the singer, probably known as Adele or whatever. Good at all. Chad, good to see you. Nice to see you. Nice to hear you. I appreciate you coming in.
Starting point is 00:42:01 Well, next to night, sporting legend, Gareth Thomas, the first openly gay rugby union star, joins me live to discuss protests against the Qatar World Cup. Welcome back to Pizs Morgan and Sets. To build up to a World Cup, it's normally dominated by frenzied excitement and optimism. This year it's just a lot of negativity. It's getting ever more deafening. The growing chorus of critics rail against host nation Qatar's non-existent LGBT rights and the way they've been treating migrant workers.
Starting point is 00:42:35 But is it time for the protest to say? stop and for players who don't agree with any of that to put out of the tournament, or just stay on focus on the football. We're joining me now as former Welsh rugby player, Garrett Thomas and comedian, Ronald Cameron. Welcome to both of you. Garrett, you are a World Cup legend. You've played four World Cups, I just got told, which is pretty extraordinary.
Starting point is 00:42:54 What do you think of this? It's complicated because I think, I would probably imagine we all agree about a few things. One, Qatar should never have been awarded this in the first place, given the apparent corruption that was going on. They've then reconfigured all the... the schedules to play it in the best, you know, heat that they can provide, but that ruins a lot of the domestic schedules like our own here and so on. And obviously, there are lots of human rights incidents as well that we should be taking
Starting point is 00:43:20 into consideration. However, the Middle East has never had the World Cup. It's a huge football-loving region of the world. Is it not the time now as we get towards the tournament after 12 years of knowing it's going to be here to say, you know what, let's just get on with the football? Sorry, Gary first, and I'll come to you. knowing. Yeah, sure. Sorry. I think on the point of 12 years of knowing, like I myself and so many other people have been trying to raise awareness. And when you talk about, you know, and I follow you,
Starting point is 00:43:53 and I like you, and as like a virtue of signaling, if anything, the media are now guilty of that because all of a sudden the World Cup has become something that has got attention. So all of a sudden, let's focus attention on the World Cup. Or we can't just focus attention on the World Cup. we now have to focus on this. But I and so many other organisations have been trying to kind of raise the fact that the human rights and the laws
Starting point is 00:44:18 anti-gay people live in there or being born there or being able to survive there have been around for such a long time. Here's the problem, Gary. I have with it. I mean, look, I completely support gay rights to equality.
Starting point is 00:44:32 For period, end. And obviously I hate the fact that in Qatar it's different. But eight of the 32, teams left in this World Cup are countries where it's illegal to be gay. It's not just Qatar. And then when you look at the other countries involved in the World Cup, almost all of them have huge human rights issues, including, by the way, if you look at our own country. You know, we illegally invoked Iraq, waiting two decades of terrorism. In other words,
Starting point is 00:44:58 if you put the morality argument up, where does it end, where do you end up being able to play a sport? Because I think you can't blame the individuals who are playing the sport. You can't blame the individuals who are playing the sport for what their country is kind of representing, you kind of go there as a team with your own representation and your own wants and your own fans. And I think that's where
Starting point is 00:45:21 the players become important and the message all of a sudden becomes important as to why the players are there. Now I understand the signalling of people wearing armbands. Yeah. I mean, my thing about the armbands is it's like, well, so what? It's not going to make any difference. Rona, what's your view about this? Well, firstly, I'm glad there was a break
Starting point is 00:45:38 between the Norwegian disabled identifying as a woman item because I nearly lost control of my bladder. So I was worrying that we were going to come to us straight after that. So, yeah, there is a lot of insanity in the world and human beings are feeling the pressure everywhere. In terms of this tournament, of course, it should never have been there in the first place. And FIFA are going to make something like,
Starting point is 00:46:08 five billion pounds out of this tournament whilst these you know as you've said these poor workers from the Philippines and Nepal and all the rest of it have been working 10 hour days in 40 degree heat I mean if you just think about those those things that basic sort of information it's absolutely shocking and then we're dealing with the fact that along with several other countries but largely with the Sharia law there's still the debt penalty for homosexuals. And you're quite right. There is there is some double standards with other countries in the world. I mean, let's let's remind everyone that in the UK, it was the late 80s before they stopped seeing homosexuality as a mental illness.
Starting point is 00:46:54 Listen, I look, we're running out of time. I think I would simply say, I think the problem with getting a moral halo on about sport is you end up not being at a play anywhere because everyone's got their problems. But it's a good debate. Thank you for joining me. We're going to have a longer debate about this. I've got to leave it there to Gareth and Rona, thank you. Whatever you're up to, keep it uncensored. Good night.

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