Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Owen Jones, Charlie Kirk
Episode Date: November 15, 2023On Piers Morgan Uncensored tonight, Piers is joined by Owen Jones on the Israel-Hamas conflict and Charlie Kirk. 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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Well, tonight on Pierce, Morgan, our sense,
that the UK's plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda
is ruled unlawful by the Supreme Court unanimously.
PM Rishishishanak says he still hasn't given up.
Is it time, though, to forget this fiasco
and take the migrant crisis seriously or debate?
Israeli forces into the biggest hospital in Gaza
claiming to terrorist command center,
Hamas calls that a war crime,
and what's talk live to Mark Regiv.
Labor faces a wave of resignations
over its leaders refused to call for a ceasefire,
in Gaza, has tempers flare over anti-Semitism, a pro-Palestine protest.
And that, Jeremy Corbyn interview, I'm joined with his uncensored debut by left-wing firebrand.
His words are not mine.
Owen Jones.
Live from the news building in London, this is Pierce Morgan Uncensored.
Good evening from London.
Welcome to Pierce Morgan Unsensored.
The government's plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda was the headline grabbing centerpiece
of its plan to fix Britain's migrant crisis.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has made stopping the small boats, crossing the channel, one of his five pledges to the British people, the test by which he wants to be measured at the next election.
Well, Saxoella Braverman even said it was her dream to see migrants deported to Rwanda.
Now, like the Monty Python parrot sketch, the government says that dream is just resting.
Well, bad news.
This parrot is no more.
It has ceased to be.
It's expired and gone to meet its maker.
This is a late...
It's a stiff.
Couldn't it put it better myself, Cleese?
The Rwanda plan is as dead
as well as Brevardman's career as Home Secretary
and it's time with the government to move on.
The bottom line with this is it was never going to work.
I said that at the time.
I've said it throughout.
And I'm saying it again
when the Supreme Court has also basically agreed.
Tens of thousands of people,
crossing the channel illegally every year.
When they get here, they enter a broken and chaotic system
beset by chronic, unforgivably large backlogs.
Sending a tiny handful of people to Rwanda
at vast public expense was never either practical
or a humane solution.
Now, the Supreme Court has reiterated that it's illegal.
Genuine asylum seekers would face the serious risk
of ending up back in the country they escaped from.
So far, the government has given $140 million of our money
to Rwanda in exchange for precisely nothing.
So it's all an embarrassing fiasco for Rishi Sunak,
his government and the country,
and the only person benefiting from all that is Sakeha Stama.
His Rwanda scheme,
cooked up with his national security threat,
Home Secretary, has blown up.
He was told over and over again that this would happen,
that it wouldn't work, and it was just the latest Tory gimmick.
But he bet everything.
on it. And now he's totally exposed. The central pillar of his government has crumbled
beneath him. Does he want to... Well, plenty of people are lining up to argue this is some kind
of affronted democracy. Newspaper columnist, I think that's what he is now, Boris Johnson,
called it a legal blockade on Rwanda, which is obviously absurd. Now some conservatives are
clamouring for the UK to exit the European Convention on Human Rights, or just ignore the Supreme
Court altogether. Yes, Lee Anderson.
who's at the moment, the Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party,
the party of law and order,
called on the Prime Minister to brazenly break the law
and put planes in the air now.
That's exactly the kind of careless, brainless and heartless thinking
that got us into this mess.
But you can see more of that on GB News
when Mr. Anderson has a show.
The UK does have a migrant crisis, the number speak for themselves.
Rwanda, though, is always a distraction or a solution.
Now, it's time for the government to put its time and money
into finding an actual solution that works.
Well, with me in the studios, Talk TV's international editor,
Isabel Oakeshaw, Associate Editor of the Mirror, Kevin McGuire,
and talk to the contributor, Esther Cracky.
Welcome to all of you.
All right, Isabel.
It's dead of, there's a doornail.
It's pushing up the daisies.
It's an ex-parat, this deal.
It is a complete ex-parrart.
It should never have been a parrot in the first place.
I mean, gimmicks would work if it's a symbolic thing
that you can actually make happen,
but it was blindingly obvious from the start
that there were never going to be a lot of deportations to Rwanda.
You didn't need to go through this agonising,
an incredibly expensive and time-wasting process to tell us that.
And, you know, hats off to Rishi Sunau for attempting to make it look like he had a plan,
you know, that he was seizing the initiative,
that he was not to be deterred by this Supreme Court,
because big wows were going to come up with some emergency levels.
legislation, which will then itself be challenged again and again.
Well, they haven't got time.
I mean, Esther, here's the point.
There's a ticking clock, right?
It's only got a year, so he has to call them election.
They're never going to get what they need to do to even get this back on the table in time.
So this is dead for this government anyway.
What do you make of this?
I mean, the problem is, at the root of this is a real problem.
Well, of course.
You know, the small boat's issue is not something that is a small problem.
It's something that enrages the British public that tens of thousands of people
come in here illegally, brought here by unscrupulous greedy smugglers who don't care if the people
they bring over live or die. It's a humanitarian crisis in that regard. It's a ridiculous
farce that our country's border is so transparently porous. They keep wanting to pour in.
And at the root of it is a system that doesn't work. 30,000 people on the asylum backlog.
Why can't we just do the basics?
It's way, like that, by the way. Is it?
How many? It's 130. It's 130.
30,000 plus.
130,000.
I mean, that's the population of Sollyhall.
On the waiting of this, right?
I mean, this is ridiculous for a country like ours.
Well, of course.
But the question is, what exactly is the government supposed to do about that?
You can't turn them back.
I think you actually can.
Well, they're not doing it.
That's the point.
This is the issue here.
This is an existential crisis for the Conservative Party because it goes against every principle.
It goes against law and order.
It goes against fairness and meritocracy.
At the end of the day, the amount of money we spend on these boat crossings is more than the budget for homelessness in the UK.
It's incredible.
You two are both.
conservatives, right? Identify as
conservatives. And yet you're both
instinctively very hostile about this
which is bad. Well, because the answer is simple.
The answer is simple. Turn them away.
Refuse their asylum. Okay, I'm going to
be hostile to the Rwanda. Well, hostile to the situation.
Because at the end of these people are not genuine asylum seekers.
They're mostly able-bodied men, economic migrants.
The majority. The people are
asylum systems should be prioritizing women and children who are
higher risk of sexual abuse and violent,
and sexual-based violence
are at the bottom of the list because of these people.
They're not asylum seekers.
The number of people crossing in boats is 30,000 this year.
Last year it was 45,000.
So it's coming down.
That's partly because the government's spending
half a billion pounds with the French
to stop the sailors.
But the government's own figures,
the government's own figures.
The government's own figures show
that Rwanda was going to cost 169,000 pound per head,
which is 63,000 pounds more
than allowing people to stay here.
And that's before.
You allow them to work.
And if you allow them to work.
But Isabel's right.
The reason for the falling number is mainly young male economic libraries from Albania.
But they're not coming.
But we've done a deal with the Albanian government and they're not coming.
But peers, yes.
But there is the answer.
You do the deals with the government.
So you stop saying.
Now, when people do.
When do people get.
It's right in a way.
If that's what you do.
If that has worked so effectively, my question for Rishi Sunek is, well, go and do more deals like that.
Exactly.
And if the French should be obstinate, as they are.
They don't want this problem on their hands, right?
Then you've got to try and do a deal that they will accept.
And the majority of the...
But we've already sent them tens of millions.
I mean, enormous amounts of money which have achieved the average.
The majority of people who do get here on boats are granted the right to stay because they have a legal right.
The government is trying to use the channel as a moat.
If you had safe and legal routes...
Don't go to each other.
Do you know part of these migrants...
Indian students coming from Serbia
because Serbia has a visa-free
waiver with Indians.
They are not genuine asylum seekers.
No, let's contextualise. Since
2018, the population of Solihull
have crossed the channel
on both. That is a
We can all agree it's wrong. And clearly if
15,000 fewer people are coming because of the
Albanian economic migrants coming over,
that clearly is a problem as well.
But there will definitely be some legitimate
asylum seekers and refugees, by the way,
have come from kids.
countries that we bombed.
Yep.
So we have a moral duty to take care of them.
Well, we went there, they went there, they come here, it's a backhanded compliment they want
to come here, start a new life, work and pay their way.
You know who we have a moral duty to the women and children that they're leaving behind?
If they're in such a desperate situation, we can all agree.
We can all agree it's an absolute horror story, right?
I'm not against it on principle, by the way, because I think that if we're actually able to do
it, it would stop the flow of migrants.
I'm against it because it was flawed from the start
because we were never going to get to make.
How would you fix it?
If I've made you home, Secretary tomorrow,
by the way, it might happen.
We've had six in six years.
So let's assume your number seven.
I would be working with the Ministry of Defence
to turn back the boats.
Whatever the legal niceties,
I would be turning back the boats.
It's been done in other countries.
Actually, Belgium is doing it.
And once you start turning them back,
they will stop coming.
Right, because I remember pretty Patel said this.
The Royal Navy was deployed.
Royal Navy sailors.
I'm going to try and use their boat to push back a dinghy
now and they'll capsize it and people have died.
The Australians have done this.
And they've actually deployed them.
The Australians have done this and we've consulted too.
Why can't we just do it?
The Australians, those boats are huge boats.
That doesn't make it different.
It's still a boat.
It's a water.
If you try to do the Australian system here,
it would be ruled quite rightly unlawful.
Now, the Rwanda deal, it was cruel, it was cruel, it was unworkable, it was expensive, it's a moral.
The Australian thing, it worked brilliantly. There are no more boats coming over.
Do you know what happens in those camps that they send them, the levels of suicide and ill health?
Is that really what you want? Is that really what you want? Is it? Is it? Excuse me. Where's your humanity?
The suicides are on the people, are the people heartlessly smuggling these individuals and taking money from them, not the government's defending their borders.
Sorry.
That's what a country means.
A country has borders.
By not having safe and legal routes.
They're all safe.
But I mean a client.
You are a business manager for the people's smugglers.
You are sending people of people smugglers.
How?
By turning them away?
The majority of people, once they're crossing those boats, are given a legal right to stay here.
That doesn't mean they should be.
Exactly.
It means our system is broken.
If you've actually looked at the criteria by which their cases of judge, they are ludicrous.
I think we could do ourselves a massive thing.
If we just...
Have a special show on this.
Because there's a lot more to say.
If we just...
Yep.
...the first thing I would do, if I was James Cleverly,
is massively increase the number of people processing these applications.
So at the very least you get that number right down.
They should be turned around within a week.
Yeah, exactly.
What's the point of processing for just letting more people in?
They allowed the backlog to go over 170,000.
They are now putting more resources in it.
It's come down 130,000.
Now, I'm all...
But all this money was spending at the moment on Rwampton.
$150 million, put that into a more processing.
Unfortunately, it appears we've paid it.
No, I know.
They're not going to give it a part.
We're going to keep spending money on this folly, right?
Well, exactly, which is madness.
But do you know the difference between the EU acceptance rates for asylum seekers in the UK?
37% versus 77%.
There's a reason why when in the safe country of France, they choose to risk coming here.
Let's say massive problems.
Isabel, how damaging, I mean, it's been a fascinating week for Richie Siennay.
He has to sack his home secretary, which I think we,
was the right thing to do. I think she defied his authority, and you can't have that as Prime Minister,
and she did it brazenly. Then he woke up this morning to quite good news, right, that he'd hit
one of his five pledges. Inflation has halved. It's come down, well, it's coming up.
I know, I know, but it's coming down, it's going up everywhere, but he's come down a lot
faster than was predicted. That's a tick in his pledge box, and yet he couldn't even celebrate
that before this happened. So it's been a turbulent week for him. I think it's kind of,
catastrophic, actually. I think this is absolutely
as Esther said, this is existential.
I got the email, dear Isabel,
have you checked out our promises from the
Chancellor saying, you know, great
news, inflation is half. Yeah, I've checked
out your promises. One of the main
ones was that you were going to stop the boats
and you have abjectly failed
to do that. Well, hang on. I interview
as you said that. He didn't say completely stop.
He said he would stop this. Yeah, she had stopped
the boats on the podium. That was the
slogan, but they have stopped a lot of the boats.
I mean, that's in argument, wasn't it? If you look
at the TNCs, it was he was going to pass legislation to stop it. But he gave the impression.
Stop means stop. There's no government. If Labor, Labor come out, they will not completely stop the boats.
Because even if you allow the people who are entitled to seek asylum in the UK to come through safe and legal routes, those who aren't allowed still sail.
Does Rishi moving more to the centre right and abandoning people like Swellabraman on the more extremity of the right, is that going to be better for him,
at the election?
No, because what matters is him actually acting
instead of moving whichever way he wants.
At the end of the day,
he has acted.
Not really, though, because he hasn't stopped the best.
In as much as I agree with a lot of Suella Bravman,
what she said.
I think she's a very unskilled, untalented politician.
I think she's very callous.
I think every time she opened her incendiary gob.
She says something that made my skin cruel.
But the thing is, she's an amateur.
She's an amateur.
They brought it on themselves, these people.
It's a lifestyle choice.
She was way out of her depth and the government is better without her.
You know what she's why I've no sympathy because she may be jobless, but that's a lifestyle choice.
Let's get her a tent.
All chip in.
Wouldn't that be ironic?
Thank you to my back.
Good to see you all.
And says the next is Israeli defense forces continue their raid at the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza.
I'll be joined by a senior advisor to Prime Minister Netanyahu, Mark Regan.
Welcome back to Piers-Borgal.
I'm going to interview with Jeremy Corbyn, which I repeatedly asked him 15 times or more, actually,
if he believed Hamas is a terror.
made it to Prime Minister's questions today. Prime Minister Rishish Sunak even said this while
criticising to Keir Stama. But he talks about apologising. He talks about the former member not being
a Labour MP now. Yes, he wasn't a Labour MP when he declined 15 different times to say that
Hamas was a terrorist organisation this week, which is shameful. But he was a Labour MP. Indeed,
the Honourable Gentleman served with him. He told the country he would make a great Prime Minister. At that point,
he described her man.
of friends. Does he want to apologise for that now?
Not a bad question. Well, let's just have a little replay of
Jeremy Corbyn's inability to answer two simple questions.
Are there a terror group?
Look, peers, can you say it?
Peers, can we have a discussion? Can you say it? Can we have a discussion?
Can you call them a terror group?
Can we have a discussion?
Is it possible to have a rational discussion with you? Are you prepared to call Hamas
a terror group? Is it possible to have a rational discussion with you?
Is it possible? Come on.
Answer that question. You can't you? You answer it.
No. It's my show. You answer my question.
Well, I'm going to be joined in a moment by the socialist commentator Owen Jones,
making his eagerly awaited debut on Pierce Morgan Unsensit.
But first of all, we go to Mark Regiv,
who's the senior advisor to Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
and a former ambassador to United Kingdom.
Mr. Reggie, thank you very much indeed for joining me.
I want to ask you specifically about the Al-Shefa Hospital
and what is actually happening there,
because the IDF have said they've gone in and they have proven
that this was being used as a command centre by Hamas.
Hamas say, no, they haven't.
This is actually what's been going on there as a war crime,
a deliberate attack on a hospital.
I've got to say that so far,
the evidence of the IDF has published
in terms of videos and pictures and so on,
I don't think it's overly compelling.
It doesn't look to me like a command center.
It looks to me like a hospital,
which has got uniforms and some military hardwomenes,
and some firearms and so on,
but it doesn't look to me like the central hub for Hamas in Gaza.
So patients will be providing more information as it becomes available.
Not all the information we have at the moment we can make public,
and I can understand while you want to see it.
But let's be clear.
It's not just the government of Israel that says Hamas has a command and control
and its military network underneath the hospital.
The US government said it today's,
ago, the Pentagon and the White House. And the truth is that the people who live there in the region,
in the city of Gaza, the Palestinians themselves there, it's the worst kept secret that Hamas
has, everybody knows that Hamas has a military structure under the hospital.
I mean, the reason it's so important is, as you know, Article 19 of a Geneva Convention,
which is what governs the way warfare is conducted, says the protection to which civilian hospitals
are entitled, shall not cease unless they are used to commit outside the humanitarian duties
acts harmful to the enemy. Protection may, however, cease only after due warnings being given,
naming in all appropriate cases, a reasonable time limit, and after such warning has remained
unheeded. So is your position that Israel has meticulously stuck by the letter of that
article of Geneva Convention in relation to the Al-Shefa Hospital?
100%. 100%. We've given adequate warning. We've given adequate warning. We've
We've urged civilians to leave the area.
We've done so, I think, three and a half weeks ago,
we started asking civilians to leave.
And the truth is, there's,
the overwhelming majority of civilians have left.
Some one million people have left that area of northern Gaza,
have heeded our advice, moved south out of harm's way,
because we didn't want to see them caught up in the crossfire
between the Israeli Defence Forces and the terrorists of Khamas.
What do you say to somebody like me
who has spent six weeks now debating this,
who believes October the 7th was one of the worst terror attacks of modern times.
Israel absolutely has not only a right to defend itself,
but a fundamental duty to its people to protect them,
particularly given the Hamas spokesman last week,
said, we're going to try and do this again and again and again.
That is an next essential threat to Israel.
I get that.
I believe Hamas has to be removed.
It cannot be removed peacefully.
It has to be removed militarily, in my estimation.
But the question then becomes,
how much of the civilian casualties that we're seeing
becomes too much.
Not just for Israel and any moral line that you may have here,
but for the wider international community,
which is already, as we're seeing in England today,
there's been a big vote in Parliament,
many people resigning from the Labour shadow bench
because of what's going on and wanting a ceasefire.
What do you say to people like me
that believe that you are right in principle,
but that the execution of what is happening in Gaza
is getting so bad that it borders unjustified.
So the first thing I would argue is it's crucial that we get rid of Hamas.
We saw the sort of violence Hamas is capable of inflicting upon innocent civilians.
You yourself just said that October 7th was horrific and brutal,
and it's clear that we cannot tolerate the continued existence of this terror enclave on us,
frontier. Israeli parents should not have to live in fear of terrorists crossing the border
in the middle of the night and murdering their children. So getting rid of Hamas is the aim.
Now, if it was possible to send a letter to the Secretary General of the United Nations and say,
please, demilitarize Gaza and get rid of Hamas, I'd like to do it that way to be easier for
everyone. But that's just not a realistic option. We have to send our troops in,
and we have to dismantle through a military conflict, the Hamas's military machine.
there's no alternative. If you have another alternative, I'm happy to hear it. Now, we've made
maximum efforts to reduce the numbers of civilian casualties. We really have tried. It's very
difficult because Kamaas has embedded itself, as we see with the hospital, inside civilian
structures. It uses Gaza's civilians as a human shield. Nonetheless, we've, because of our warnings,
some one million northern Gazans have fled the northern Gaza Strip, moved to the south,
which is safer than the north,
and we are still making a maximum effort today
to distinguish between those civilians who've remained,
who are not our target, and the Qomass terrorists.
But, Peers, you've been around.
You know that there hasn't been a war in modern history
where civilians haven't been caught up in crossfire.
No, no, that's true.
Here's what I would say to that.
I heard Jeremy Bowen, the BBC's Middle East editor today,
saying he hasn't seen devastation of the kind
that's happened in Gaza, which he's now witnessed,
since Aleppo after the Russians had been in.
And that was apocalyptic.
And I guess my question of you is, yeah,
you've persuaded a million Gazans to head south.
What are they coming back to?
Everything that they had is being disintegrated.
It's just being vaporized.
There's nothing left for these people to come back to, is that?
I agree, and it's clear that when this is over,
Gaza will have to become demilitarized, de-radicalized,
and rebuilt.
And ultimately, though I know it's very difficult for the civilian population of Gaza who are going through what is a traumatic experience, they're going through a war.
It's not easy. I understand that. But ultimately, when this is over, it will be better for them too.
What has 16 years of Hamas rule bought the people of Gaza? Bloodshed, suffering, impoverishment.
Hamas has nothing to show for its time in government except for those bad things.
The people of Gaza also deserve better than the current dictatorial terrorist regime that has ruled them.
I mean, a final question I would have for you is simply this,
is that Gaza has an extremely high percentage of population, our children.
These scenes of thousands of kids and babies being killed on an hourly basis are obviously horrific.
How do you know that what you're doing with this war is not just instinctive?
to me, creating, as many people fear, Elon Musk touched on this and others,
just radicalizing a whole new generation of people
who've seen their young brothers, sisters and so on,
killed in this offensive.
Do you not worry that you're just creating a whole new problem down the line
of a newly radicalized Gaza?
Could I offer, with your permission, a counter argument,
and that is exactly the opposite will happen,
that the people of Gaza will see that the power,
of violence and terrorism and brutality, that is Hamas,
will be totally discredited.
It'll be discredited.
They'll understand that the path of extremism
hurts them more than it hurts us,
that it's a dead end,
and that that will create space once we've defeated Hamas
and its whole ideology has been discredited.
That'll create space for more moderate
and pragmatic voices to fill the void,
and that's good for the future.
Mark Raghiv, I hope you're right.
Thank you for joining me. I appreciate it.
Thanks, ma'am.
having me. Well, Ancensored next tonight, socialist commentator, not spoken man of the left. Owen Jones
joins me live in the studio for his uncensored debut. He's been listening intently to that last
interview. I'm sure he's had some strong views. We'll find out after the break. Well, join me now as a
socialist commentator, Owen Jones. Owen, you'd be sitting there patiently. Your response to Mark Regiev,
a grotesque inversion of reality. I mean, the thing about Israeli spokesperson like that is if
I was told the sky was blue, I'd go out the window and check just to be sure.
What did he say this wrong?
For one thing, talking about the hospital being used as a terror base.
Now, let's just bear in mind that Israel's spokespeople
have a long-track record of lying through the back teeth.
When they shot in the head, for example, Shereen Abu Ackley,
they said for months and months and months,
it was Palestinian gunmen.
It wasn't. They shot her in the head.
James Miller, a brilliant British documentary filmmaker,
shot dead 2002 by the Israelis.
years later, of course, after they denied it.
You wouldn't believe Hamas and their version of events either, would you?
Well, that's why I depend on what aid agencies
are the United Nations are saying on the ground,
which is that collective punishment is being unleashed
against the Palestinian people.
I mean, look, we can see already the evidence they've been unveiling
for what they said was a terror hub,
including showing CDs and a computer.
What they've done to that hospital is, firstly,
because they cut off energy in a total siege,
which they justified by saying they were fighting human animals,
which should be considered genocide or rhetoric has been condemned as such.
Well, it should certainly be condemned,
and they should not have the ability, Israel, to cut off water and power and fuel.
That is collective punishment.
Can we agree?
Under Article 33, that's against the law.
So war crime.
Can we agree?
I think we should have some consensus.
I would argue you're heading towards collective punishment when you do that.
You're not heading towards collective punishment when you cut off energy of water to the inside of civilian population.
to play devil's advocate and to give their side of it, which I've heard repeatedly,
take the issue of fuel.
They want to try and get fuel in the Israelis, as they've said,
to the hospitals, to the humanitarian side of this,
but they know that Hamas are taking that fuel and using it for their military.
The hospital authorities who should listen to have rebutted those accusations.
What's happened here is babies right now are gasping for breath and suffocating.
We've had several nurses and patients.
since shot dead.
In fact, this whole hospital
has been described by medical staff
as a mortuary.
But you don't know.
Just quickly, when a hospital,
just quickly, when a hospital becomes a mass grave,
when dozens of decomposing bodies
have to be buried in a mass grave in a hospital,
were talking, what you said,
can I just quote something you said about Peter,
and I think this was very wise.
You said in March 22,
I'm seeing a genocide monster killing women and babies
in maternity hospitals as we sit back and let him do it.
Why was it so disgraceful?
But you were right.
You were right to be able to.
Here's the difference.
Why, when you see this hospital, is there not the same theory?
Let me explain.
Because the two are, in my opinion, morally very different.
In one case, Vladimir Putin's illegal invasion of Ukraine,
he was committing war crimes having illegally invaded the...
Wait a second, let me finish.
Having invaded a sovereign democratic country.
Here, it was Israel that was invaded by a vast number of terrorists
who murdered over 1,500...
innocent men, women, children.
They kidnapped 240 people, including babies, children, Holocaust,
so my point is, morally there is a massive difference.
Hold on.
Morally, it's a massive difference.
Now, the question of the hospital, wait a say.
The question of the hospitals is this to me.
They have so far produced some evidence of Hamas operating inside the hospital.
For me, so far as a journalist trying to be fair and impartial,
I don't think, as you've heard me say to Mark Regget,
I don't think I've seen enough evidence here,
which says to me, this was a sprawling command sensor.
But there is a moral difference between what Putin's doing in Ukraine
and what Israel's doing to defend itself against Hamas, isn't there?
Hold on.
Isn't there?
No, absolutely.
Sorry, this is the difference, okay, if you want to talk about that
or trying to separate them.
For a Ukrainian ordinary civilian being killed
or put an ordinary Palestinian child being killed,
both equally awful.
None of them did anything wrong.
We agree on that, don't we?
We absolutely agree on that.
Now, when you repeatedly denounce Putin for his genocidal behave in Ukraine,
do you stand by that?
Do you think that's a genocide?
Well, it doesn't matter what the basis for what the operation.
Of course it does.
No, no, no, no, no.
Pierce, in terms of what actually is happening, we can talk about the massacre,
the obscene massacre of a thousand...
What Israel's doing is not genocide.
Pierce, Pierce, Pierce, Piers.
Can't keep seeing no, no, no, no.
Let's talk about genocide.
Why is it?
Let me tell you the difference in genocide.
Let me put something to you, and you come back at me and tell me if I'm
I'm wrong. Hamas, from its charter onwards and from the spokesman said last week, is dedicated
to the eradication of Israel and killing as many Jews as it can possibly kill. That is the purest
definition of genocide intent that you will ever see, and they executed it on October the 7th as best
they could. Now, what Israel is doing in response, and they've been very firm about this, and the
international courts will rule that they...
These are very long questions. They're not. I'm making... I'm answering a
point, and I'm putting one to you, right? In my estimation, they are qualitatively different.
What Hamas is, publicly what it's doing is genocide. What Israel's doing is not genocide.
There's a difference between what Israel, you could say, both Israel and Hamas, have engaged
in genocidal and murderous rhetoric. And I'll give you an example. Yes, they are.
No, you can't. Benjamin Netanyahu. Is it uncensored or not?
Yes. Okay, you can say it. Let me quote, let me quote what the Israeli authorities have said.
Go on. Benjamin Netanyahu, when he quoted Amalek, the script.
What does Amalek say? He quotes Amalek when they attacks the Israelites.
And what God told the Israelites to do was to destroy every kill, every man, woman, child and livestock.
If I would put it to you, an Islamist leader was quoting a similarly genocidal passage from the Quran,
you would not, I would say, hesitate.
Can I respond?
No, no, we haven't.
No, but you've had a lot.
I'm going to respond just quickly.
Israeli officials said that Gaza will end up being a city of tents with no building standing.
that they are attacking for damage, not for accuracy.
The agricultural minister Avedicti, he said we are rolling out a new NACPA.
A NACPA is the mass expulsion, 700,000 Palestinians in 1948.
This is why hundreds of genocide scholars, people who are actually, unlike Q and I,
experts in the field of genocide studies, fear that a genocide is taking place.
So the difference between Israel and Hamas is Hamas does not have the capacity to wipe back Israel.
Israel is wiping Gaza.
The point. That's the point.
But that, no, you've actually exposed the weakness in your argument.
Israel does have the ability to kill everyone in Gaza tomorrow, and they're not doing it.
Oh.
In fact, well, hang on.
What they're doing, and it's indisputable, they are issuing a number of warnings repeatedly to people to go south.
Wait, and stay out of northern Gaza, right?
And then they're pulverizing it with airstrikes, and now they've gone in on the ground,
and they're waging battle with Hamas fighters, terrorists, right?
No, hang on.
So my point is this.
Israel could, if they wanted to, kill everyone in Gaza.
They decided not to do that.
Genocide is where you want to kill everyone.
Sorry, sorry.
Your definition of genocide, because in Ukraine,
Vladimir Putin hasn't killed every last Ukrainian.
That simply not happened.
No, no, no, he hasn't.
And nor has he stated his intention to do so,
and nor as brutal in Bar-Barrick.
Actually, sorry, Vladimir Putin, to be clear.
Absolutely, by illegally invading a sovereign country
and indiscriminately bombing anything in front of it.
Is it.
Is waging a summer of genocide?
Wow.
Indiscriminate bombing,
Gaza, more than two Hiroshima bombsworth
have been dropped on East London
in the space of five weeks.
Okay, let me ask you two quick.
No, no, no, no.
No, no.
You've said Ukraine.
No, I'm going to have to put this to you.
Okay.
15,000 people have now been killed now
by the Israelis estimate in Gaza.
One in every 200 people in Gaza
have now been killed.
If you were to adjust for population in Ukraine,
that would be 300,000 Ukrainian civilians.
300,000, there's been a terrible death toll.
It's estimated by the UN 10,000 civilians have been killed since February last year.
In the space of five weeks, a country with a much, much smaller population,
has had a much higher death toll, higher officially than that.
How can it be, how can it be that you call that genocide,
but when you have nearly half the entire civilian death toll of the Bosnian war
in a country which is twice the size and size of population,
why isn't that genocide this?
Well, I've just answered your question by saying,
wanted to commit genocide, they would simply...
So would Russia.
They would nuke Ukraine.
Russia wants to take over Ukraine.
Yes.
And they want to take over Gaza.
And it will kill any number of Ukrainians, men, women and children in that process.
The death rate is...
The death rate in Gaza is much higher.
The only reason it hasn't is that actually Ukraine has a large military supported by countries
like the United States and is putting up one hell of a fight.
Russia has nuclear weapons.
Okay.
And by the way, Ukraine gave theirs up.
Russia has an armed...
Let me ask you...
No, no, no, you've got to accept this.
Hang on, no, no.
I've got to accept it anyway.
A far lower death rate in Ukraine,
as it is.
I've explained why.
I've explained why.
You haven't explained why.
Yes, I have explained again.
Israel have made it clear.
You didn't hear me.
Israel have made it clear
that they intend to occupy Gaza permanently.
Yeah, which they should not be allowed to do.
We can agree on that.
What did the Israeli ministry leaked intelligence...
What do the intelligence...
Sorry, my interview of you.
I know, but you...
Not your interview of me.
Well, I think you did answer to be held to account on that.
I'll answer you. Let me answer you.
Well, let me ask you two questions, which I asked Jeremy Corby.
Sure. Let's get me. He's off the table. Do you believe Hamas is a terror group?
Yes. If you engage in violence against civilian population, that terrorism.
Wait, don't do supplementaries. Let me just ask you this. Second question, which I asked him when she couldn't answer.
Should Hamas remain in power?
If I could wave a magic wand, then no, obviously there'd been independent. No, let me finish.
There'd been independent Palestine, free of Israeli rule with a secular democratic movement in power.
I agree with you.
When you courageously stood against the Iraq war,
and you were courageous for doing so.
So what was the argument put against you?
That you wanted to keep Saddam Hussein in power,
even though he'd gassed his own people,
the Kurds and committed genocide, many would argue,
that he had invaded his neighbour
and that he had massacred the Shia when they rose up in 1991.
Now, your argument against that
was that what could happen next would be far, far worse.
And you were right.
That wasn't my argument.
Well, that is the argument.
Did you want to keep to that I'm Hussein in power?
Don't tell me what my argument was.
I know what it was.
I was edited to the paper that waged the campaign.
Did he want to say to remain a power?
I did not believe that they had produced any evidence
that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.
I thought he had nothing to do with 9-11.
Therefore, we were waging a completely irrelevant war,
which I thought would stir up absolute hell in the Middle East.
And you know what? I was right.
And actually, most of the architects of that war now concede they were wrong.
It was a horror story from start to finish.
But what it did do is spark the rise of ISIS.
And what the world did with ISIS would say,
this crosses a moral line, we have to get rid of them.
And we went after ISIS in places like Iraq and Syria and other countries.
And in bombing the head out of ISIS, a lot of civilians got killed.
You just skipped a lot of very important history there.
Wait a minute.
No, no, that's not what happened.
Well, there is what happened.
No, that's not what happened.
One of the consequences of the Iraq war was that ISIS became a very powerful,
for a short period of time, global terror force committing atrocity.
But in just correct your version of history.
But in wiping out ISIS, pretty, pretty much.
effectively, we also killed
a lot of civilians. No, what
actually happened? What's the moral difference between that
and what Israel's doing in Gaza?
You just revised history.
We were told that al-Qaeda
was perhaps in League with Sudan-I saying
that was one of the justifications of invading.
What actually happened after the invasion
was that it became a playground
for Al-Qaeda, who you've missed out of notice.
No, no, no. And what happened...
We know about Al-Qaeda. I'm talking about ISIS.
What happened, for example, is
Fallujah, the city of Flugia in Iraq.
the Americans went in and they massacred people protest against their rule
and many of those sunny populations ended up in driven into the arms of al-Qaeda.
A brutal counter-insurgency program then resulted in resulting in mass slaughter
of innocent sunny civilians and from that fury and anger something even worse than al-Qaeda emerged.
Just as...
ISIS.
Yes.
So you agree with that was...
No, I'm saying that's exactly what we're saying today in Garland.
I didn't give every detail of the journey.
No, no, no.
You've misunderstood.
You've misunderstood.
They engage in a brutal counterinsurgency.
No, I know the story.
Offensive against al-Qaeda, and that caused something worse to emerge.
Just as in Afghanistan, just as in as Afghanistan, we had two decades of occupation.
Let me, listen, we're running outside.
Two decades of occupation, and the Taliban emerged stronger than ever.
The same applies to both what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It seems to me...
Because if you brutalize a population, you will turn them into terrorists.
Stop talking.
Or extremists.
You make a lot of good points.
I agree with a lot of things you say, right?
Always have done, actually.
I find the way you say them, as you do move me, quite annoying.
But that's fine.
You're allowed to, and we're uncensored.
Come back.
I want to end, if I can, with some kind of, look, we've agreed Hamas is a terror group.
We've agreed they have to go.
How do we actually get peace here?
Well, firstly, we have to deal with the underlying causes
of what's driven the Palestinian people in the case of Gaza,
in the hands of Hamas, which is, starting in 1948,
the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian population in the Nakhua,
It was 700,000 driven from their homes, murderously, I might add.
And hundreds of thousands of Jews were driven from their homes before that.
In Palestine.
Well, they were driven away from Arab countries.
Hold on.
Hold on. Dispoll.
They were driven away from Arab countries.
Yeah, from Palestine.
Jonathan Friedler wrote a very good piece about this thing.
You know what?
If you go out of history, there's just cause on both sides.
The Palestinians were driven from their home, 700,000 of them.
And then we had the illegal settlements of colonisation,
including in the West Bank, we're completely unremarked.
And I've already condemned the...
There is mass terror.
Expanding.
Right.
Illegal settlements.
And as well as Amnese International,
as Human Rights Watch,
and Betzelem describe it,
the Israeli human rights organization,
a system of apartheid.
But if you keep brutalizing
the Palestinian people,
ridding them of their freedom,
and you end up now in Gaza
with parents picking up the burn dismembered remnants of their children.
There will never be picked.
I agree.
What I would say to that is
on the Arab side,
they have had multiple opportunities
to do a peace.
still, not least in 2000 with Arafat.
And he walked away.
Look, what happened there? Go on.
What were the concessions?
Well, no.
The truth is, the truth is Bill Clinton, who helped for, wait a minute, who helped forge peace
in Norman Ireland, brilliantly with Tony Blair and with the others involved there, that actually
Arafat, they had peace in their grasp.
And as Bill Clinton said to him, I'm going to end up being a failure because of you and looking
away.
No, that's, yeah.
And that revision of history, again, not just from you on this program, but by Bill Clinton,
because they demanded, for example,
land swaps for a ratio,
90 to 1 in the favour of Israel.
Come back again.
I love to.
No, seriously, this conflict's not going away.
It's going to continue raging the war.
I think you're an important voice in this.
We should keep talking about it.
Okay, we'll chat.
Good to see you.
See here.
Unsensor next tonight,
conservative activist Charlie Kirk joins me live
for his take on what we've just been discussing
and on the state of universities.
How do they got so nuts?
I'll ask Charlie after the break.
Welcome back to Unsensit.
So on another remarkable debate between two influential characters with vehemently opposing viewpoints,
Rabbi Smooley and Muhammad Hijab.
Well, here's a preview discussing a two-state solution.
If two-state solution is a Hamas state wanting to eviscerate Israel?
He doesn't believe in it.
But he doesn't believe in a two-state solution.
He believes in a final solution.
No, no, no, no.
You don't believe in a final solution.
The way you speak about Jews from you believe in those final solution, and it's scary.
I like them.
I think it's fair to say is,
probably the most ferocious debate we've ever had on Piers Morgan Unsensitive,
and that will be the show tomorrow night for the hour. It's the kind of debate we need to be having,
but you have to see how close we get to any kind of peace or agreement.
Well, for now, conservative commentator Charlie Kurt says universities have become
islands of totalitarianism in his new book. It's called Bicolli's scam,
how America's universities are bankrupting and brainwashing away the future of America's youth.
And Charlie Kurt joins me. Now, Charlie, good to see you.
This Israel-Palestine war and the debate that's raging around it,
such passionate views on both sides,
have we lost the ability to have civilized debate?
Probably.
I mean, on these campuses, it doesn't give you a lot of hope.
I'll tell you, it was just at UCLA last week,
and many of the Palestinian forces,
they have signs that say from the river to the sea,
Palestine will be free,
which is basically coded language for the abolition of the state of Israel.
But look, part of what I, why I wrote the book,
the college scam is that we are seeing the erosion of Western values of free speech and dialogue
and hearing the other side. You know, I have visited over 150 campuses in the last five years.
I'm not afraid of different ideas and to invite that kind of dialogue and discourse.
I think this Israel-Palestine issue is just the latest example in a variety of different
ideas and topics where we see the most radical and fringe ideologies come out of these
university campuses. I mean, at Harvard University, which is considered to be the best school in America,
31 student organizations right after the terrible massacre
against the Jewish people on Yom Kippur
came out in favor of the Hamas activity.
In fact, some professors even said it was justified,
and another Ivy League professor said that it was a wonderful day
and celebrated it.
So some of the most vile and disgusting ideas
that we've seen come to the surface in the last month
have a point of origination on college campuses,
which is why I wrote the book, The College Scam.
And what's so extraordinary about that
is the very same people who've been behaving in this,
effectively supporting a terror group have gone out of their way to de-platform and shame and
cancel anyone who, mainly on the right, it has to be on the conservative side, who've deviated
from their worldview. So free speech to them seems a very complex issue.
No, that's right. And look, I mean, we have to be disciplined in how we advocate for dialogue
and free speech. And when I go to these college campuses, it's come very clear. And you see this now
manifesting in some of the larger censorship regime that is taking over the West, that if a young
student finds disagreement with a conservative or somebody on the right, they don't just find the
ideas objectionable. Some, in fact, a majority by recent Pew Poll, want to use force to try to
silence and stifle and even censor those different ideas. Yeah, which is the complete antithesis of
what going to university should be about. I mean, Harvard, that you referenced earlier, just came bottom
on a study of free speech at American University, bottom,
almost registered zero, I think, or below zero.
In other words, it's the complete opposite of a home of free speech,
and that you would hope and expect that someone like Harvard
would be a place for all opinions to be discussed and debated and challenged,
but it appears to be the complete opposite,
unless you're out there supporting Hamas.
Yes, that's right.
Well, it's been kind of ironic, Pierce,
which for the last decade I've been arguing for free speech,
arguing that conservatives should have a voice on campus,
and it's met with at best groans or opposition.
And now students for justice of Palestine
and the pro-Hamas groups are the one saying that
we want to have full free speech,
we want to have rights to speak publicly,
when I have our guests on campus,
which again, I'm a free speech, guys, so have at it.
But the administration has been very quick
to pander every possible demand
of the most radical groups possible on campus
when we conservatives have been asking
for equal and fair treatment over the last
10 years. And it's worse than even the free speech debate, Pierce, it's that these Jew
hatred ideas find a philosophical and intellectual foundation at so many of these institutions.
I also think if you look at things like TikTok, for example, which obviously originates from China,
which may have all sorts of vested interests, and kids, I think under 21, it's their main news source.
And if you ask young people of their view of this war, for example,
they skew massively pro-Palestinian
because they've been bombarded all day long
with very short, often woefully ill-informed dates on the war on TikTok.
And that's their only reference point.
No, that's exactly right.
And I would say that your dialogue recently with Douglas Murray
was one of the most powerful that I've heard recently.
And if every young person could hear the conversation you had with Douglas Murray,
I think they would have a different opinion.
But they look at almost everything through oppressor, oppressed dynamics,
and that is the kind of framing that is unfortunately pushed forward at many of these universities.
Yeah, in a way, what we've tried to do on this show since the war started is give a platform to both sides,
if at all sides.
There are people with other views, too, not just Douglas, but also people on the pro-Palestinian side and stuff.
And it's important to have that.
But I've got an interview tomorrow and I, was a debate, really, between two people, Rabbi Shmouli and Muhammad Hijab.
and it just descended into one of the most ridiculous kind of punch-ups I've ever been involved with.
And that's the sadness of this.
Because you don't get anywhere, really, when you're just trying to kill each other, metaphorically or verbally.
I don't think you could hear me there, Charlie.
All right.
Don't worry.
We've run out of time.
I've heard a lot of voices in my ear, but it's been great to be out of years.
The good news is you and I have just had a very civilized conversation, and I hope we can have it again.
Charlie Kurt, thank you very much indeed for joining me.
I appreciate it.
That's it for us tonight.
Whatever you're up to.
Keep it uncensored.
Good night.
