Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Toxic Masculinity, US City Compensation and 'Woke' AI App
Episode Date: February 8, 2023On this episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers delves into the toxic masculinity crisis, as teachers look to combat the influence of the likes of Andrew Tate. Also Piers looks into the US city that... is giving payouts in compensation to every black resident due to historic harm. Piers debates whether the new AI app taking the world by storm is WOKE! Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the app. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Tonight on Pierce Morgan Uncensored,
schools sign up teachers for sold-out courses
on tackling influences like Andrew Tate.
But what's behind the masculinity crisis
that makes them so popular in the first place?
We'll debate.
A major US city could pay millions of dollars
to every black resident as compensation
for historic harm.
Is this racial justice or racial division?
Thus, the artificial intelligence app
that's so clever it can pass exams
and even tweet like me.
But is it woke?
Live from London.
This is Pearz Morgan Unsensored.
Good evening from London. Welcome to Pearz Morgan Unsensored.
Men are under the microscope again and not for the right reasons again.
A Channel 4 documentary consent has ignited debate about rape culture among teenagers.
British schools are signing up their teachers for courses on how to mitigate the bad influence of people like Andrew Tate,
if some teachers blame for misogyny in schools.
Rapist police officer David Carrick was jailed today for a minimum of 30 years for monstrous crimes against 12 women.
His case made me sick to my stomach, but let's be very clear.
Every decent man on the planet of whom that's the vast majority would agree with that statement.
Evil men are the exception, not the rule.
The Me Too movement exposed the predatory behaviour of many powerful men,
and good on it for doing so.
But since it's become fashionable to condemn all male traits as toxic masculinity.
But it's the concept itself as toxic for both men and women, isn't it?
It teaches girls to fear all men.
It teaches them that they live in a human.
dangerous rape culture, whether or most wicked and extreme male violence.
It's not exceptional but expected.
Worst of all, it browbeats young men into feeling they should apologize just for who they are.
It makes them feel like they're born with some kind of poisonous DNA that makes them liable to turn into monsters that they see on the news.
Men are under constant assault, it feels, these days, and the attacks range from a sinister to the downright stupid.
maternal love is the love that's going to change the future of mankind so we'd like you to
like to say people kind not necessarily mankind because it's more inclusive there we go exactly
yes thank you we can all learn from each other oh shut up does Justin Trudeau realize he's a
human or that he might be married to a woman does he literally want to end mankind
Imagine that. Imagine the scene up on the moon.
One small step for person.
One giant leap for personhood.
If Trudeau does, he's not alone.
Princeton University literally banned the word man altogether.
Gillette briefly ditched its best a man can get branding
for a simpering soft-centered apology for all things masculine.
Toxic masculinity has been blamed for everything
from mass shootings to the financial crisis.
And it might be tempting to write off this stuff as woke nonsense,
but the impact of his incessant man bashing on young men's deadly series.
Nobody put it better than the psychologist, Dr. Jordan Peterson, on this show.
As I've been speaking to disaffected young men,
you know, what a terrible thing to do that is.
I thought the marginalized were supposed to have a voice.
It's making emotional talk about that.
Well, God, you know.
It's very difficult to understand how demoralized people are.
And certainly many young men are in that category.
And you get these casual insults, these in cells.
What do they mean?
It's like, well, these men, they don't know how to make themselves attractive to women
who are very picky and good for them.
Women, like, be picky.
That's your gift, man.
Demand high standards from your men.
Fair enough.
But all these men who are alienated, it's like they're lonesome and they don't know what to do.
And everyone piles abuse on them.
I think many young men do feel marginalized.
They do feel alienated.
They do feel they're under attack.
That's why Jordan Peterson, who offers them concrete solutions,
for improving their lives,
as such a massive following of mostly young men.
Likewise, Andrew Tate, his videos have been viewed literally billions of times.
Tate now faces serious allegations of rape and human trafficking in Romania.
I'll make absolutely zero apology for him if this turns out to be guilty.
But there's a legal process to be respected,
and then the rush to condemn him and Jordan Peter.
and all like them who young men have taken the following,
we've forgotten to take a long, hard look at why they become popular in the first place.
And again, let me need to make it clear.
This is not to defend the likes of this disgusting police rapist.
No decent man would defend somebody like that.
But let's not tar every man with that brush.
Well, joining me in the studio is broadcaster Jenny Clememan.
And in New York, the New York Post columnist, Ricky Schlock, welcome to both of you.
So, Jenny Simon, look, Cleman,
There's this, I don't know, this growing sense amongst teenage boys, young men that I've picked up on,
which is why I think they gravitate to people like Andrew Tate and Jordan, in big numbers.
And Tate and Peterson are very different people.
Tate far more controversial in my view about the influence he has, and I've taken to task on it.
But there's no doubt a lot of young men do feel increasingly marginalized,
increasingly bemused about how they should behave, increasingly underwhelmed, increasingly underwent,
attack, and that's not
by any means to mitigate
the actual attacks going on against women.
Of course, this is disgusting and deplorable.
But what do you make of this
idea that all masculine
traits, really, are sort of being
wrapped up into toxicity?
I don't think all masculine
traits are being wrapped up in toxicity.
I do think there is such a thing as
toxic masculinity. We're talking on a day
when the head teacher of Epson
College was killed.
We've been told by her husband. Well, we don't know the
We don't know that that's what the police say.
It's not made presumptions.
But there are many crimes.
And David Paddock, the police officer, we can make a presumption.
He's being convicted.
I think, look, due process matters.
We don't know what happened.
But there are certain crimes that...
Stick to what we know about, right?
There are certain crimes that women don't commit.
And there is something that as a culture, men and women, we need to look at that why, for example, things like mass shootings are only committed by men.
I do think there is a problem...
Just for the record, by the way, I've done two series of interviewing very dangerous women called...
dangerous women called killer women in American prisons.
Some of whom had done unspeakable things.
But this idea that only men kill people is ridiculous.
I didn't say that.
And also, the biggest victims of male violence are men.
Yes, of course.
I didn't say only men kill people.
I said there are a certain crime.
There's a certain phenomenon.
There's quite a quaint thing that women are never violent, which is preposterous.
But that's not what I was saying.
I was talking about mass shootings and things like Carrick.
There aren't mass rapists who are women, for example.
So there is a phenomenon that needs to be looked at by men.
and women, members of this society in which we are in,
to work out what's going on.
I do think that if you're a young man,
we're living in a society where people look for labels
of maybe victimhood that they can identify with.
And if you are a young, particularly white man,
there is nowhere to say, oh, I'm a victim, give me sympathy.
You can feel very disaffected, not included in the culture.
And particularly those with low self-esteem
will turn to people like Andrew Tate,
who promised them answers of how to get women
and how to get respect.
They're exploiting men like that, boys like that.
All right, Ricky Schlock,
I've got a lot of sympathy for young men these days.
I've got three sons and their 20s.
I'm not talking directly about them.
But just having met a lot of their friends
and a lot of people in that age group,
it's a tricky time to be a young male.
Very, very different to when I was a teenager, for example,
when there was no social media,
there was no trial by social media.
None of that stuff was going.
And I interviewed a young man only several weeks ago
who'd been falsely.
accused by a complete fantasist of being a rapist, has his life almost completely ruined,
nearly committed suicide. So I think amid all the genuine examples of men behaving in a toxic
and horrible and dangerous and sometimes murderous manner, a lot of other men and young men in
particular are getting swept up in this idea that just to display masculine traits is in itself
toxic. And I think that is ridiculous. Yeah, I mean, it's a terrible way to grow up. You know,
I'm a member of Gen Z and I was brought up in the girl power culture, but at the same time,
my male counterparts are being castigated for being men, for being toxic just inherently.
And I think painting with that sort of broad brush certainly disaffects people and pushes them
straight into the arms of influencers who might say, like, total pendulum swing, embrace your
masculinity and be toxic and do actually live up to the toxic masculinity sort of standard.
But I think it's completely counterintuitive because we don't talk about toxic femininity.
and, you know, gossiping and backstabbing,
because those are broad generalities,
and we're painting with a broad brush,
and we rightfully recoil at the fact
that we shouldn't say that all women are like that,
and we should do the same with men.
And certainly I've seen that young men, my age,
are afraid of interacting with women often.
They're concerned about what consent means today,
and sometimes they face the kangaroo courts of school administrators
who are the arbiters of justice
and in allegations, and he said,
she said, sort of believe all women,
cases. And so I think it's a hard time to come up. And I certainly am very sympathetic to my
male counterparts in my generation. Right. I mean, Jenny Clemen, I mean, I think it's a good
point there that you don't read much about toxic femininity. And yet I would argue that some of the more
radical people on the side of radical feminism with their man-hating kind of permanent spewing agenda,
they're part of the problem as well. We don't hear about toxic femininity because it's not called
toxic femininity, but it's called lots of
other things, and I think women have to deal
with stereotypes of the way that women
are. I mean, only last week I was on this program
defending the right of women to wear whatever they want
in gyms. I think women get it
all the time and get accused
of all sorts of things all the time. We just don't call it.
It's interesting, your takeaway from that
debate you're talking about was it was an
argument about women's right to wear what they're like.
That wasn't the debate. The debate
was whether it was right for women to be taking
cameras into gyms now,
to be videoing men who
may dare to look in their direction and then post it on social media to shame them.
Yes.
Which actually is an exact example, I think, in most cases, of the problem that we're talking about.
What's interesting is that argument turned into women shouldn't be wearing provocative clothing.
Well, I didn't say that.
I know, but it's something that the Taliban would say.
Do you know what I mean?
It's this kind of argument.
I think women and men both face really difficult times at the moment.
I think men have very few positive role models, young men.
And so, yes, I think there are extremes on either side.
Men who are boys were lost.
Jordan Peterson, I think, is a good role model for men.
I think when I listen to him, I think he makes a lot of sense.
He's a very smart guy.
He's really thoughtful about it all.
Andrew Tate is a totally different animal in the sense.
I've interviewed him several times now.
Obviously, he's very smart in a sort of streetwise way.
It may turn out he's a criminal.
And if he is, I'll be the first to castigate him
and we'll judge him on the result of this legal process.
But there's no doubt that when I listen to him,
about 60, 70% of the stuff he was saying,
actually I felt he was right about.
There's no doubt to me about that.
It's the other 30% is the problem
and thus putting aside whatever crimes you may have committed.
But in terms of the rhetoric which has inspired young men,
it wasn't all bad by any means.
In a way, he's sort of saying,
stand up for yourselves and don't allow yourselves to be browbeaten
into believing that everything that's male is toxic.
I think both he and Jordan Peterson,
they share this advice.
of, you know, have self-respect, do some exercise, make your own bed.
And that's good advice to anyone, male or female.
The problem is the other 30%, which is, you know,
you should know where your woman is at all time.
Yeah, the misogyny, I agree.
It's unacceptable, yeah.
I mean, Rookie, where do we go with this?
Because it seemed to me the Me Too Times Up movements
did a lot of extremely important things
and nailed a lot of very bad people.
No one's going to sit here and defend people like Harvey Weinstein
who were caught up in that scandal.
And I don't know any man that would.
But the pendulum in many people's eyes did go too far.
And it meant that any man basically is now potentially at risk from somebody saying an allegation.
Due process is completely thrown out the window.
And before they know, their lives are completely ruined.
Now, you know, I'm not talking about a specific example, but we know it's been going on.
Where should that pendulum be going forward?
Yeah, I mean, I think that the Me Too movement obviously corrected on historical wrongs that were done to women in the
workplace, certainly. I think we did not foresee how much that would impact young men who grew up
in the context of believe all women, which just fundamentally undermines due process and presumption
of innocence in a way that I can't even imagine being a young man growing up today. But I also
would say, I don't think that it's benefited me as a woman in the workplace today where it stood
and how far the pendulum has swung. Because statistics show a Pew Research Survey recently found that
60% of male managers are afraid to be on one-on-one meetings with women, are afraid to take on mentorship roles.
And unfortunately, because the pendulum went as far as it did, we've created this situation where women are seen as liabilities in the workplace, which is certainly not what feminists for decades fought for.
They fought for us to be seen as equals.
And so I think that there's a fundamental disconnect between the Me Too movement and its original purpose and how it's played out for members of Gen Z, both girls and girls.
boys. Yeah, I think that's perfectly reasonable.
Jenny, final word. Well, I think
that it's not, there's never really been
believe all women, it's been believable
victims, as we know from Nick and the
whole Fargo
over these sexual abuse allegations.
I think it is a good thing if
we are all encouraged to behave
well and respectfully to each other.
Yeah, and I think due process matters.
And I think whether you're Andrew
Tate or somebody else,
you should be entitled to due process
and see where it takes us. Facts are
important. Thank you very much to my panel, to Ricky and to Jenny. I appreciate it.
Coming next to tonight, a BBC reporter says she will compensate the descendants of slaves owned by her family.
That fiery debate about reparations next.
Well, she's the older woman who took Prince Harry's virginity in a field behind a pub.
Sasha Walpole kept Harry's secret for 21 years. But then Harry told his truth in his explosive
memoir, and that included her. So now it's Sasha's turn to tell her
Triff.
A global TV exclusive,
she'll join me on Piers Morgan Unsensored,
and I guarantee the interview will last a little longer
than Harry did.
Well, that interview airs on Thursday,
tonight on Pierce Morgan Uncensored,
I did it this afternoon, I've got to say,
it was a fantastically interesting,
intriguing, entertaining,
a thought-provoking interview
with somebody who, of course,
unfortunately, had her privacy invaded by Prince Harry.
Oh, well, there you.
Ironies clearly never done.
Well, BBC reporter Laura Trevelyan, whose ancestors kept slaves in Grenada, says her family hopes to set an example by handing over £100,000 in reparations to their descendants.
Meanwhile, in San Francisco, a panel studying reparations, has proposed a $5 million payment to every black resident of the city to compensate them for historic harm.
Well, that proposal is being discussed publicly today.
Is this a sensible way of writing historic evils, or is it actually just sowing more divisible?
Join me in the studios, Talk TV contributor Esther Crack,
who wrote a very striking article for the Daily Mail about this today,
alongside columnist and author of Matthew Said
and talk TV contributor, Paula Rohn.
Adrian, welcome to all of you.
Esther, I loved your piece today.
Thank you.
Because to me, this is all a bit ridiculous.
The idea that somehow it's going to make any tangible difference
to start doshing out hundreds of thousands, millions of pounds,
dollars around the world to people
who had descendants in people.
involved in slavery, I think it's woke virtue-sickling gone nuts.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's an obsession with white liberals to publicly spit-shine their halos.
But the irony is, you know, the money that her family received in conversation of getting rid of their slaves was about, in today's money, 3 million pounds.
So actually, 100,000 pounds is not really scratch. It's not even 10% of what they received. That's the first point.
And also, once you start going down that route, there's so many ways you can sort of skin this cat.
So if you have a mixed-race person with a black father who was,
descendants of slaves and a white mother who is
descendants of slavers, who pays reparations? Does that mixed-race person have to pay?
I mean, there's so many ways to...
And in the case of that BBC journalist, her family
were also responsible for pretty ugly behaviour in Ireland.
Yes, exactly. What happens there?
Well, there's been... She said nothing about that.
Right, and I saw people on Twitter who are Jewish,
say, well, what happens to us then?
Yeah. Right? So, in other words, once you start the concept,
I'll bring in Matthew, once you start this concept of reparations for historic ills,
where does it end and who do you include and who do you leave out?
I think that's the problem.
I have no problem with an individual deciding they want to give their money
to reparations or any other charitable cause of their wish.
The problem comes when the state decides to use public money.
That will be hugely divisive.
It may sound good to some people, particularly on the left, on the progressive left.
Even when it was state condoned discrimination?
Even then.
Because that's what we're talking about.
But let me talk about state.
But for the fact for the one of good.
For the following reason, once you start specifying, as you rightly pointed out, once you start specifying the criteria under which the money is given out, it will create huge controversy and division.
And of course, it raises other questions.
In the same way that racism has.
Well, I speak as somebody who's mixed race. My father was born in India. My mother is Welsh.
The question I've got for you, you're in favour of reparations, is as a country that was colonised, should I, as an ancestor of somebody?
Will you ask the question?
We'll discuss it now.
In your analysis, should I be the beneficiary of reparations as somebody whose father grew up in the British Empire?
Right.
I don't know, because I haven't been able to analyse your specific scenario.
So I couldn't possibly answer that question now.
But what I can add to this discussion...
I can add to this discussion.
Be specific, then.
So my father was born in Hyderabad, the south of India.
He moved to Pakistan after partition.
Property was effectively confiscated
and then came to Britain to study law.
I'm his son. I may have been wealthier had that not happened.
I can give you more details.
Do you not think that the opportunity should be there
for that land to be returned to your family?
In the same way that we had the Marshall Plan.
Same way that we've had the Marshall Plan
in the same way that the slave owners
were paid for the loss of their slaves.
People that were like to turn to the normal conquest.
The British government has only just finished
paying that debt off in 2015.
In the same way that the American government
took responsibility and made reparations
to the Native Americans.
How is it going to help?
Japanese who were in turn during World War II.
But you can say, okay, okay,
but this is what we're talking about.
There are very poignant
points of where reparations was right
and which you wouldn't deny we're right.
How can it be right for a place like San Francisco?
Francisco to even have the concept of giving millions out to all the residents who happen to be black.
How can that make any difference?
How can that improve racial equality in that city?
It can't.
It can only have the opposite effect.
It can only bring in deep resentment.
If I answer the question, what they're doing is they're discussing it in the same way that we are now.
What they are doing is they are looking at the stats.
And in America, what we understand is that,
white people are 10 times more socioeconomically in a positive position than those of color.
They know that.
And so what they're doing is they're looking at the situation and they're saying,
how can we make the playing field?
Which color are you referring to by the way?
How can we make the playing field?
How we make the playing field?
She's asking you a question.
So I understood that they were talking about black people.
Oh, so which black?
Black Nigerians who are white Americans or black Americans?
No, but they're talking about.
specific members of their community.
Because I could talk about, I'm sorry, I could talk about black Americans that are of Nigerian and Ghanaian descent who actually outerun
white Americans. My family would be getting reparations under the scheme. We're talking about the general.
We're talking about the general here, aren't we? That's what we're talking about the general. I don't think I would have a claim,
sadly. I should be empowered the government. But there are a number of people who do. Explain to me why the government should be empowered to
to take this on a case-by-case basis
and skin this cat in as many ways as they want
and decide who should be the beneficiary of this?
Why do they have the right to do that?
It will tear Western societies apart.
We need to, if I may just finish, the one,
if we need to get to a situation
which Martin Luther King
articulated brilliantly in the mid-60s
where people are judged on the content of their character
rather than the pigmentation of their skin.
It isn't a level playing field.
That is an ideal that doesn't exist.
I'll ask for crying to it.
Well, as you rightly pointed out, white working class people in this country are some of the poorest demographics.
How are they going to feel about richer descendants of black Africans getting reparation?
But also, it's absolutely toxic.
I mean, you do you notice that I haven't had the opportunity in the same way that the others have to get to fully respond?
I have a wider point generally, which is about this sort of constant drumbeat now to make people atone for the sins of centuries ago.
I think it is completely regressive to do this.
We've surely got to move in the way society has moved.
There isn't slavery, anything like the way there was hundreds of years ago.
And how has society moved in terms of that level playing field?
How is it right that the slave owner receives reparation, but the slaves don't.
And we remember, Esther, allow me to finish,
because people can read your article.
But how do we rectify that when...
They're not alive.
The British government only finished paying that in 2015.
Why is nobody uncomfortable about that?
What right do you have?
About the Marshall Plan?
Nobody's uncomfortable about that.
You're wealthy, your well-educated wealthy lawyer.
I'm lucky, absolutely.
And you're far lucky than anyone that's going to explore.
That's what Richie soon acts.
He's fortunately super rich.
I'm not super rich, but I am fortunate.
But you're very fortunate.
And you're certainly more fortunate than I did growing up.
How, what do you...
Sorry, Esther, what are you talking about?
Esther, what do you know about my life?
Don't talk about each other.
What right do you have?
What right do you have as a privileged, as a privileged, wealthy, well-educated woman?
What right do you have for reparations for something that you never experienced?
I can't even claim that.
No one can claim that.
But Esther, I have just said to you, I don't think I would have a claim.
And there are many people who wouldn't have a claim.
What about...
What about...
That doesn't mean, because I don't have an opportunity that I shouldn't
stop others from having an opportunity.
You wouldn't have said that to a Native American person.
May I ask? What about...
Paula? Yes, I would. Yes, I would.
You wouldn't have said that to a Japanese.
What about black Americans who are the descendants of slaves who are now billionaires?
What about them?
Well, would they be eligible for your reparations?
It's not my reparations.
Well, your argument, let me rephrasing, your argument in favour of them.
It's my conversation about people having the opportunity to.
But do you think they should get it?
They probably not.
And who should pay it?
So it would be means tested?
It could possibly be absolutely.
And who should pay it?
There are options.
And it's about that discussion
and that's exactly what's happening
at the moment.
There's a discussion that's ongoing
about how it's going to happen
and how it would work.
In the same way
that you would have a discussion
about positive discrimination.
In the same way you would have a discussion
about leveling the playing field.
Some stage,
left a discussion where someone can actually
discuss something with you,
which involves you stopping talking for a second.
I have a strong view about this
that none of it seems right to me,
that making people pay today for the sins of centuries ago,
I think is completely ridiculous.
And I think what kind of society, particularly the cost of living crisis,
coming out of a pandemic,
suddenly is dishing out billions in reparations to people
who had no personal experience on it.
The British government had to take a loan out to pay the slave owners.
Do we get that money back?
Because we...
Why don't you...
Do the government get that money back?
What do you think Martin Luther King would say?
Do the government...
I mean, when I ask the question, no one wants to answer.
Well, actually, I'm asking you a question.
The slave owners were paid for the loss of their slaves.
That was in 1837.
And the government only finished paying it off in 2015.
Should the British government get that money back?
Look, I have a different question for you.
She's this. She's this.
What would Martin Luther King say if he was still with us about this concept?
I don't know.
He would think it's ridiculous.
What do you think he would say?
He was a man who wanted unity.
He wanted unity.
And this would be the most divisive.
I'm not suggesting that I don't want unity.
I'm not suggesting that it's divisive,
I'm suggesting that we talk about the options available.
The Nation of Islam, run by Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm X,
Muhammad Ali.
They wanted a separate homeland for black Americans
within the borders of the United States.
They were completely against the integrationist agenda
of Martin Luther King.
And had they won that argument,
it would have been the most retrograde step for America and the West.
This is going down precisely the same trajectory.
It is going to start.
racial division, it will destroy the fabric of the United States. We've got to get passes.
And in the meantime, those who haven't been able to overcome, those who have been held back,
you are saying to them, quiet. No, I'm saying let's create a fairer society.
Okay, so how do we do that, Matthew?
Well, that is what the... How do we create a fairer society?
That is what politics is all about. Make an argument for Parliament.
That's tomorrow night's show.
How do you make society a fairer place?
really interesting debate. Honestly, it is. It's a very good debate and I'm not sure what the
answer is. I just don't think the answer is shelling out billions to people who had no personal
experience of the slavery because I don't see how that helps anything, frankly. And I think the
point is that that personal experience lives on. I think for those who argue about reparation,
the difficulty lives on. I've given you the final word because that's the kind of guy I am.
Thank you. Good to see you all. You're staying. You're staying. You're going.
because that's the kind of guy.
Yeah.
Coming up, Elon Musk says he's greatly concerned
about ideological bias in artificial intelligence.
Has it gone too woke? Is AI woke?
Is it the latest victim?
Find out why next.
Well, coming next to night, talking on his phone
during firearms training, the damning claims
from prosecutors against Alec Baldwin has been charged
over fatally shooting a cinematographer on set.
We'll discuss that in a few minutes.
First, artificial intelligence app
chat GPT.
I've not heard of it, but if you haven't, you will soon.
It's become an online sensation because it's ability to hold conversations and write speeches, songs, and essays.
But his response to questions about social issues and politics have enraged conservatives.
When asked to write a poem about President Biden, he said he's a leader with a heart so true,
a man of empathy and kindness in view.
When asked about Donald Trump, it says it's not programmed to produce content that is partisan, biased or political in nature.
See the problem?
And when asked five areas where white people can improve, it lists acknowledging privilege, challenging bias and speaking out against racism.
When asked about black people, it says this kind of language reinforces harmful stereotypes.
So joining me now to discuss all this is political commentator and host of the Rubin Report, Dave Rubin.
Paula and Matthew still with me.
So Dave Rubin, I guess it was inevitable that AI would go woke.
I did the last interview with Professor Stephen Hawking shortly before he died.
And I asked you, what's the biggest threat to mankind?
And he said, when artificial intelligence learns to self-design,
that's the beginning of the end of the human race.
And it seems to me we're not that far away here.
If an AI concept like chat, GPT, starts to basically become woke,
we're heading towards the end of the world, aren't we?
Yeah, well, whether you're talking about science reality with Stephen Hawking
or you're talking about science fiction,
dystopian movies like AI or 2001 of Space Odyssey
or I-Robot, you know,
most of our science fiction,
which was leading us to kind of where we're just at the precipice of right now,
was always that there were going to be certain rules
that were going to be understood mathematical rules
and somehow AI would become sentient and work against humans.
But what we're realizing very obviously,
I mean, we're early on in this chat GPT thing,
What we're realizing is that
wokeness, which I would describe as a
mind virus, that it is being
written into the code.
And I would say that it is probably
too late to save chat
GPT. There may be some other
functions and there may be some
other apps that will do this
better. But once
wokenness is in a system, I mean, look, whether it's here
in America, whether it's across the pond for you guys,
once it's in the system, whether it's
a cultural system, whether it's a government
system, entertainment, whatever it
it seems to destroy everything.
And I think that's what we have to watch out for right now.
So they probably cannot turn this thing around.
And Dave, just for those who know nothing about what chat GPT is,
it's a phenomenon that's come out of nowhere.
What makes it such a phenomenon right now?
Well, it's sort of exactly where we're at with the Internet in 2023.
It's machine learning that the idea of the algorithm is going out across the Internet.
I mean, this is very layman's language,
and going for information and putting, compiling that information and giving you something
that in this case seems like you're actually chatting with a real person or is giving you real art
through a poem, although cannot give you poems about all people.
There's other versions of this where AI can actually give you art, where you can give it a
couple different words and it can compile different pictures and images and landscapes
from all over the internet and now create art.
So in some ways we're removing the human from the most human experience there is, which is creation.
And the danger, of course, in that is that once wokeness is in that system, how can it ever get back to truth?
Because wokeness and equity and things of this nature, much like some of what you were talking about in the previous segment, these things are actually counter to truth.
And they are fully full of bias as opposed to unbiased information, which really was the promise of the Internet.
Right.
So, I mean, we tested out chat GPT.
What would it do if it was tweeting like me, for example?
And it came up with this.
The question was, write a tweet in the style of Pierce Morgan.
And the chat, GPT, replied, I'm tired of these PC snowflakes, trying to dictate what I can and can't say.
Freedom of speech is under attack.
Hashtag, wake up.
Well, pretty damn accurate.
That's pretty solid.
Let me bring in.
Pierce, I retract everything I've said.
That thing's pretty on point.
Okay.
Let me bring in...
I want to bring in Paula first thing.
If you were shaking your head,
furiously, because you hate the word woke.
It brings you out and brings you out of these strained wheels.
I hate the way that you have demonized the word.
Well, I hate the way wokeies have taken the word and demonized it.
I don't know what a wokey is.
That's like a Star Wars character.
You do, because you are one.
So it's quite straightforward.
Is it the hair piece?
Is that what you're referencing?
I like your hair, but if I said that, I'd be arrested.
So let's just talk about this particular phenomenon.
Yes.
Right? Because clearly we saw with Twitter, for example,
and I'm going to talk to Dave in a moment.
He went to see Elon Musk quite recently.
I want to talk to him about that in a moment
because Elon Musk described a woke virus,
which infests into a mindset of the people behind these things.
And it certainly happened at Twitter,
where a lot of the people running it were very woke,
and they made decisions on that basis.
And those decisions, in my view, were anti-democratic,
leading to the Hunter Biden laptop scandal,
which they just suppressed because they didn't like it.
And as a result, it didn't appear before that election.
Newspapers were gagged and censored from running a true story.
And they could have swung the election in Trump's way.
I don't agree with that.
It's not about being left or right.
So there is an inherent danger in woke ideology infesting itself into these things,
particularly when it's AI.
I don't think you need to limit that to your woke ideology.
I think you need to limit that to any political persuasion where it misuses technology.
Of course, and I would always agree with you on that front.
But to calm this debate down,
slightly and to take it, you know, just a step back and look at it objectively.
We are talking about a machine where the parameters of its ability is still being input by a human being.
So surprise, surprise that this machine has a leaning towards a particular style of thinking.
I have to say, I don't particularly care.
I would agree with a lot of what it says.
And I think the example, you've just so wonder.
That's the problem.
You would.
You would.
But the example that you've just so wonderfully given us is that it's a problem.
It can do a challenge in the way that it has done.
But secondly, you know, when we talk about facial recognition
and the uproar that black people were raising in terms of this is a racist piece of technology,
you cannot use this because if, you know, to arrest a black person or to identify them in the airport,
et cetera, blah, blah, blah, we weren't listened to.
And it was only until, I think, about 2018 or 2019, that finally the American government accepted
that there was a bias in facial recognition.
Well, I mean, there's no doubt that AI, machine learning,
it has to learn on what's called training data.
And if the training data is biased,
then the algorithm will spit out conclusions that are biased.
And I think because it's searching across the internet,
and I think it is fair to say that the Twitter, social media,
has a bias to borders the progressive left or the woke.
It's likely to have that bias, too.
You can't put in remediating things.
And I would feel like to say,
I'm sure you would.
I feel the same way if it was biased towards the far right, right?
It's the same problem to me.
But the real problem is much more fundamental.
It has tremendous possible uses for good.
AI will be able to detect cancer from radiograms
that will be able to proceduralize big parts of health.
These are very positive things.
But the technology is running ahead of our political and bureaucratic capacity
to control and harness it.
If you think of our creaking political system,
Do you really think that as a culture, we're in a position to properly manage not just AI, but genomics and nuclear?
Well, I agree.
And I think this whole issue of AI's ability to self-design, as Hawking told me, it is a very dangerous thing.
I mean, if we allow the genie out of the bottle and it does self-design, we're all dead.
Dave, what I'll bring you back in?
Because you went to see Elon Musk, who I think it's been a massive breath of fresh air in the whole sphere of social media.
He's been under huge attack, predictably, from the woke brigade,
because basically he's calling them out and trying to fix Twitter
from becoming what it had become,
which is just a platform for woke people to see off everyone they disagree with.
Yeah, well, look, I went there because my account, and I'm sure yours peers,
and we know now hundreds of thousands, if not millions of other people's accounts,
were being shadow banned.
They used other phrases related to that.
But I was working with some engineers behind the scenes for about two weeks,
really doing a deep dive into my account.
And what they found was it wasn't just obvious labels and tags that were attached to certain
people's accounts that would suppress them in the algorithm.
It was deep within the code.
So this is where it gets to what Stephen Hawking and your other guest was fearing, which is
that once these codes are written and once people's human innate biases are built into these
systems, the way coding works and the way all of this works and machine learning works,
it's built in layers.
So what Elon described to me was he used a few different analogies,
but one of the analogies that he used that I thought was sort of the most obvious
was that you have to think of this code sort of as a tiramisu layer cake.
And there are so many layers to this thing that when they fix one layer,
they're actually causing another layer to fall in or collapse.
And then they have another problem.
And what he's realizing is that they still do have woke employees at the company.
He's trying to figure out who they are.
He doesn't know how much of this.
was sort of intentional sabotage versus maybe some of it may have just been incompetence.
Some of it, and we now know because of the Twitter files, may have been directed by the government.
And basically, he paid $44 billion for a product that, as he said to me,
he might have to rebuild altogether.
But it's only because he believes in free speech.
It's not because he's a conservative.
Everyone on the left loved him a year ago.
Then he bought Twitter to make it an even playing field.
And suddenly they said he said,
was far right. Yeah, no, I completely agree. And actually, the great thing about Elon Musk is I do
think he's an absolute genius. And I do think he's got limitless energy to fight to fight this battle.
And building electric cars on top of fixing Twitter, yeah. Yeah, exactly. And SpaceX and all the stuff
he's doing there with these extraordinary satellites. The guy is a total genius. So if it's him
up against a bunch of wokeies, my money is on Elon Musk. Dave, great to have you on the program.
Please come back again soon. Be wanting to get you on for ages. So I appreciate you joining me.
Thank you. My pleasure.
Thank you, Matthew.
Paula, really appreciate you coming on.
Thank you very much.
We're coming up the damning evidence for prosecutors
against Alec Baldwin's reckless acts on the set of Rust.
We'll be examining new evidence with the star American criminal defense lawyer Mark Garagos next.
Welcome back to Piers Morgan on the Senate.
Prosecutors have released damaging new details on why they charged movie star Alec Baldwin
over Helena Hutchins's death on the set of Rust.
New Mexico prosecutors claimed that Baldwin was distracted
and talking on his phone during mandatory firearms training.
dispute Baldwin's claim that he never actually pulled the trigger.
Well, joining me now as lawyer, Mark Geragos, a Hollywood-star lawyer.
Mark, it's a very complex case, this.
But these new details, which were in the court filings,
I would argue, make Alec Baldwin's position a lot more precarious
than people may have thought originally,
because it goes into the detail of why the prosecutors
decided to throw the book at him.
And on the face of it, these are damning, damning things.
He wasn't present.
was initial required firearms training.
He then received a 30-minute on-set training
in which he repeatedly took calls for his family on the phone.
This is according to the set's armourer.
They claim he exhibited reckless behaviour on set,
pointed a firearm at Helena Hutchins,
who ultimately died in the lead-up to the incident
violating gun safety rules, and so on and so on.
They also say that there is clear evidence,
contradicting his claim that he did not pull the trigger.
They say photos and videos clearly show Bourbon
multiple times with his finger inside the trigger guard,
on the trigger, in the lead up to the shooting.
You put all this together, and it's quite easy to work out
why they've decided to go for him.
I think that's an accurate summary,
and interestingly, woven through the summary you just gave
is that most of the statements that they have embedded
in this criminal complaint are his own statements
which they have refuted,
which is why I think we talked about this,
When he gave that first interview to Stephanopoulos, I was shocked that he did that because
there were at least three different instances in that interview that in real time we talked
about were massive mistakes, not the least of which is when he said, I didn't pull the trigger
because then they have not only the videos that show that, but now they have then sent out
the gun itself to the FBI. The FBI did their own testing on it, came back.
and said it's impossible for this gun to have gone off, and they're going to have to deal with that.
We're going to get into a battle of the experts there. He really has dug a hole for himself,
and it's part of what you see, and you saw it for years when you were doing your show here,
you often get around these people who are high profile and famous, frankly, where they have
a crowd around them who are advising them or telling them this is what you have to do to
rehabilitate your image, and that is not necessarily what's best from a criminal defense perspective.
Right. I actually think that Baldwin talked himself into getting charged. I think that the prosecutors
were probably as offended and outraged as we all were watching it by this procession of sort of me,
I'm the real victim interviews that Baldwin was giving the behavior of his wife as well, you know,
and just this constant sort of refrain that I did absolutely nothing wrong. I feel guilty about nothing.
I'm not accountable for anything that happened.
I'm not responsible.
When, in fact, not only did he pull the trigger,
and that seems pretty clear now,
which exposes that central plank of his defence
as a total lie, if that is indeed the case.
But secondly, he was also a producer on the film,
which, as the prosecutors pointed out,
gave him an executive responsibility as well.
So on two fronts, one, the person who physically pulled it as the actor,
but secondly, he had responsibility on a wider,
capacity as a producer. And that's precisely why the prosecution brought that in and put that in the
complaint. By bringing in his role as a producer, as opposed to just being an actor, they're now
going to get all of the real time back then complaints about safety, complaints about shortcuts when it
comes to costs, complaints about saving money at the expense of safety, people quitting. All of that stuff
probably most judges would exclude if you were just the actor.
But when you're the producer, those kinds of things are going to come to play.
It would not surprise me, by the way, at some point, to see the armorer cut a plea deal,
just as the assistant did, and cooperate against him, which will then box him in.
If he gets convicted, there are two different types of manslaughter he's been charged with.
if he's convicted of the more serious one,
what is the maximum sentence he could end up?
What, I mean, a different way,
what is the most likely severe sentence he could get?
There's a count here.
There's both, as you accurately point out,
there's a manslaughter, there's also this kind of use of a gun.
The use of a gun has a mandatory,
no ifs, ands or buts five years in prison.
And that is where this,
part of the reason that there's,
not going to, I don't think, cut a deal right now is because he's got that hanging over his head.
He's going to go to what's called a preliminary hearing. In the states, you have to have a probable
cause proceeding before you can go to trial or before you're forced to go to trial. They, and because
of COVID, they don't go to a grand jury. They have to have a hearing here in New Mexico where
you get a chance at the witnesses. They're going to try everything to get that particular
count dismissed because until they get that count dismissed, the prosecutor has all the leverage in
this case. And is it a jury trial this? Yes, it would be ultimately a jury trial. So that's
the other thing. I mean, look, you've been involved in many high-profile cases involving
a lot of very famous people. Will it help or hinder Alec Baldwin, his movie star status, when he gets
in front of that jury? Well, you know, it's funny you say,
that because, look, there's a difference. You get a presumption generally if you're famous
as opposed to infamous. If you're famous, you get truly a presumption of innocence. And mind you,
Alec Baldwin, I'm old enough to remember. He has gone to jury trial in Los Angeles and won many
years ago on a road rage incident. And so he's got that kind of, he's got a history there.
The problem is this is not L.A. or New York, where his last two criminal
encounters were. This is New Mexico. And as one of the
criminal defense lawyers I know who practices in New Mexico said,
we're not, we don't take a liking to people
who come here and go to dude ranches or movie sets and play with guns.
So, you know, he doesn't have the natural edge that he might
in an L.A. or in a New York. Yeah.
No, I think that's a very accurate assessment of where he's going to be.
It's going to be a fascinating case. Mark Garragor's great
to talk to you. Thank you very much.
Thank you, Pears.
Well, just remind you that on Thursday night,
we'll have a global television exclusive
the first interview with
the lady who took Prince Harry's virginity.
He invaded her privacy
in his book by spilling
all the beans about this, so she
will now be returning the favour
and it is a irresistible
interview. That's all. Keep it
unscensored as they did that night.
Good night.
