Piers Morgan Uncensored - Trump On Trial: Will He Benefit? & Biden's Uncle Eaten By Cannibals?
Episode Date: April 25, 2024Donald Trump is on trial. He is the first former president in history to face court on criminal charges. Trump is of course accused of falsifying business records to cover up hush money payments to ...his alleged mistress, porn star Stormy Daniels. But whether he’s guilty or not guilty, will it dent his bid to return to the White House? Could Trump actually benefit from being - once again - the undisputed star of cable news? And was President Biden's uncle eaten by cannibals? Returning by popular demand to debate this - and much more… Joining Piers, Three politically-charged titans of YouTube Destiny, Benny Johnson and Dave Smith... YouTube: @PiersMorganUncensored X: @PiersUncensored TikTok: @piersmorganuncensored Insta: @piersmorganuncensored Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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lying. Joe Biden has lied multiple times had to drop out of presidential campaigns because he lied.
Joe Biden has a very, very warped view of minorities. Joe Biden is the same guy that went and kicked
corn pop out of the pool because he had too much pomade in his hair. Corn Pop was a young black man.
I believe Roseanne. If she says it happened, it happened. Believe all women.
An important component to a to a free society. And so, yeah, leave Rosanne alone. And I also thought
it was quite funny. Man, that's a big question. Everybody's like so reactionary in how they view things.
and now you've got the Republican Party who's like, well, you know,
screw everything that the Democrats stand for.
Like, we actually think Putin is based and strong,
and America's weak and they have too much LGBT stuff.
I mean, no offense to you, Pierce, personally, on this at all.
But I hate the idea of, like, royalty in politics.
No one even, like, knows anything about half the people involved,
but yet their word means something?
Why are the richest counties in America,
eight of the top ten, richest counties in America,
all in the circumference of Washington, D.C.?
Why would all of these counties around D.C. be so,
bloody rich.
Donald Trump is on trial.
He's the first former president in history
to face court of criminal charges.
Trump is, of course, accused
of falsifying business records
to cover up hush money payments
to his alleged mistress,
the porn star Stormy Daniels.
But whether he's guilty or not guilty,
will it harm or hinder his bid to return to the White House?
Could Trump actually benefit
from being once again the undisputed star
of cable news day in, day out?
And what's President Biden's uncle eaten by Canada?
A claim made by the President of the United States.
We're returning by popular demand to debate this and more.
Three politically charged titans of YouTube, Destiny, Benny Johnson and Dave Smith.
Well, welcome to probably my favorite political trio in world political discourse.
So thank you guys for coming back.
I want to start with a clip of Trump outside the courtroom.
This is yesterday.
It's a kind of random clip of stuff he's been saying pretty much every day.
Let's take a look.
Payment and they go out a legal expense and you heard it today for the first time.
This is what I got indicted over.
This is what took me off and takes me off the campaign trail.
The judge is conflicted, as you know.
It's very unfair what's going on.
And I should be allowed to campaign.
And whoever heard of this, you got indicted for that?
People in the court you said to me, I can't believe it.
This is the case.
Now, Justin, let me start with you.
Cards on my table.
I've written columns about this in the last week.
I kind of agree with Trump about this.
If they've begun with any of the other three cases,
I think there's a far more compelling argument
that it should be held to account for them.
But this seems such an obviously politically trumped-up attempt
to stop Trump campaigning
and to try and make a federal crime
out of what is at worst to state misdemeanor.
And ultimately, it involves a possible one-night stand
with a porn star between two consenting adults 18 years ago.
None of this makes sense to me
to drag in to a courtroom the first ever American president
and humiliate him in this way.
But I'm also not convinced, if I'm on the left,
why would you think this is anything
but going to be beneficial to Trump?
Whatever happens, either he walks,
because one of the jury goes, like me, this is ridiculous,
or he gets convicted, in which case,
a lot of middle America, I think, goes,
what the hell?
This is ridiculous.
You know, Bill Clinton paid off a woman,
$850,000.
to settle a harassment case when he was president.
He had sex with an intern in the Oval Office.
He never got dragged into court.
So whichever way this goes,
I don't see how it does anything but help Trump.
And I just feel like starting this criminal trial litany of cases
with this one is a massive strategic error.
Your thoughts?
Well, I mean, when you say strategic error,
the implication there is that politics should be a heavier consideration
for the particular indictments that he's faces.
I do agree.
Well, hang on, hang on.
The prosecutor is a paid up Democrat, right?
So there is a political dimension before you even start.
Yeah, but he told me it was a Republican, and that apparently didn't count for anything.
So I don't know how important the parties are here.
I mean, I agree that of the four cases, I agree that this is definitely the weaker of the four.
But, I mean, the idea that he's done so much other insane stuff that he shouldn't be held accountable for the less insane stuff he did.
I don't know that argument holds too much water for me.
I do agree that the misdemeanor charge of it being like a bookkeeping charge,
is kind of like whatever.
But the reason why it's upgraded to a felony is because the accusation is that this was done
in the commission of another crime, which is the obfuscation of the hiding of basically campaign
contributions, which I do think is a big deal.
If somebody was donating $100,000 to a campaign effectively and somebody was trying to hide that,
I think that if this was a case of like George Soros paying somebody to give favorable coverage
or to kill a story for Joe Biden, I think that the Republicans may make a really big deal
about it.
So I think that the aspect that these were essentially campaign contributions and that they were
done and lied about through fraudulent bookkeeping, I think does make it kind of a big deal.
I think it's worth it to be litigated.
All right, Benny, I mean, my response to that would be, I'll let you do the talking for
yourself, obviously, but, you know, the catch and kill thing is a time-honored tradition
between tabloids and major figures, celebrities, politicians, and others.
And often, as we know with Trump, with the National Inquirer already from David Pecker's
testimony, it's being used with them between Pecker and Trump to kill off untrue stories.
including him supposedly fathering some child of a woman in an apartment block.
So it's not always used to kill off true stories.
It's just used to suppress damaging information.
Trump, regardless of his run for president, was a massive star, one of the biggest stars in America.
He'd have people trying it on all the time like this.
So to me, there's nothing particularly damning about the fact that he may have had a cozy
relationship with a tabloid editor.
It just so happened, he then ran for president.
Yeah, you're right. This is just common practice. These are called nuisance lawsuits. Celebrities deal with them all the time. But I think we're missing the greater overall point here, which is that the judge here, Judge Mershon, is a Democrat activist. He funded, helped fund Joe Biden's election campaign in New York, which went for Joe Biden. The jury pool being pulled from New York went for Joe Biden. I just looked it up 85 points for Joe Biden. Joe Biden won New York with 85 percent of the vote.
It's hard to find a more blue district with a more Democrat judge who donated to Joe Biden.
He should recuse himself.
His daughter does campaign fundraising for people who want to put Donald Trump in prison.
She's raised hundreds of millions of dollars to put Trump in jail.
Her social media avatar is a picture of Donald Trump in jail, a Photoshop.
So my question to destiny.
We know that story was fake, right?
My question to destiny is this.
My question to destiny is this.
Oh, so wait, hold on.
So his daughter doesn't take campaign contributions to put Donald Trump in prison.
Yes or no?
That particular Twitter account that you referenced in the activity on it?
Does his daughter?
I'm going to answer a random question.
I'm responding to what you just said was fake news.
It's a Trump's self or fake story that's by Laura Lumer.
No, no, that's not a fact.
Go look it up.
You can Google it.
These are facts.
So is the judge of the Joe Biden donor?
I don't know and I don't care if the judge is a Joe Biden donor donor donor.
But the Twitter account that you referenced is not the Twitter account of his.
The Twitter account, I don't think that somebody being supportive.
Hold on.
Do you think the standard should be that every single judge that's donated to any politician must recuse themselves in every single criminal trial relating to a political trial?
Hang on.
Well, let me answer that.
What's the standard there?
Destiny, you've actually hit on the real problem of this.
This is why I don't think any American president should ever go through a prosecution of this kind.
Because the answer obviously is, yes, of course this judge is not impartial.
Of course he's going to have a view against Trump.
Of course it will affect all his decision-making.
He's a paid-up Democrat.
So that's the problem.
Let me come to Dave Smith here.
Dave, you're neither left nor right.
You kind of sit in the middle as a voice of, I don't know,
common normality, perhaps.
Let's call it that.
Not to denigrate my two other fine guests.
But on this, I just find I'm really struggling
with both the reality of prosecuting a president
of such a trivial matter
on what I think are jumped up
or trucked up charges
driven for political reasons.
But also just really bad strategy
by the political people driving this
thinking this is going to help them.
Trump has been sitting in that courtroom
like a martyr day in day out.
He then comes out.
He goes up to Harlem to the scene of a particularly ugly crime
where a shopkeeper got framed for murder
and then got acquitted and so on.
He then comes out and he's greeted by crowds,
chanting four more years.
He's turning it into a running campaign thing,
but he's also getting all the oxygen
of publicity on television.
It's all wall-to-war Trump.
I was in New York last week.
It's all anyone's talking about.
None of that can be anything, I don't think,
given that Trump has proven before
his celebrity power can propel him to the White House.
None of this seems to me good politics.
Never mind the fact the law itself
appears to be being misused here.
Yeah, well, look, I mean, I completely agree
with you on that.
So almost if we're separating these two things,
in terms of like the political strategic aspect to it,
I think there's no question that it has backfired so far.
If we're talking about the political strategy,
you also have to kind of zoom out and look at the optics
of the fact that the entire corporate media
and the entire Democratic Party told us for years
that this guy had committed treason,
was involved in a conspiracy with the Russians.
He led an insurrection, he attempted to overthrow democracy,
and yet when we come down to the treason,
trial, it's about falsifying business records about hush money to a porn star.
So if you're just talking about like the optics and the strategy there, I think it looks
pathetic at which it is.
But in terms of the argument that you guys were just talking on, like there's a very
interesting question about whether someone like Donald Trump can get a fair trial in
the United States of America.
And it's not, I don't think, as simple as destiny saying like, oh, if you had ever
contributed to the Democratic Party, then could you never be the judge against a
Republican. There's something kind of unique about Donald Trump where he has been elevated in the
minds of Democrats to such a unique evil that they will openly tell you, we have lost our democracy
if he is reelected. You know, literally Hitler has been said thousands of times. If he is that bad,
how could anyone who has that mind state not be doing just whatever they can to try to ruin the guy?
and it does make you question whether it's possible
that in that environment
he could ever get a fair trial.
Right, and there's another side to this, which is Joe Biden, right?
So you would think that the Democrat nominee for president
would be absolutely milking this in a masterful way
to propel himself to stay in the White House.
But this is what Biden said yesterday.
In a sense, I don't know why we're surprised by Trump.
How many times do you have to prove we can't be trusted?
Now, he meant to say, how many times can he prove he can't be trusted?
But Destiny, once again, he's incapable of finishing a sentence that makes an incoherent sense.
And this is the major fault line for the Democrats' chances of winning the election is whatever happens to Trump.
We know that Biden's popularity is an all-time low.
We know that most Democrats, two-thirds are Democrats, nearly three-quarters of Democrats, don't think he should be running again.
because of his age and clear, you know, cognitive acuity issues.
But when you see a clip like that, and they come every day with Biden,
do you not think that it would be smart of the Democrats to somehow persuade Joe Biden to step aside
and get a younger, more dynamic person who might have a better ability to capitalize on what's happening with Trump?
I don't know what the backfired thing is coming from.
I don't know. It was just like because we see a lot of crazy tweets on Twitter or X or because,
certain talking heads or pundits or whatever, but Biden's popularity on the recent polling has
continued to rise. It is slowly rising. I think like I said for months now, I don't think there's
anything good that happens for Trump from here to the election. And as long as the economy can
recover, as long as inflation is under control, I think it only gets better for Biden from here
on now. I don't think a lot of people are seeing Trump in the courtroom or his crazy antics on
truth social and think like, wow, this guy is such a martyr for the cause. All of the sick of
fanatic fanatics that follow Trump are still following Trump and the people that really like him
still really like him, but all those people that are kind of like more moderate or kind of not the most
extreme Trump fanatics are slowly starting to drop off. I think Biden's popularity is continuing
to rise. And I don't know why you would throw away an incumbent who's already beaten Trump before
and try to run a totally new untested candidate when you have no idea what the opposition
research or anything like that is going to be on him. I agree that Biden definitely has problems,
but I mean, Trump has so many problems. And he's already lost to Biden. Why would you run anybody else?
Benny, I mean, there's some good points there.
You know, Biden has beaten Trump before.
This is his argument, apparently, for continuing to stay in this race.
And the economy is beginning to perk up at America, indisputably.
And the polls are closing indisputably.
Why shouldn't Biden run?
And why wouldn't he have a good chance of beating Trump?
Yeah, because he's a tyrant who has no base of support.
I went to that event yesterday.
I was physically there.
It was in Tampa.
So I actually went to the community here.
We spent the entire day there in Tampa.
I had the community college hunting for a Joe Biden supporter to try and find a single Joe Biden supporter since Joe Biden was physically there speaking.
I'm not sure he was totally awake, but he was there, right?
Physical man was there.
Couldn't find a Joe Biden supporter.
We found thousands of protesters from the Democrat left, leftist protesting Joe Biden saying he should be locked up for human rights abuses, calling him genocide Joe.
We went and interviewed a bunch of them.
We couldn't find anyone.
We talked to the students.
Nobody even knew Joe Biden was there.
The students were like unaware that the resident of the United States.
was physically there. There was more energy and enthusiasm at your local nursing home during
activity hour where there's extra cinnamon for the applesauce than there was for Joe Biden yesterday
at an actual presidential event. And this was in Florida. And I think it's a lot has a lot of
shit spots to go to Florida and think you can flip this state. This state went for Trump twice.
But I guess this is my question of destiny. Is this state in Florida is a place where the
Biden family had a lot of business, a lot of corrupt business in this state.
the DOJ, the FBI,
looked into the Biden business practices
in this state they've had to pay big penalties.
Would you be in favor of a district
in this state that voted for Donald Trump,
85 points for Donald Trump,
and a judge that donated to Donald Trump
and whose kids are in the business
of locking up Joe Biden?
Would you be in favor of Joe Biden
being brought to trial for bookkeeping
in a county like that?
You would be okay with it
because you just said this doesn't matter.
So you'd be all right with that scenario.
Unless the judge themselves have made specific comments about the candidate themselves that somebody can like show me and you can see a clear bias, then no, I wouldn't have a judge recused themselves there.
The idea that we cannot trust our state, district, our federal judges to do the jobs that we entrust them to do, that we think that they can't give an impartial trial to somebody because they were an ex-president, well, then why should we have any faith in our justice system delivering fair trials to anybody at all?
What about a black person? What about a woman? What about a trans person? What if they know you're a registered Republican? What if they know that you vote?
voted for Trump? What if they know that you supported Bernie Sanders? Like, no, we should be able to
entrust that our justice system will deliver fair results going through the processes that they go through.
If somebody's made a particular comment about Trump or Biden, I would hope they would recuse themselves
in that case. But if they haven't, and they just tend to support a particular political party,
then we would hope that their allegiance to upholding justice in the United States is true.
And also this idea that you can walk on a college campus and figure out who's going to win the presidency.
If that was true, then the last election would have been Bernie Sanders versus Andrew Yang.
Since when do we go to college campuses to determine the overall,
popularity of a presidential candidate.
Okay. Dave, I mean, I
knew in 2016
Trump was going to win because I was down in
Middle America a lot doing crime
documentaries in Florida, Texas,
Alabama, I could feel
tremendous heat for Trump and loathing
for Hillary Clinton. So I was
telling everyone Trump's going to win and he won.
This time, I have no idea what's going to
happen. I don't think anybody does. We are into
completely uncharted territory.
But for the Democrats, is it
smart politics to stick with
given the age issue, which is not really about his age, it's about his ability at his age to do the job.
Is it sensible of them to let him continue as a nominee, or should he, as two Democrat incumbent presidents have done since World War II before, which is pull out and let somebody younger take over?
Well, I think he should pull out. I think if anybody was around him who loved him, they should try to convince him to pull.
out. It is, it's elder abuse, what's being done to him. It does, it feels like we're living
through the emperor's new clothes when people pretend they don't see the issue with Joe Biden every
time he speaks. That, you know, I think the logistics of how they would get him out when he's
determined to run again and who they would replace him with are challenging. But the, you know,
destiny made the point that Joe Biden has beat Donald Trump already once. And that's true. However,
it was a very special year. There was COVID, so he had this excuse to not actually campaign.
And it could be seen as being the reasonable, you know, like the safe choice or he's following the
experts or whatever. And there's just many differences now. And the biggest too, according to all
the polling, it's immigration and the economy, the inflation, which I will say, by the way,
Joe Biden, look, a lot of the inflation was caused by how much money was printed in 2020.
and then that was felt on Joe Biden's watch.
But, you know, he was still president at the time
and people tend to blame the guy who's in charge for that.
And the immigration thing is just, it's a killer for him.
I mean, after years of being so critical of Donald Trump,
all of the Democrats were,
for his immigration restrictionist views,
to then see the disaster of this de facto open border
is very bad for them.
And this is why you've seen a huge shift
in many key demographics toward Donald Trump
that Joe Biden cleaned up with in 2020.
You've seen huge gains for Donald Trump
amongst minorities, amongst young people,
and so this is a whole different race.
We're not running back 2020.
Yeah, I agree with that.
I want to play you, Benny, a clip
because I just think it'll make you laugh
because you'll know what it is,
and it made me laugh.
Although, it's kind of, again, a serious point to it.
This is Joe Biden claiming his uncle
had been eaten by cannibals.
And my uncle, they call him Ambrose,
they call him Bozzi.
my Uncle Bozy, and he became an Army Air Corps before the Air Force came along.
He flew those single-engine planes.
He got shot down in New Guinea.
And they never found the body because there used to be,
there were a lot of cannibals for real in that part of New Guinea.
There were two problems with this, Benny.
The Pentagon dug into this,
and it was confirmed that the plane was not shot down.
It actually had technical failure,
which led to it crashing into the ocean.
which is almost certainly where Uncle Bozzi died,
but there's certainly zero evidence
he was ever eaten by any cannibals.
And in fact, the leaders of Papua New Guinea now
have been outraged by this categorization
of their people as a bunch of cannibals.
Yes, that's exactly right.
So two things that trend perfectly for Joe Biden here
that has followed him effectively
his entire career and he's built his career off of.
One, lying. Joe Biden has lied multiple times,
had to drop out of presidential campaigns because he lied.
And two, Joe Biden has a very, very dark and very warped view of minorities.
Joe Biden obviously wrote the 1990s crime bill that disproportionately locked up hundreds
of thousands of young black men for having a scintilla of crack cocaine on their persons,
whereby his own son had mountains of crack cocaine on him.
And he has yet to face any type of prosecution for that.
I'm very interesting hearing Destiny's take on this.
But Joe Biden has always tracked along these lines.
Joe Biden is the same guy that, according to his own stories,
went and kicked corn pop out of the pool
because he had too much pomade in his hair
and was willing to fight corn pop with a rusty razor blade and a chain.
Corn Pop was a young black man.
Joe Biden is a racist.
He says you cannot vote.
You cannot be black if you vote for Donald Trump.
And it's this type of conversation
and these types of policies that are leading
to, as Dave just alluded to, the largest support for any Republican in my lifetime among minority
communities. That is a fact. Okay, Destiny, I mean, the trouble of the cannibals thing is that so much
of what Biden says from his memory turns out to be completely untrue. I'm not suggesting he
deliberately lies. He just constantly seems to forget key parts of his life. And then they don't
even apologize. I mean, the White House press secretary was given the chance to apologize.
by Fox News by Peter Ducey and refused to do so.
Would it not be right for the White House to just when they get things wrong like this,
just to say we're sorry?
The president spoke wrong.
He said the plane crashed in the water, okay?
Who says cannibals can't swim, all right?
We don't know that.
Listen, I understand the, I understand the spect-
A little bit of a stretch test to me.
Hey, maybe, listen, I don't know what they're like that.
I've never met that beginning before.
Okay, listen, like, there's always the gas and there's everything that's fun to talk about.
But it says something that every time Trump makes a gas,
I hear this repeated over and over again.
We are not supposed to take Trump literally.
We're supposed to take him seriously.
When Trump says there's an invisible plane, he didn't actually mean that.
When Trump was like on stage, you know, pondering about the injection of disinfectant into your lungs, well, he wasn't serious.
Well, when Trump talks about cyber, you know, he's just like speaking metaphorically.
I don't know, man.
At the end of the day, like, Biden is a gaff machine.
George W. Bush was a gaff machine, and he couldn't even blame senility on that.
I agree that his speaking stuff is a problem.
I definitely think that his memory has issues.
But I'm more concerned with Trump, like on TV, you know, telling the DOJ that they should be jailing political opponents, you know, I'm more concerned with the fact that Trump was not even office.
You know, we were just talking about immigration, which is a real issue.
Trump is literally communicating to people in the House like, hey, don't vote on immigration bills.
I want to keep the border open so that when I run for president, I can point to that problem existing.
The fact that Republicans were unwilling to actually come together and work on what was an amazing border reform bill, something that would have increased the amount of asylum judges, something that would have decreased the amount of people that could just come to the border and claim asylum.
like these things would have been amazing, you know.
Day Smith talks about a de facto open borders policy.
The de facto open borders policy is not de facto.
It's de facto.
It's by letter of the law.
If somebody comes to the U.S. and they say, hey, I'm claiming asylum.
Well, you're kind of, you know, S.
Well, I guess we've got to put you with the U.S. now and we have to process you because
that's the policy on the books.
And Republicans were the ones that stood in the way of actually changing that policy
in the house because they didn't want to lose their one issue that they could hopefully
artificially continue to, I guess, make this country look bad for their upcoming election,
which I think is unpatriotic and I think it's damaging to the United States.
And I wish the Republicans were held to account more for that type of self-destructive behavior.
Dave, Smith, I want to get your response to the Kennedy family endorsing Biden.
First of all, I want to play a clip from Roseanne Barr, a quite extraordinary clip she's posted
of her claiming to have been attacked by President Biden.
Let's take a look.
Twenty-six years ago, Joe Biden raped me right here in that dressing room in the shoe department where I went in, changed my shirt.
It was in the shoe department at Bergdorf-Foodman.
Are you okay?
No, I'm not. I need to sell. I need to sell.
Now, she was obviously mocking the settlement that E. Jean Carroll recently got very, very heavy, I think $70-odd million settlement against Trump.
for alleging exactly that Donald Trump had done exactly what Roseanne is mimicking there.
When she got blowback from people online, Roseanne wrote back on ex,
I would never incels a sexual assault victim,
I was talking about EG and Carroll.
It's a doubling down, possibly in a way that is defamatory to EG and Carol
on the way that she has sued Trump.
What do you think of that?
Are we crossing lines or have we lost an ability to laugh?
In other words, Roseanne is a comedian.
should be she should be allowed to do this and we all just accept it as a bit of fun or is it more serious
no i i believe rosan if she says it happened it happened believe all women
well that's the point she'd basically yeah exactly so this is yeah this is a comedian using humor
to to make a point and yes i think uh absolutely that's the i think it's an important component
to a to a free society and so yeah leave rosan alone and i also thought it was quite funny
It made me laugh.
I mean, maybe it shouldn't have done what it did.
On the Kennedys, let's watch the clip of Kerry Kennedy endorsing Biden.
My siblings and representing my first cousins, all of whom, with the exception of two,
all who are legally able are supporting Joe Biden for re-election.
And we cannot stand aside when we have.
We're up against a man who says he wants to be a dictator.
We need to stop Trump and we need to elect Joe Biden.
It's interesting.
When I watched her with the other members of the family,
and I compared them to RFK,
who I think's been a really impressive candidate in his own way,
I'm not sure this is particularly good for Biden.
I mean, there's the Kennedy magic, sure,
but actually the most impressive Kennedy out there is RFK.
And it all looks like,
in the latest polling that his run could be more beneficial to Trump than Biden, I think I'm
right in saying. So what do you make of this? Yeah. Yeah, you'd think that the relatives and
children of Ted Kennedy would know a car wreck when they see one and not endorse Joe Biden. But,
you know, hey, it's crazy times. But what's crazier is connecting the John F Kennedy
or RF Kennedy, RFK legacies to Joe Biden. They have absolutely.
no similarities whatsoever. JFK was anti-interventionist. JFK wanted to end the Vietnam War,
not accelerate wars around the globe. JFK wanted to have major oversight over the deep state and
over run amok and run wild intelligence agencies. JFK wanted a crackdown on the crimes
that were actually occurring here. He was a law and order candidate, and he wanted lower taxes.
And so there is zero, literally zero connection to the legacy of JFK to Joe Biden. So,
the Kennedy family is desecrating that memory.
Dave Smith, I mean, does it help Biden, really,
to have a bunch of slightly doddery Kennedys all standing around?
Some of them are looking like they didn't know what they were doing there.
When RFK Jr. is, like I say, a pretty impressive operator
who's clearly resonating with a lot of Americans.
I don't think it helps Biden at all.
And I mean, no offense to you, Pierce, personally, on this at all.
But I hate the idea of, like, royalty in politics.
There's like, you know, there's this family.
No one even like knows anything about half the people involved, but yet their word means something.
And I'll just say, I mean, look, my first thought about it, and I've been very critical of RFK lately over his position on the Warren Gaza.
But as somebody who like knows the guy is just, I find it wrong to come out like this against your own family.
I mean, like I understand if you don't want to support him because you don't agree with him on the issues.
but I just could never imagine, like, if my brother or my sister
or something like that were running for something,
publicly coming out, trying to campaign against them.
And I think at least that's the way it, like it rubs me.
Like, I'm a family guy before any other political opinion that I have.
And it just kind of, it makes them all feel sneaky to me.
Let me ask you, Destiny, about something else.
This is a, the big new film in America right now is this Civil War movie.
Let's take a little look at the trailer.
It's American.
100%.
That's what I'm talking about.
Cool.
I'm going to D.C.
Are you serious?
The United States are vaporized.
They shoot this on site in the capital.
I've never been scared like that before,
and I've never felt more alive.
This has got a big debate going, Destiny,
about whether there could be an actual civil war,
particularly if Donald Trump was to win back the White House,
how divisive he is and so on.
It obviously paints a pretty dystopian picture,
people who compared it to the successionist movements
in Texas and other southern states and so on.
But is it a worry of yours
that things are so toxic and tribal now
in American politics that if Trump was to get reelected,
you could start to see eruptions of civil war?
I mean, I feel like you could ask the question either way.
In some ways, it might be more scary
if Trump loses again
because we saw what happened last time,
when Trump lost the election.
The way that I view it, and I don't know, I don't know at the beginning of the origination
of every single revolt in history, my idea for the United States is that as mad as people
could be, as long as like the basics are continuing to run, people have got food, people
have got sheltered, people have got electricity.
I find it hard to believe that people will actually be revolting, like there will be open
revolt in the streets.
So I'm hoping that, well, actually, no, I'll make that strong prediction because if I'm
wrong, nobody's going to be holding me to account for it because society.
they will love to send it into chaos anyway.
So, yeah, I would hope that as long as the basics and society function,
I don't think we'll head down that civil war route.
But we definitely have a problem with turning the temperature up
on every single political disagreement in this country right now.
Yeah, I mean, Benny, it does seem that way.
And we've got the same issue in the UK.
You know, people just get into their tribes fueled by social media.
They shout ever louder.
They get angrier and angrier.
And you get a sense, which may not be the reality.
Maybe most people are not wondering around steaming with rage about stuff.
But certainly, I think, also exacerbated by the pandemic,
which I think send a lot of people nuts
and a lot more people online
than were online before.
There is a lot of anger in the air.
Now, whether it's real
or whether it's slightly misleading
because of social media and the noise it generates,
but do you worry when you see this movie
getting traction, do you worry that it may reflect
a wider reality about what may happen
in America?
So two things here. One, I can't believe
in every single show I find agreement with destiny,
but I do here. I like a less politicized America. And I know that may, that may actually be bad for my
career, but it was good for the country, the fabric of the country. I grew up in the 90s. I'm 37 years old.
Born in the 80s, grew up in the 90s. I remember a time when you could just, you know,
presumably go watch a sporting event without the athletes disgracing the flag, without your beer
companies going woke, without your friends deciding that they can't sit next to you because you're
wearing a red hat or blue hat. It really didn't matter. There were things that we shared. You could go see a
movie without being preached at or scolded or shamed because of who your skin color, your beliefs.
It was a better country. And to have a country, you have to have something that you share.
There has to be like a shared culture. And that is quickly being rent in America. And that is
a thing that actually does terrify me. You need to have things that we all agree on. And even now,
the American flag is divisive to the point that we allow it to be burned in our streets.
And I think that that is a horrible place to grow up. And so we need to have a shared culture and the
injection of politics into absolutely everything divides the nation and fractures the place.
It makes it a terrible place to live.
Now, here's the one thing about that movie that I think is 100% fiction and fantasy is that
California and Texas unite to actually fight the federal government.
I don't see that ever happening.
You want to talk about real Hollywood magic.
California and Texas joining teams to go fight a common enemy.
Don't see that happening.
I can't see that happening.
Dave Smith, I mean, what do you feel about this?
It's interesting that both Benny and Destiny kind of found common ground there.
That's kind of where we want to get to.
I was struck by, for example, Speaker Johnson,
changing his mind about Ukraine, for example,
and getting that bill through in the end, doing a deal with Democrats.
I actually thought, whatever your view of the Ukraine part of that,
which is obviously a major part of that money,
whatever your view of it, it was quite refreshing to see a Republican speaker
crossing the aisle and prepared to do a deal for what he'd be.
was the national interest of America.
And I think Trump actually recognized that
because he was quite supportive of Speaker Johnson
in a way that it may not have been expected.
So is that the kind of thing we want to see more of?
Well, no.
I mean, from my perspective,
I certainly don't want to see more money going to foreign wars
that have nothing to do with the United States of America.
But the broader theme that you're talking about,
I don't exactly celebrate the political,
parties coming together. I actually think that's when a lot of the worst things that the United States
of America does happen. I would support the people of this country being more united. And look,
I agree with both of you guys that I think, I doubt that we're going to be in a hot civil war anytime soon.
We do kind of seem to be flirting with the concept. And I think cultural divisions and political
divisions in this country are the worst that they've ever been in my lifetime. And, you know,
one of the things that I would mention is a huge component of this.
is that the federal government, starting under George W. Bush, continuing through Obama,
continuing through Trump, and continuing with Joe Biden,
has gotten enormously bigger and more powerful since the 90s.
Like if you're thinking about what's different then.
And the idea that the founders had of this country was a very restricted government with strong federalism.
And as the government, I mean, look, the government in D.C.
is the most powerful organization in the history of the world,
and there's no close second, or spending over $6 trillion a year.
And what happens when the centralized government gets more and more powerful
is that who controls it becomes more and more important.
If you have a very small government, it doesn't really matter if your political enemies control it.
When you have a gigantic government, it's life or death.
And I think this is a big part of the reason why, as Benny pointed out,
everything is becoming politicized now.
And it's horrible.
Politics is like the worst, most corrupt thing that human beings do.
You want that to be, you know, as removed and compartmentalized as it possibly can be.
You know, the one thing, I think I'm a point of unity for America
because I think the one thing you can all agree on is when you start Brit bashing.
Then I find the country comes together extremely well.
Dessaly, I want to end with quite an interesting moment this week
between a podcasting Joe Rogan and Tucker Carlson on Joe's podcast,
in which Tucker Carlson was asked about nuclear weapons.
And he said this.
Well, I love, by the way, that people on my side, I'll just say, I'll just admit it.
On the right, you know, have spent the last 80 years defending, dropping nuclear weapons on civilians.
Like, are you joking?
Right.
That's just like prima facie evil.
Yeah.
If you can't, well, if we hadn't done that, then this, that, the other thing, that was actually a great savings.
Like, no, it's wrong to drop nuclear weapons on people.
And if you find yourself arguing that it's a good thing to drop nuclear weapons on people, then you are evil.
Like it's not a tough one, right?
It's not a hard call for you.
It's not a hard call for me.
So that was interesting.
There's also another interesting Tucker-related moment this week where Mitch McConnell said this abbey.
Sir, I think the demonization of Ukraine began by Tucker Carlson, who in my opinion ended up where he should have been all along, which is interviewing Vladimir Putin.
And so he had an enormous audience
which convinced a lot of rank and power Republicans
that maybe this was a mistake.
So two interesting Tucker-related things there.
I mean, Destiny, on the first point,
what is your view about the morality of nuclear weapons?
Is it ever a justification?
Was it right for America to drop bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
to prevent, as they saw it at the time,
potentially millions more people being slaughtered.
Man, that's a big question.
I think that in retrospect,
I think that we view nuclear weapons
a little bit more special than they actually are.
I think that people had this idea that in World War II,
when we were fighting with Japan,
we would attack a city and 100 people would die.
We'd do a huge bombing run and maybe a couple thousand people would die.
And then the nuclear bombs dropped.
And it was 40, 60.
It was like, oh, my God, it was unprecedented and massacred.
The reality was the bombing campaigns that happened during World War II were insane.
There are huge death counts.
Dresden in a single day, I think like 25,000 people were disintegrated for the firebombings
of Tokyo.
I think in one to two days, some estimates are as high as like 130,000 people were killed.
So I don't think that nuclear weapons should get a special carve out in terms of like, was it okay
to nuke or was it not okay to nuke?
Because the question is, it really has to do with bombing in general, and the civilian cost
of any war in general. And any war is always going to incur, any war between two great powers
or any two people are going to incur a great deal of civilian death. It seems to be an unavoidable
aspect of war. And I don't think nuclear weapons are like a special part of that because
conventional bombing runs and conventional ground warfare have led to huge civilian casualties,
regardless of nuclear weapons being used or not, you know, regardless of your stance on
the Israeli Gaza war, I mean, there's a lot of civilians that are dead and are casualties of that war.
No nuclear weapons have been used whatsoever.
Right. I think it's a good point.
And just quickly, on Tucker and Mitch McConnell,
do you think McConnell had a point there?
Do you think that this weird thing where you have a big section of the Republican Party
very hostile about helping Ukraine,
which perhaps historically wouldn't have been the case?
Is that down to Tucker, do you think?
I feel like everybody, it just feels like we have these reactionary trends
where, you know, in the 90s and in the 2000,
conservatives got so mad about, you know, gay people and metrosexuals
and, you know, progressives are like, okay, well, now we don't even,
A man can be a woman and a woman can be a man, you know, screw you.
And everybody's like so reactionary in how they view things.
And now you've got the Republican Party who's like, well, you know, screw everything that the Democrats stand for.
Like, we actually think Putin is based and strong.
And America's weak and they have too much LGBT stuff.
And we're going to support every single person that is against America because we think they're stronger, better leaders.
And America shouldn't be involved in anything.
And when I look at the Ukrainian-Russian stuff, that's kind of what it feels like to me.
Like, I very rarely hear like a principal take on whether or not we should be intervening in that conflict.
It usually just comes down to some weird quasi-libertarian.
like, oh, well, we shouldn't be involved in any foreign conflict whatsoever.
And it's like, really, is that really the stance we want to take?
Is that how we would have felt in the first Gulf War?
Is that how we would have felt with Yugoslavia or Bosnia?
Is that how we would have felt with?
Is that, you know, should South Korea and North Korea be one country
that American ever did anything with?
Like, yeah, I don't know.
I don't feel like there's much, like, intellectual thought to mine
on the anti-interventionist train of thought
that's currently running to the Conservative Party.
Okay, interesting.
Benny, on that first point, the morality of nuclear war,
where do you sit with that?
Yeah, so I think also it's very wise to take a step back and look from a 35,000 perspective as to what is the industry of our federal government?
Why are the richest counties in America, eight of the top 10, richest counties in America, not Beverly Hills, not Miami, not Wall Street, all in the circumference of Washington, D.C.
What's in the circumference of Washington, D.C.? It is a rat-infested, crime-riddled, hellscape that is horrible to live, and I lived there for 15 years.
Why would all of these counties around DC be so bloody rich?
What is their industry?
Their industry is war.
And that is why in my lifetime, America has always been at war, has been at forever war.
There's always a war that is being concocted and created.
That is the industry of permanent Washington.
And that is evil.
And from a moral perspective, it is evil.
And the older you get and I have three kids, the more I think about my kids being draft age,
the more I think about like, you know, honestly, F you guys.
If you think that, like, my kids are just cannon fodder for the next, for a couple extra points on your Raytheon stock, they're not.
But what about, okay.
They're more human beings.
Okay, I hear you.
I like, you got to step back and say, like, what, why do these people continue to push for war?
Why do they hate anti-interventionism?
Okay.
What the hell are we doing in Ukraine?
Okay.
It really is a question.
Is the $60 billion going to really win the war?
But just on that one point about when America dropped the bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, because they were trying to end an existential threat.
to Western civilization, the Nazis.
Was that justified, do you think?
I think ending war is good.
I think ending war is good.
But oftentimes, again, the older you get,
the more you realize that war is not a side
of like the angels versus the devil, oftentimes.
Oftentimes war is two different devils
fighting for evil causes.
And the people who are caught in the middle
are the carnage.
And those are our children.
Those are just normally,
it's never the politician's children.
It's never anyone in power's children.
America has been led by draft dodgers for my entire life, peers.
My entire life, you've had Bill Clinton, George W. Bush,
Joe Biden is a draft dodger, John Kerry is a draft dodger.
None of these people have ever served.
Actually, a very good.
Somebody whose brother was a serving army colonel and brother-in-law was a serving army colonel,
you make a very good point.
Very quickly, Benny, just a quick yes or no.
Do you think that Tucker's been a major influence about the anti-Ukraine sentiment?
Yes.
Absolutely. And a good one, and an excellent one. And something that's really good to shake the conservative side awake and say, which country do you wish to put first?
We're running out of time. I'm sorry. I'm going to cut you. We're all running out of time. Just Dave Smith, just quickly on those two points. The morality of nuclear weapons. Where do you sit with that?
Okay. Well, I just, to correct something you said there, we did not drop the nuclear weapons to end the existential threat. That was Nazism. The Nazis had already been defeated. Adolf Hitler was already dead, and the fighting in Europe was over.
This is why five-star general Dwight Eisenhower was against them.
He said it was horrible, and he also said it was unnecessary strategically,
and that Japan was ready to negotiate a surrender.
That's an important clarification.
You're right, yeah.
Yeah.
And on the second point, look, Tucker gets a lot of credit.
He's very influential in the right wing in America.
But no, the reason why the America first movement rose up
and why the Republicans have gone more non-interventionist
is because of the 20 years of disastrous catastrophic terror wars.
Every last one of them being an utter disaster
that did nothing but slaughter hundreds of thousands of people,
cost trillions of dollars,
and leave our bravest young men blowing their brains out
by the tens of thousands.
That's what has brought about this non-interventionist streak
amongst Republican voters.
Interesting.
Guys, fantastic to talk to you.
Really enjoyed it again.
Let's do it again.
Really enjoyed it.
Thank you very much to Destiny, Benny Johnson and Dave Smith.
Thanks for having us.
Thanks, Pierce.
Thank you.
