“You’re A JOKE!” Trump Shooting Debate & Free Speech ‘Hypocrisy’ | With Cenk Uygur & Glenn Beck
Piers Morgan Uncensored
0:00 It was a joke about him being killed.
0:02 And if you want to clarify Shut up about jokes.
0:08 You can fix it.
0:08 You're a joke.
0:09 Again, because you know what he thinks Jimmy Kimmel was trying to be violent.
0:13 Can we skip this crap?
0:14 This is obviously He criticized hosting on that after the shooting.
0:20 Look at the signs these left-wing are holding up.
0:23 Do you have any regrets about what you posted or you double down on that?
0:28 I would find Rupert down on it.
0:30 I have to be real honest with you.
0:31 Don't like Charles, never have like Charles.
0:33 He's here in the 250th anniversary of us kicking your ass.
0:36 The fact that he was able to unite the Democratic
0:38 Party that had spent millions of dollars on no kings rally,
0:41 but gave him a standing ovation.
0:42 Like the hypocrisy moment there for me was worth the entire trip.
0:49 It's been a very bad week for those who
0:51 questioned the relevance of the monarchy for our modern age.
0:53 It's been a very good week for Britain,
0:55 the United States, and for King Charles, and indeed President Trump.
0:58 In four short days, the monarch has done more to repair the strained
1:02 special relationship between the two countries
1:04 than entire legions of diplomats and bureaucrats.
1:06 And he's done it while managing
1:08 to appeal simultaneously to conservatives, liberals,
1:11 royal bashers, monarchists, and most importantly of all,
1:14 to the president himself.
1:15 There's been much debate about the politics, and we'll get into that.
1:18 But my favorite discovery this week is that King Charles is genuinely hilarious.
1:23 I cannot help noticing the readjustments to the East Wing, Mr.
1:29 President.
1:30 Um following your visit to Windsor Castle last year.
1:35 And I'm sorry to say that we British, of course,
1:37 made our own small attempt at real
1:40 estate redevelopment of the White House in 1814.
1:47 [laughter] You recently commented, Mr.
1:47 President, that if it were not for the United States,
1:50 European countries would be speaking German.
1:54 Dare I say that if it wasn't for us, you'd be speaking French.
2:00 As Oscar Wilde said, we have really everything in common with America nowadays,
2:06 except of course language.
2:11 Now, as you may know, when I address my own Parliament at Westminster,
2:16 we still follow an age-old tradition and take a member of Parliament hostage.
2:24 Holding him or her at Buckingham Palace until I am safely returned.
2:33 These days, we we look after our guests rather well,
2:37 to the point that they often do not want to leave.
2:44 I don't know, Mr.
2:45 Speaker, if there are were any volunteers for that role here today.
2:51 Well, it might seem a little strange to kick off America's
2:53 250th anniversary celebrations by honoring the very crown they kicked out.
2:58 But as Trump himself explained, you can take the Brits off American soil,
3:01 but all the ICE agents in the world couldn't remove us from the American soul.
3:06 Long before Americans had a nation or a constitution,
3:10 we first had a culture, a character, and a creed.
3:15 Before we ever proclaimed our independence,
3:17 Americans carried within us the rarest of gifts,
3:22 moral courage, and it came from a small but mighty kingdom from across the sea.
3:31 Well, for the Brits, that was really the whole point of this tour.
3:33 Nothing better represents continuity than the monarchy.
3:36 The fact is that the two countries are stronger together,
3:39 and they will remain stronger together,
3:41 no matter who's in the White House and who's in number 10.
3:44 In just a few months,
3:45 President Trump has insulted Brits who died in Afghanistan,
3:48 savaged the Prime Minister as weak, ridiculed the Royal Navy as nonexistent,
3:52 and written off Britain's warships as toys.
3:54 All of this while demanding Britain's weak leader sends his nonexistent
3:58 navy and his toy warships to support the war in Iran.
4:01 The king was able to make effortlessly make it all
4:03 feel like small beer without even mentioning it at all.
4:07 That takes some diplomatic skill.
4:09 And so does giving the US and the president a subtle lesson
4:12 on democratic checks and balances without
4:14 sending said president into a tailspin.
4:18 The US Supreme Court Historical Society has calculated that Magna Carta
4:25 is cited in at least 160 Supreme Court cases in 1789.
4:33 Not least as the foundation of the principle
4:36 that executive power is subject to checks and balances.
4:43 [applause] Well, all this charm and aura and wit has clearly impressed Trump,
4:55 who as we know reveres the royals.
4:57 He'll be well aware that some of his critics believe he quite like to be one.
5:01 Two kings, the White House posted yesterday in what
5:03 could be interpreted as a classic Trumpian troll.
5:06 But as we know, practical jokes can get out of hand.
5:09 And Trump's decision to put his own face on the US anniversary
5:12 passport and coinage will do little to quell the no kings movement.
5:16 If this tour shows anything, Mr.
5:18 President, it's that Brits do royalty best.
5:21 And judging by the public reaction,
5:22 if America is going to have a king again anytime soon,
5:25 well, it might be King Charles.
5:28 Well, joining me on the panel to discuss all this is Clay Travis,
5:30 the founder of Outkick.
5:32 Cenk Uygur, the founder and CEO of The Young Turks.
5:34 Mike Nellis, Democratic strategist and host of Endless Urgency.
5:38 And Ben Ferguson, co-host of The Verdict with Ted Cruz.
5:41 Well, welcome to all of you.
5:42 I'm just wondering, given the extraordinary united
5:46 scenes we witnessed in United States Congress,
5:48 where left and right came together as one in roaring ovations for my king,
5:55 and what could have been your king if you hadn't been so reckless 250 years ago.
5:59 Whether this panel, this panel so ideologically opposed to each other,
6:04 so used to shouting at each other, could one just come together right now as one
6:10 and just put a virtual hug around each other.
6:13 Am I hoping for too much, gentlemen?
6:17 I think it was a great moment.
6:21 [laughter] It was nice.
6:22 Uh I think you all look a bit shocked by You
6:25 all look a bit shocked by the mere notion of that.
6:27 Clay Travis, let me start with you then.
6:29 It was an amazing spectacle.
6:31 I mean, I've not seen King Charles either as king or prince
6:35 make a speech as powerful as the one he made to Congress,
6:38 or one as funny as the one he made at the state dinner last night.
6:41 So, I think he's really stepped up here when, my god,
6:44 my country needed somebody to, given how
6:47 bad the relationships got in recent months.
6:49 Um but I also felt that there was a It was a Well,
6:54 there was a unit as I'm trying to say between everybody in Congress,
6:57 a rare unity which everyone's picked up
6:59 on, where you don't often see a united Congress, but they were for the king.
7:06 Well, I appreciate Democrats standing for kings after deciding that no kings
7:10 was the fabric of their entire opposition to Trump over the last year.
7:13 So, standing ovation for an actual king was
7:16 what they would stand up for [laughter] anything.
7:19 Uh it was it was a lot of fun.
7:21 But look, what I First of all, I had no idea Prince Charles is this funny.
7:25 And I watched The Crown.
7:26 I will defend myself by saying my wife got me to watch The Crown,
7:30 but it's a very, very good show.
7:32 And what I liked about it, Piers, was a recognition of Again,
7:36 he's here in the 250th anniversary of us kicking your ass,
7:40 but he's here and he's referencing this the Boston Tea Party,
7:45 the untimely 1814 burning of the of the White House.
7:49 Um of these moments.
7:53 And And like he said that we might
7:55 be speaking French but for the Brits coming over
7:58 during the French and Indian War and and all
8:00 of the the the colonial aspects of that.
8:03 I'm a history nerd.
8:04 And so, sometimes I think in the immediate moments of trying
8:08 to analyze everything that happened in the last 24 hours,
8:11 we often lose the sweep, the majesty, the majesty,
8:15 the significance of the historical resonance that 50 years from now,
8:19 100 years from now, when none of us are
8:21 around and people are still studying the history of today,
8:25 uh will be seen in the context of the longer arc of history.
8:28 And so, I It was really well done.
8:31 And And And I'm not just saying this, Piers,
8:33 because I back before everybody knew that your DNA
8:36 was harvested and would be stored forever,
8:38 I did the 23andMe or whatever the heck it was called.
8:42 And all of my ancestors were British and Irish.
8:46 So, So, when you look at it from a thousand or 1,500 year perspective,
8:51 many of us have a lot more in common with England
8:54 than maybe we choose to acknowledge on a day-to-day basis.
8:58 Well, Cenk Uygur, I actually had
9:00 a text exchange with the president this morning.
9:03 I'm sure that you did, too, right?
9:04 Um but it it was just asking how he felt yesterday yesterday had gone.
9:09 And he replied he's a great guy, talking about King Charles,
9:12 and had a he saw a wonderful evening.
9:13 He'll be back tomorrow morning to say goodbye.
9:16 Last night was special.
9:17 President DJT.
9:19 I I think it would have been to him because he has
9:23 often said to me that he remembers watching the coronation in 1953,
9:28 sitting on his mother's knee in New
9:30 York watching this first ever global televised event.
9:34 And I think the idea of him now hosting a British monarch
9:39 at the White House where he is the current occupant as president,
9:43 for Trump actually, on a personal, emotional, family level, is a massive deal.
9:49 And if it calms him down a bit from what
9:52 has been a pretty incendiary few months, I'm all in favor.
9:56 What are your thoughts?
9:59 First of all, I'm enjoying the idea
10:01 of me and Trump having a texting relationship.
10:04 Um [laughter] that would be hilarious.
10:07 It would be.
10:08 we ever got Yeah, let alone if we ever got together and President debated.
10:13 Now, that would be fun.
10:14 Uh so, first big ups to England and the UK.
10:19 Uh King Charles did great.
10:20 Way to represent, okay?
10:22 And it was nice to have a head of state who isn't a maniac.
10:25 So, that was like reassuring for the planet a little bit.
10:28 He's not technically, you know, you guys know how the monarchy works.
10:32 It's kind of From an American perspective,
10:34 it's kind of pointless, but hey, you know what?
10:36 He's a good spokesman for it.
10:37 Okay, so God bless.
10:39 Um but look, the main thing that I thought is
10:42 we got 250 years after our independence from these guys,
10:46 we're wonderful friends and allies.
10:47 And I hope that's exactly how we are
10:49 with Israel 250 years after our independence from them,
10:53 which would be hopefully 250 years from now.
10:56 So, it turns out being an independent nation is a wonderful thing.
11:01 And And then by the way, later we can be wonderful allies, okay?
11:06 But first, we need our independence from every country,
11:08 including the one ruling us today.
11:12 Ben Ferguson, there there were a number of quite strong
11:16 opinions that the King expressed on behalf of the government.
11:19 So, I think it's important to clarify
11:21 to an American audience in particular that when
11:24 the King speaks at a function like the the Congress or whatever it may be,
11:29 he does so on behalf of the UK government.
11:31 So, they help him write certain lines and so on.
11:34 But there were things in there.
11:35 I mean, let's we got a little mashup
11:37 of some of the more potentially contentious things he said.
11:40 If you're an American,
11:41 particularly American Republican like you, let's take a listen.
11:46 In both of our countries, it is the very fact of our vibrant,
11:51 diverse, and free societies that gives us our collective strength,
11:58 including to support victims of some of the ills
12:02 that so tragically exist in both our societies today.
12:06 In the immediate aftermath of 9/11,
12:09 when NATO invoked Article 5 for the first time,
12:14 and the United Nations Security Council was united in the face of terror,
12:19 we answered the call together.
12:22 Today, Mr.
12:22 Speaker, that same unyielding resolve is needed
12:27 for the defense of Ukraine and her most courageous people.
12:34 From the depths of the Atlantic
12:38 to the disastrously melting ice caps of the Arctic,
12:42 the commitment and expertise of the United States Armed
12:45 Forces and its allies lie at the heart of NATO.
12:51 Now, sometimes, Ben, you know, it's it's not what you're saying,
12:54 it's the way you say it can avoid a lot of who-ha.
12:58 You know, on the face of it,
12:59 the King of my country coming over and sort of lecturing Congress,
13:04 as some might categorize it, about the importance of NATO,
13:07 and President Trump has indicated he wants to dismantle it,
13:10 reminding people that after 9/11 NATO, including Britain,
13:15 were right there shoulder to shoulder with America.
13:17 In fact, I'm actually doing the show
13:19 from the AP down right next to the 9/11 Memorial,
13:24 where King Charles and Queen Camilla are
13:26 currently laying flowers with the New York Mayor,
13:29 Eric Adams, and that's a reminder that Britain
13:32 was shoulder to shoulder when we were asked then.
13:34 There It's been a different situation with Iran, and we can come to that.
13:38 But then also, he was he was emphatic about support needed ongoing for Ukraine,
13:43 which is not hugely popular now with the conservative right here.
13:46 And of course, he he talked about climate change in a way that again,
13:50 people on the conservative right would would maybe naturally bristle at.
13:53 So, my point being he made a few, you know,
13:56 points that could under normal circumstances,
13:58 had they come out of a politician's mouth,
14:00 have engendered a lot more angry response perhaps than they got,
14:05 but it was taken in the right spirit because of the way that he phrased it.
14:08 Would you agree?
14:10 I think it was taken the way it was taken and no one
14:12 really reacted because they know he really
14:14 doesn't have any power on those issues.
14:15 It's Starmer, right?
14:16 Like this is the guy that I I look at the King's visit is is
14:20 no different than Roger Federer being a great
14:22 spokesperson for Rolex or Rory McIlroy for Rolex.
14:25 They're great ambassadors.
14:27 They do a great job.
14:28 They don't take many risks.
14:30 They smile.
14:30 They look good on TV.
14:32 And look, if there's anyone that should be praised right now,
14:34 it's this dude's speechwriters.
14:36 Whoever they hired, give them a raise.
14:39 Pay them double because I met him when he came
14:41 in '05 when when when in the second Bush administration.
14:44 He was not funny then.
14:45 Like this is a this is a brilliant move.
14:48 Whoever's working on the PR, I liked seeing him here.
14:51 I also liked seeing the fact that there was this moment where you can say, "Hey,
14:55 we may disagree politically on a lot of things right now because you guys
14:58 have got someone we think is a little crazy in the UK in Parliament,
15:01 the Labour Party, and we're going to outlast that, right?" And there
15:05 may be some that say the same thing about Donald Trump,
15:07 that hey, we'll get another liberal Democrat woke person there,
15:09 we'll get along with them better.
15:11 And so then we'll get back to green new deals and and and all of that.
15:15 But ultimately, I do find comfort in the fact that the US has an ally.
15:21 We're not agreeing right now on a lot of issues.
15:23 That's okay.
15:24 That's politics.
15:26 You know, I also love the fact that he was able to unite
15:29 the Democratic Party that had spent millions of dollars on no kings rally,
15:32 but gave him a standing ovation.
15:34 Like the hypocrisy moment there for me was worth the entire trip.
15:38 That they're like, "We have no kings.
15:39 We said no to kings." BUT OH, WE GOT A KING HERE TODAY.
15:42 And And Democrats, by the way,
15:43 were clamoring for any event that he was going to be attending.
15:47 They wanted to go to the night at at the garden party at the UK Embassy.
15:50 They were begging for tickets.
15:51 So, for a party that says they said no to no kings,
15:54 they sure as hell wanted to hang out
15:55 with the King for the last 48 hours in Washington, D.C.
15:58 Hypocrisy 101.
15:59 I love both the points coming out of this trip.
16:02 Well, I'm going to come to Mike Nellis to respond to that.
16:05 But before I do, you know, what did you make of the White House, Ben,
16:08 putting out a picture of King Charles
16:10 and President Trump with the headline two two kings.
16:14 Yeah, yeah.
16:14 Whoever did that in the PR shop Yeah,
16:18 whoever did that in the PR shop at the White House,
16:19 like they also deserve a raise because it's trolling 101.
16:23 It's hysterical.
16:24 It was mocking the Democrats with no kings.
16:26 It's a it's And of course, their heads exploded on social media.
16:30 He's going to try to stay in power for longer.
16:32 By the way, you're an idiot.
16:33 No, he's not.
16:34 He's trying to become a king again.
16:36 This is trolling you guys that are insane.
16:38 He's not a king.
16:39 We don't have a king in America.
16:41 We don't need a Roger Federer or Rory McIlroy for Rolex, okay?
16:45 Like we're the United States of America.
16:46 You sometimes you win, sometimes you lose.
16:49 That's how it works here, but we don't have kings here.
16:51 So, I agree.
16:51 We have no kings in America.
16:52 Democrats should be happy.
16:56 Mike Nellis, were you happy with Democrats
16:59 in Congress roaring on the King of my country?
17:04 I think it was fine.
17:05 I mean, I agree with something that Ben said,
17:07 which is that the PR team that wrote that speech did a really good job.
17:10 And maybe when Ben and Clay are looking for talking points to attack Democrats,
17:13 they should hire that PR team instead of the one
17:15 that's telling them to make the same joke
17:16 about no kings day because I don't think that's
17:18 going to get anywhere [laughter] with the American people.
17:21 That is a really, really great joke.
17:23 No, it's it was it was a great joke.
17:25 It was a great joke when I heard it.
17:27 No, no, no.
17:27 It was a great joke when I heard it the first time yesterday,
17:30 and it wasn't a great joke a thousand times later
17:31 cuz it's the only thing that you guys have right now.
17:34 So, it's just sort of silly to me that you
17:35 guys are going to repeat it over and over again.
17:36 But look, somebody said it earlier that I have to well,
17:41 I have to say I have to say, Mike, No, I didn't interrupt these guys.
17:44 Can I get a chance to make my point?
17:45 Like Well, yeah, but I would just say, Mike, on that point, if if the purpose,
17:50 as Ben Ferguson said, was to troll the libs, you are sounding deeply trolled.
17:55 No, I'm not I'm not deeply trolled.
17:57 I mean, I think the point that I was No,
17:59 I think the point that I was going to make though is somebody said
18:01 earlier that Donald Trump was loving this whole
18:03 thing over the last couple of days,
18:04 which of course he is.
18:05 Like he loves it because he's at the center of the attention.
18:07 He gets the idea of of hosting the King of England,
18:10 which makes him feel important.
18:11 But nothing that's happened in Washington in the last couple
18:13 of days has anything to do with the average American.
18:16 And people are struggling right now, so they watch a lavish ball.
18:19 Donald Trump's talking about building his ballroom now with taxpayer dollars,
18:22 thanks to Republican members of Congress.
18:24 I think people are frustrated when they see this stuff.
18:25 So, I thought King Charles did a great job.
18:27 I thought it was great to have a real diplomat here,
18:29 give a good speech that actually made a little bit of sense
18:32 and articulated the values I think the vast majority of Americans have.
18:35 But I'd like to see this country get
18:36 back to the actual work of improving this economy.
18:39 And that's what I care about more than anything else.
18:43 Clay, let's just switch gears slightly to this huge event,
18:47 which has already the news agenda's moved on, which
18:49 indicates just how crazy the news agenda is these days.
18:53 But the White House Correspondents Dinner
18:54 with this appalling latest assassination attempt,
18:57 which could have been an absolute disaster and massacre.
19:01 You have been criticized and praised, I have to say,
19:04 probably in equal measure for posting on X
19:07 after leaving the dinner after the shooting,
19:09 leaving the White House Correspondents Dinner,
19:11 and look at the signs these left-wing C U N T's are holding up outside.
19:16 And the image showed protesters holding signs saying "Death to tyrants." Now,
19:21 given all the debate about rhetoric and the rest of it,
19:25 obviously, you fired that off when you were genuinely angry,
19:28 and I don't blame you.
19:29 I think people are holding up signs saying "Death to tyrants"
19:32 when someone's literally trying to kill half of the cabinet,
19:36 as appeared to be the mission there.
19:38 Is, you know, extremely triggering, I would think,
19:41 for for a lot of people that were guests
19:43 there and were fearing for what may be happening.
19:46 Do you have any regrets about what you posted, or do you double down on that?
19:52 I would quite droop all down on it.
19:54 One of those signs said death to all of them.
19:56 In addition to death to tyrants.
20:00 No, I mean I I if you look on the right side there, death to all of them.
20:03 That's what I said that's what I saw immediately
20:05 when I came out of the White House Correspondents Dinner.
20:08 And I think unfortunately those two protesters are
20:11 emblematic of the motivations that this 31-year-old highly educated
20:17 two family household two parent household Democrat put
20:21 in place to justify trying to kill President Trump.
20:25 He accepted the rhetoric of these guys as justification.
20:29 He thought that he was a hero.
20:31 And look Ben Piers we're talking about the history
20:33 of of the United States and Great Britain.
20:36 I'm reading Rick Atkinson's seminal trilogy right now about
20:40 World War II and the partnership between United States,
20:43 Britain, and other democracies to defeat Adolf Hitler.
20:47 You know, before Trump we used to sometimes sit
20:49 around have a few drinks and you would say, "Hey,
20:51 if you could go back in time, would you kill baby Hitler,
20:53 right?" I mean that was a real debate that people would have.
20:56 And you would answer the question one way or the other.
20:59 For 10 years Democrats have been saying that Trump is Hitler,
21:03 that he's an authoritarian fascist dictator.
21:06 And that might just be a rhetorical argument for some people.
21:13 But this guy, I mean he's kind of an interesting test case.
21:16 He went on Twitter from mostly posting about playing
21:18 video games and obviously being a bit of a science
21:21 nerd to being willing to die trying to kill
21:24 as many people from the Republican Party as possible.
21:27 And let me say this Piers, I was there too.
21:29 So I I understand his motivation.
21:31 It didn't surprise me.
21:32 Supreme Court the Secret Service performance was indefensibly bad.
21:37 And so I don't know why more people aren't talking about this.
21:41 On video a guy comes running full speed right
21:45 by the guys who were supposed to be stopping him.
21:48 According to the indictment five shots were fired by the Secret Service.
21:53 They didn't hit the guy.
21:54 They may have hit another Secret Service agent.
21:56 We're not even exactly sure who did.
21:59 And the guy might have gotten all the way down to the ballroom.
22:01 We don't know if he hadn't tripped and fell.
22:04 I mean in the wake of Butler,
22:06 in the wake of West Palm Beach, and now we got Washington D.C.
22:09 Someone else for sure in the next two and a half
22:12 years is going to try and kill President Trump.
22:14 And I actually think the biggest story coming out of this is
22:17 our Secret Service is completely incompetent
22:20 at being able to protect the president.
22:22 I'm glad this wasn't some sort of trained
22:24 assassin cabal because he would be dead.
22:27 Trump would.
22:27 And and Piers, I said this yesterday on my radio show President Trump is
22:31 alive today in spite of the Secret Service not because of the Secret Service.
22:37 And that is troubling going forward no matter who the president
22:40 is or who people in high positions of power are.
22:43 And I say that as someone who saw it unfold there on Saturday night.
22:49 Yeah, I completely I think it is being
22:51 under said this because if you think about it,
22:55 the Butler, Pennsylvania shooting where he
22:57 actually got hit and somebody got killed.
23:00 The the first place surely the Secret Service would check nobody was
23:04 hiding would be a rooftop 125 yards away from the stage, right?
23:09 The the and then the golf course one which I still find I scratch my head about.
23:13 This is somebody who hid in a bush at a spot
23:17 on Trump's own golf course where he regularly played where
23:20 the media would go to that very spot because it
23:23 gave them ironically the cleanest shot of the president playing golf.
23:27 And if it hadn't been for one Secret Service agent who
23:29 spotted the barrel of this rifle coming out of the bush,
23:32 Trump would probably been killed that day.
23:34 And now third time you have this guy fired at him then, missed him.
23:38 The only reason we caught him was because a woman
23:41 in the parking lot wrote down his license plate number.
23:46 The guy had the car [laughter] drove away and was like 50 miles away.
23:49 This is incom- I'm surprised it's infuriating that nobody's talking about this.
23:55 I agree.
23:55 The the point to finish my point okay,
23:58 you got the rooftop would be the first place you'd check.
24:00 That part of his golf course would be
24:02 the second place you'd check, but they didn't.
24:04 And and here you've got a a guy who's checked
24:07 himself into the hotel on the Friday armed to the teeth.
24:12 And you're like how how is that even possible?
24:15 This is where you're wrong.
24:16 Let me give you an example.
24:17 I wish I had said I go to the Atlanta Braves baseball team,
24:22 Major League Baseball.
24:23 My kids are monster fans.
24:25 I'm a fan.
24:26 There is a hotel with rooms that overlook the stadium.
24:30 The Atlanta Braves security comes and checks the rooms to make sure
24:35 you don't have guns in those rooms before every Atlanta Braves baseball game.
24:42 How the hell do the Atlanta Braves have
24:43 better security than the president of the United States?
24:47 They didn't go around to the hotel rooms and check and see,
24:50 "Hey let me make sure that there's no one with guns
24:53 or God forbid bombs staying in this hotel." It's it's crazy to me.
24:58 Yeah.
24:58 Piers, let me say one other thing about this that I think is really shocking.
25:02 And I hope there's bipartisanship on this.
25:05 This is the problem with government work and bureaucracy.
25:09 The Secret Service should be the best of the best.
25:13 There has been far too much DEI in there.
25:16 It puts Democrats at risk when they're at leadership.
25:20 I'm going to say you can argue that the Okay.
25:24 I'm going to I'm going to go back to They should not exist.
25:30 We should have the baddest ass special force badasses on the planet.
25:34 We should have the best of the best
25:36 and and and there is data that backs up what I'm saying
25:40 that we had far too much DEI in hiring not
25:42 only at the Secret Service but also at the FBI.
25:45 And we had people that should never have been in positions of power there.
25:48 Now, I say this as someone that there's Secret
25:50 Service that's still protecting every living president including Democrats.
25:55 It is far too easy to get close
25:56 to a Democrat and or Republican former president,
25:59 current president, their family members.
26:02 And and there needs to be a massive overhaul.
26:04 I don't want anyone Barack Obama Joe Biden Bill Clinton the list goes on to have
26:11 this be this easy to go after a president of the United States of America.
26:15 And part of this is clearly a massive failure.
26:19 And it's because of bureaucracy.
26:21 You should have the best of the best.
26:22 They should be the I mean SEAL Team Six should be
26:25 immediately the first that you think of to come in here.
26:28 You're dealing with terrorists around the world
26:30 and you're dealing with these types of individuals.
26:32 And what you have is a bureaucratic agency
26:35 that should look nothing like a bureaucratic agency.
26:38 So I hope that Democrats and Republicans will say together this has got to be
26:42 changed because this is far too many shots being taken at a current president.
26:46 And by the way there will be a Democratic president.
26:49 I want them to have the baddest ass people around them.
26:52 No matter who they are.
26:54 And if you guys get a Kamala Harris in there I want them to be safe as they
26:57 can possibly be everywhere they go including their staff
27:01 including their cabinet members including the vice president.
27:04 I don't care about politics.
27:06 They need to be safe and clearly right now there's a massive lapse.
27:09 Can I can I can I jump in here for a second because I Okay.
27:13 Okay.
27:14 Mine not his first then say yeah.
27:16 Yeah, I mean look I I agree that the Secret Service should
27:18 be the best of the best and I think we should wait
27:20 to find out what actually happened instead of making assumptions based
27:23 on the limited information that we have right now about what happened Saturday.
27:28 Congratulations.
27:29 Congratulations.
27:29 You can look at a video Ben, but Donald Trump and the rest of the administration
27:32 are saying the Secret Service did their job.
27:34 So why Before you guys do what you always do, you blame it on DEI.
27:38 When the plane crashed just a few weeks
27:40 after Donald Trump was inaugurated, I was in D.C.
27:42 that day.
27:43 They blamed it on DEI too.
27:44 So it's just ridiculous.
27:46 Let's figure out what actually happened and then make a determination.
27:50 They fired five times Mike and missed him.
27:52 And may have hit another Secret Service agent.
27:55 They may have only captured him because he tripped and fell.
27:57 Why don't you just wait and let the people whose job it is to figure out what
28:00 happened actually figure it out instead of just making
28:02 an assumption and going back to the talking points.
28:05 Like it's just it's ridiculous.
28:06 Let law enforcement do their and let them make their is not a talking point.
28:10 Us wanting to protect Democratic is not a talking point.
28:14 The problem is you guys want to make assumptions about everything.
28:17 Like it's JUST IT'S BUT MIKE MIKE WAIT WAIT WHAT GRADE
28:22 WOULD YOU GIVE THE SECRET Service over the last two years?
28:25 Would you give them an A or a B or a C?
28:29 No no no no no.
28:29 I wouldn't give them an A.
28:30 I'm not saying the Secret Service is doing a good job,
28:32 but I want I don't know what I would give them.
28:35 I don't have access to the information.
28:37 The guy on THE ROOF A GUY ON THE ROOF SHOOTING the president and no
28:40 one watching that roof you can't grade that as an This is why I DEI.
28:46 YOU GUYS ARE OBSESSED WITH NO, YOU SEE YOU'RE BLAMING IT ON DEI.
28:49 YOU DON'T HAVE ANYTHING TO BACK that up.
28:50 It's just lazy.
28:51 guys have the same three talking points.
28:53 Like it's just so unbelievably lazy.
28:55 Get some new material.
28:57 How would you fix it What would you call Educate Tell me
28:59 why what you would do to explain it what happened in Butler
29:03 what happened the other night what happened where people go to take
29:07 pictures the damn place they take pictures of president playing golf.
29:10 What Teach me.
29:12 Tell me in Listen how would you fix it then?
29:15 No.
29:16 Ben clearly there were breakdowns in security
29:18 and they should be fixed by people who
29:19 know what the hell they're talking about not
29:21 four political commentators on Piers Morgan's YouTube show.
29:23 That's the point that I'm making.
29:24 You come on here with a cheap political talking point to blame
29:27 it on DEI when you don't know anything that's going on.
29:29 You don't know anything about security.
29:31 Clay doesn't know anything about security neither do I.
29:33 Stop making assumptions.
29:34 I SAW WOMEN ON STAGE TO BE HONEST OKAY GUYS DONALD Trump talk away.
29:40 Donald Trump talk away.
29:41 should be in charge of You want SEAL Team Six to do that.
29:44 SEAL Team SEAL TEAM SIX'S JOB.
29:46 SEAL TEAM SIX'S JOB IS TO GO out there and kill bad guys.
29:49 That's what they're trained to do.
29:50 Their job is not to protect the president of the United States.
29:53 badasses.
29:53 Why would you not want the best people to protect and kill people?
29:58 going out there and killing evil people.
30:00 I want them to go find Bin Laden.
30:01 You don't want them to protect THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES?
30:03 AMAZING.
30:04 Let me jump in.
30:04 Let me jump in, please.
30:05 I want to bring in Cenk,
30:06 who's been waiting unusually patiently, because this segues Cenk for me.
30:10 And by all means join in that debate.
30:13 But it also segues into this debate about left-right political violence.
30:17 Now, the Center for Strategic and International
30:20 Studies reported last September that in recent years the US has seen an increase
30:25 in the number of left-wing terrorism attacks and plots.
30:28 And in fact, for the first time in many years,
30:31 2025, in fact the first time in 30 years,
30:35 was the first year when left-wing terrorist
30:37 attacks outnumbered those from the violent far right.
30:41 So, let's not get into, you know, who's worse.
30:44 Let's just say there's been a lot of political violence on both sides.
30:48 But why is political violence from the left surging in the way that it is?
30:53 And I was particularly concerned about this guy's twisted manifesto,
30:57 because there were no red flags about him,
30:59 no criminal record, nothing to suggest any violence in him at all.
31:04 He's a teacher.
31:05 He just won an award few months ago, right?
31:08 What would have driven this guy?
31:09 And then you read the rhetoric of his manifesto,
31:12 as he put it, and you're seeing I'm talking points.
31:16 You're seeing a lot of the talking points that are drummed
31:19 out on the left quite regularly have somehow permeated into his brain,
31:24 a substantial brain by all accounts, very smart guy,
31:28 and they've made him get a train right across America,
31:31 book himself into a hotel,
31:33 and then and then try and attempt mass murder,
31:36 which is what was on his on his mind.
31:38 I And my question for you, Cenk,
31:39 is park right-wing political violence to one side for a moment.
31:44 I'm not pretending they don't have a similar issue,
31:46 and that it hasn't been worse historically in the last 30 years.
31:49 Focus just for this on this particular guy and coming off the back of a year
31:55 where left-wing political violence has overtaken right-wing
31:59 violence for the first time in three decades.
32:01 What is happening here, and how do we stop it?
32:06 Yeah, I I reject all of the framing in this conversation.
32:10 So, but let me address the the heart of the matter
32:12 and then this nonsense talking point that Ben had.
32:15 Um so, number one, I abhor violence.
32:18 Political violence is intellectual surrender.
32:21 That's saying I'm pathetic, I don't know how to win a debate,
32:24 so I'll resort to being a savage and doing uh violence or terrorism instead.
32:30 So, I hate it on the right, I hate it on the left.
32:33 Uh and if you're a person who is for peace, especially if you're on the left,
32:37 and our movement is for peace and non-violence, well,
32:40 then if you do violence, by definition, you're not one of us.
32:43 Okay, we banish you,
32:44 and you don't represent a single person other than your stupid ass.
32:49 Okay?
32:50 So, now I won't put right-wing violence aside,
32:53 because as you just said, historically,
32:56 right-wing violence has been much more severe.
32:58 But that's okay.
32:59 I'm not trying to blame people.
33:00 I'm trying to get past it.
33:02 Okay?
33:02 For both sides, for God's sake, what is violence going to solve?
33:06 All it's going to create is more violence.
33:09 And why are we killing each other?
33:10 This doesn't make any sense at all.
33:12 We should be resolving this in an American way,
33:14 and that's through debate and politics
33:16 and winning the day through your arguments.
33:19 So, and and both sides have gotten out of hand.
33:23 But who on the left are there people egging on violence?
33:27 I literally never see that, right?
33:29 That doesn't mean that it doesn't exist.
33:32 And now I'm disheartened to see people on the left doing it.
33:36 On the right, we all know Donald Trump has historically said violence is great,
33:40 that you should beat up people who he
33:41 disagrees with, and he'll pay the legal costs.
33:44 And Donald Trump isn't encourages kind of rhetoric from day one.
33:48 And and I don't think it's healthy.
33:49 I don't think it's healthy for him or for anyone else.
33:52 Now, I do think Well, hang on.
33:55 Hang on.
33:55 Hang on.
33:56 Hang on.
33:57 Hang on.
33:57 On that point I know I know it's relevant to what you just said,
34:00 cuz we actually have a mashup of Donald
34:03 Trump talking in the way that you're describing.
34:06 Let's just watch this.
34:07 Knock the crap out of them, would you?
34:09 Seriously.
34:12 [cheering] Okay?
34:12 Just knock the hell I promise you I will pay for the legal fees, I promise.
34:17 And we have the enemy from within.
34:19 And the enemy from within, in my opinion,
34:21 is more dangerous than China, Russia, and all these countries.
34:24 Now, if I don't get elected,
34:26 it's going to be a bloodbath for the whole That's going to be the least of it.
34:30 It's going to be a bloodbath for the country.
34:31 For those who have been wronged and betrayed,
34:34 of which there are many people out there that have been wronged and betrayed,
34:37 I am your retribution.
34:39 We will take care of them.
34:43 [cheering]
34:41 We pledge to you that we will root out the communist, Marxist, fascist,
34:48 and the radical left thugs that live
34:50 like vermin within the confines of our country.
34:53 You know what they used to do to guys
34:55 like that when they were in a place like this?
34:57 They'd be carried out on a stretcher, folks.
35:01 Like to punch them in the face, I'll tell you.
35:03 She's a radical war hawk.
35:06 Let's put her with a rifle standing
35:07 there with nine barrels shooting at her, okay?
35:10 Let's see how she feels about it.
35:12 You know, when the guns are trained on her face.
35:15 You know, they're all war hawks when they're sitting
35:17 in Washington in a nice building saying, "Oh, gee willikers,
35:20 let's uh send let's send 10,000 troops right into the mouth of the enemy." Now,
35:28 now that substantiates the point you're making, uh Cenk.
35:34 Yeah, you see, look, that that is so unhelpful, including the Donald Trump.
35:39 There's one clip in there that isn't quite right.
35:41 The bloodbath clip was about the economy, not about violence.
35:45 Uh but the rest of it is purely about violence.
35:47 And in fact, that last one was a rhetorical shot at chicken hawks.
35:52 And so, if he just left it at they're hypocritical, there's no problem.
35:57 But now, look at what he said.
35:58 If they're going to send in troops to the Middle East,
36:01 they should have guns pointed at their face.
36:02 Now, he's sending in troops to the Middle East,
36:05 and that's why you shouldn't talk like that, cuz it encourages violence overall.
36:09 Now, to the Secret Service, look, guys,
36:11 they've had tremendous failures, and I have a ton of questions.
36:15 And a lot of people on the left
36:16 and the right have a ton of questions about their performance,
36:19 including, by the way, the guy who failed miserably in Butler,
36:23 Pennsylvania, the head of the Secret
36:26 Service in that particular location and date,
36:30 has now been promoted to the head of the Secret Service.
36:32 That is a very curious, bizarre thing.
36:34 And by the way, if you listen to Ben talk,
36:36 you would think that the Secret Service is all minorities and women.
36:39 No, it's overwhelmingly white males.
36:42 So, I don't Why are you blaming white males and Is that your problem with DEI,
36:46 that we're hiring too many white people or too many men?
36:49 So, the guy who got promoted is also a white male.
36:51 I think the real question isn't
36:53 this distraction about identity politics and culture wars.
36:56 The real question is what the hell is going on?
37:00 Why did they let him take that shot in Butler?
37:02 Why did they move the photographers into place to get the exact right shot?
37:06 There's a lot of people on the right as well as the left going that Butler,
37:09 Pennsylvania, shooting makes no sense at all.
37:12 And we're not saying we know who did it and what what happened.
37:15 What we're asking is why isn't
37:17 our government care about shooting of the president?
37:20 Why doesn't Trump care?
37:21 Trump never talks about it.
37:23 Normally, Trump would be going crazy about what a hero he is, etc.
37:27 When I when I talk about bureaucracy and DEI, it's not just women.
37:30 There's social promotion of men of certain
37:34 whether it's skin color or political beliefs.
37:36 You've made that The Secret Service is overwhelmingly white males.
37:40 So, like, is it I I Let me at least finish what I'm saying.
37:43 If you're getting promoted because you're a bureaucrat,
37:46 because you're a liberal white guy, okay?
37:49 I think there's DEI for liberal white guys in the Secret Service.
37:54 I MIGHT GOD, IT'S THERE'S NO BALANCE OF REASON.
37:57 I BELIEVE I absolutely believe that you guys are getting creamed
38:02 I'm going to I'm going to I'm going to finish my point.
38:05 I'm going to finish what I was saying.
38:06 Nothing but culture war crap.
38:10 I'm going to I'm going to I'm going to finish my point.
38:13 I didn't interrupt you on when you were saying I listened to what you said.
38:16 I didn't interrupt Okay.
38:22 So, let me finish my point.
38:23 I'm literally I'm literally going to finish what I said,
38:28 and I'll go back to the core point here.
38:30 If you run the Secret Service the way it's being run now,
38:33 it will continue to be a failure.
38:35 There needs to be a massive overhaul
38:37 of the Secret Service for Democrats and Republicans.
38:40 The way that it's being done now is not working.
38:43 When you've got a guy that can run through, have multiple shoot at him,
38:46 and he not get hit by what's supposed to be the best
38:49 security force for a president of the United States of America,
38:52 whether they're Democrat or Republican,
38:53 and he can run right through the damn metal detectors,
38:57 and then get shot at, and no one shot at him.
38:58 The only thing that saved him from being killed, I guess,
39:02 is that he fell down and saved people's lives in that room.
39:06 Like, let's not act like the Secret Service above reproach here.
39:09 And there has to be a moment where we
39:11 say No one is saying that they're above reproach.
39:15 Ben, nobody is saying that the Secret Service failed.
39:17 You're just making it about stupid identity politics, cuz it's all you have.
39:21 in.
39:21 Let me jump in.
39:22 Let me jump in.
39:22 I I want cuz we've got a very slight delay from me to you guys,
39:25 so I just want to make sure we we can get to other stuff here.
39:29 Clay, obviously Trump says a lot of incendiary things.
39:33 And you know, his language about Iran, for example, you know,
39:37 talking about wiping out the whole country and all that kind of thing.
39:39 All of that is what I would categorize
39:41 as unnecessarily over the top political violent rhetoric.
39:46 And all of it permeates down to disturb minds in some way.
39:50 I I'm a firm believer in that.
39:52 I do think that people calling Trump Hitler and a Nazi and all the rest of it,
39:56 that to the deranged mind always sends a signal.
40:01 He was Hang on.
40:04 Hang on.
40:04 Hang on.
40:05 Uh this is for Clay.
40:06 But my point is that I think it works on both sides.
40:09 I think incendiary violent kind of rhetoric or massively over
40:13 the top exaggerated rhetoric like Trump's a Nazi or Hitler.
40:17 To the deranged mind,
40:18 it's like a signal to them to go and deal with that problem then.
40:22 If he's really the new Hitler, we've got to kill him.
40:24 It's a public duty.
40:25 Um and that brings me to the Jimmy Kimmel uh
40:29 saga where the just to remind people what he said.
40:32 I think we've got the full clip here.
40:35 Our first lady Melania is here.
40:37 Look at So beautiful.
40:39 Mrs.
40:39 Trump, you have a glow like an expectant widow.
40:43 Obviously was a joke about their age difference and the look
40:48 of joy we see on her face every time they're together.
40:51 It was a very light roast joke about the fact
40:53 that he's almost 80 and she's younger than I am.
40:55 It was not [laughter]
40:57 by any stretch of the definition a call to assassination and they know that.
41:04 Now for what it's worth,
41:05 my thoughts about the Kimmel thing are that I didn't think the joke was funny.
41:10 I found his his his explanation a bit torturous,
41:13 but I do think that the right has to be careful it doesn't
41:16 fall into the same trap it has always accused the left of doing,
41:19 which is wanting to cancel comedians for jokes.
41:22 You may not like it.
41:23 It's tasteless and so on.
41:24 And he didn't say it in the aftermath of of this shooting, obviously.
41:28 Um but at the same time, uh Clay, uh it it plays [clears throat] into this whole
41:34 debate that everyone's having about violent rhetoric.
41:37 And I would say that Kimmel's a hypocrite because he
41:40 wouldn't have said that about Michelle Obama or about Jill Biden.
41:44 He wouldn't.
41:45 He wouldn't have done that joke.
41:46 And he could easily have done it about Jill Biden.
41:48 Exactly the same joke.
41:49 When it was obvious that Joe Biden was
41:52 a walking zombie and Jill's a lot younger than him.
41:55 He never did.
41:56 So to me, it it highlighted the ongoing
42:00 issue that I have with the late night guys, which is that to a man,
42:04 uh and the irony is always never lost on me
42:07 that for the guys that bang on most about DEI,
42:10 they're all middle-aged white guys.
42:12 Uh that they to a man, they skew to the liberal left and they
42:17 have a double standard that drives what they do.
42:20 But I don't think he should be canceled and I think
42:22 it's dangerous for the conservative right to call for him to be
42:26 canceled or to put pressure on Disney or whatever it may be
42:30 because that's exactly what they've always accused the woke left of doing.
42:35 Your thoughts?
42:37 Yeah, look, the punchline is Melania hates President Trump
42:40 and is going to be excited when he actually dies,
42:43 whether it's of old age or whether it's because somebody killed him, right?
42:47 I don't think that's a very good punchline.
42:48 I don't think it's particularly funny joke and I agree with you, Piers.
42:51 Never would have been said about said about Michelle Obama,
42:54 Laura Bush or um uh or certainly Jill Biden.
42:58 Now they probably would push back and say, "Well,
43:00 they actually love their husband." But then you're getting into why
43:03 the joke wasn't funny because if you have to explain humor,
43:06 uh it loses its punch.
43:08 I would not fire Jimmy Kimmel.
43:09 I defended him uh when he made the last uh tasteless joke, so-called.
43:14 Um look, I have a dark sense of humor.
43:17 I'm in favor of tasteless jokes.
43:19 Um I'm in favor of uh of humor in general.
43:23 Uh I think uh we're all better when we laugh more.
43:26 Uh what I would do, Piers,
43:28 if you're asking me how I would respond to this, we got a new CEO of Disney.
43:32 I would actually defend Jimmy Kimmel by setting
43:35 forth the new precedent and that is we're not going to fire people for jokes
43:39 or because uh the cancel culture comes for them.
43:42 I've got two examples recently inside of Disney that I
43:46 think would make a lot of sense, maybe three.
43:48 Uh one, I would rehire Roseanne.
43:51 Uh let her do a comedy special.
43:52 Say, "Hey, we didn't make a good decision when we fired her over a joke,
43:56 whether we liked it or not." I would also go
43:58 back I don't know if you ever watch it, The Bachelor.
44:01 They fired Chris Harrison for defending uh someone going
44:05 to a a party back when they were in college.
44:07 He'd been on the show for 20 years.
44:09 I would bring him back.
44:10 I know they got their own issues right now
44:11 with The Bachelor or Bachelorette over throwing chairs and everything else.
44:15 Uh and then I know they kind of said
44:16 this, but I would say it even more publicly.
44:18 They fired Gina Carano from the show The Mandalorian for so-called
44:22 conservative posts relating to uh to her opinions on Instagram.
44:26 I would set a new precedent and that would
44:28 be we're going to be wide open creatively.
44:31 Sometimes creative people are going to say things
44:33 that people of a variety of perspectives find offensive,
44:36 but that's the job of being in creative business.
44:38 So um I would defend Jimmy.
44:41 I'd defend Roseanne.
44:42 I'd defend uh Chris Harrison.
44:44 I I don't want anybody getting canceled for actual opinions.
44:46 Now acts where you commit acts of violence,
44:49 things like that, that's very different.
44:51 Uh but uh I that that would be my perspective on it and I
44:54 think conservatives should try to get their humor to be making poor choices.
44:57 All right, but before I go before I go to the others,
44:59 I'll come to you, Mike, next.
45:00 Before I go to the others, Clay,
45:01 do you accept that that Donald Trump should dial down his rhetoric?
45:05 I mean, that was the point that Kimmel made with with Melania.
45:10 If you want to start you Melania was obviously
45:12 very upset about it and I totally understand it.
45:14 Um but she made the point, you know,
45:17 that that uh it shouldn't have said it, blah blah blah.
45:20 And Kimmel replied, "Well, the the reality of this joke is that uh
45:27 it was a joke and you should just accept it.
45:30 Uh and and if you want to start with rhetoric which is not very nice,
45:33 start with your husband." Right.
45:35 So do you accept that Donald Trump's own rhetoric doesn't really give him
45:39 the bragging rights or the high moral ground when it comes to this issue?
45:44 Well, look, I think Trump's jokes and Trump's uh
45:47 often bull in a china shop uh vocabulary and way
45:50 to uh express himself should be of anyone who
45:54 should be more in favor of wide expression, it's Trump.
45:56 And look, Piers, I doubt this is ever going to happen.
45:59 I think Jimmy Kimmel should have Donald Trump
46:01 on as a guest and I think he should talk to him like late night hosts used
46:06 to talk to the president of the United States.
46:08 I I don't tune in to Jimmy Kimmel
46:10 to see him try to analyze uh geopolitical issues.
46:14 Uh back in the day, do you remember when Fallon went on and kind of rubbed
46:17 Trump's hair and everybody ripped Jimmy Fallon
46:19 and since that point there's been a political war.
46:24 Yeah, it was it was actually what TV should be, by the way.
46:30 Let me come to Mike Nellis.
46:31 I mean, I remember when Greg Gutfeld went on Jimmy Fallon,
46:34 I think it was, wasn't it?
46:36 Um was it was it Fallon or was it Kimmel?
46:39 It was Kimmel.
46:40 And and it was it was it was Kimmel.
46:42 Whichever one it was, but it was Fallon It was it was Fallon.
46:48 And and it was deemed a huge controversial moment that a conservative
46:52 at a Fox News comedian would be on a late night show.
46:55 And I remember scratching my head going,
46:57 "Well, there, right there is the problem.
46:59 Right there." Right?
47:00 The fact that Greg Gutfeld is a hilariously funny guy,
47:03 has is the number one guy in the ratings
47:06 on cable news both at the 5 and his own show.
47:09 The idea that his appearance on a late night show
47:11 in America would be deemed remotely controversial because they skew so left.
47:16 I think somebody New York Post did a a check of how
47:19 many right-wing guests Jimmy Kimmel had after the last thing he had.
47:23 And it was about one in four years.
47:25 I mean, it's ridiculous.
47:26 So there is a genuine bias genuine bias
47:30 that is inherent in those late night shows,
47:33 Mike, which I think does them all a disservice.
47:35 I I loved it with I used to go on Jay
47:37 Leno or I went on David Letterman or whatever it was.
47:41 And they were all impartial guys.
47:43 They just had everybody on.
47:45 What's happened to that?
47:47 Well, I I want to uh start by giving Clay a little bit of praise for being
47:50 ideologically consistent on comedy because a lot
47:53 of his fellow MAGA influencers are not and I
47:55 just appreciated anytime somebody's actually being consistent
47:58 on their values because I also have a dark
48:00 sense of humor and I like a good joke and I don't really care for Kimmel.
48:03 I never really tune into his show.
48:04 I was more of a Conan guy when I actually stayed up that late.
48:07 But I think this whole thing is silly.
48:09 Now the one thing I will push back on just a little bit is like comparing
48:12 what Jimmy Kimmel said to like Roseanne Barr
48:14 and and Gina Carano whatever her last name is,
48:16 I apologize, but like Roseanne Barr tweeted a racial
48:18 slur against Valerie Jarrett that was highly offensive.
48:21 It was not a joke.
48:22 It was like a sincere comment that was frankly very offensive.
48:25 And Gina compared her compared being a Republican to being a Holocaust survivor.
48:28 So it's just a little bit different and I think
48:30 that's why they got fired and it isn't about comedy.
48:33 It's about you say something stupid, your employer can fire you.
48:36 That's true whether or not you're a comedian.
48:37 It's also true if you're one of the idiot liberals
48:40 who was celebrating Charlie Kirk's assassination a few months ago.
48:42 You can be fired by your employer for saying something stupid.
48:45 Now a lot of this is is very much in in bad faith.
48:48 I I agree that probably liberal shows
48:51 could do a better job of having conservatives on that we can all do a better
48:54 job of having real conversations which to your credit,
48:56 Piers, like you brought on two liberals, you brought on two conservatives.
48:59 We're having a conversation.
49:00 Sometimes it's unpleasant.
49:01 We could do a lot more of that and I don't
49:03 have a problem with Donald Trump going to do Jimmy Kimmel's show,
49:05 but Trump would never do Jimmy Kimmel's show.
49:07 I mean, he only agreed to do the White House Correspondents Dinner this weekend
49:10 because they wouldn't invite a comedian and it used to be an event where
49:13 the whole purpose was the President of the United States would sit and take
49:16 his lumps from a comedian whether or not it was Barack Obama or George W.
49:19 Bush.
49:20 So we've kind of gotten away from that and I
49:22 think I would take going back to like what Clay said
49:24 earlier about the signs that were outside the White House Correspondents
49:27 Dinner about killing the president and killing everybody who was there.
49:30 It's disgusting.
49:30 Like people should not say that.
49:31 They should not put that on a sign.
49:33 But I would take those criticisms
49:35 with a grain of salt because they're not willing
49:37 to call out the president of the United States for the things that he said.
49:39 And the president of the United States not that long
49:41 ago was calling Democrats terrorists and saying that they were
49:44 treasonous and then talking about how George Washington would have
49:46 hung Democrats for having opinions that are different than Donald Trump.
49:49 So, he invites this stuff.
49:51 He has moved the Overton window.
49:53 Plenty of people on the left do it too,
49:54 but the president of the United States is
49:55 the president of the United States and he continues
49:57 to use incendiary rhetoric that has created this moment
49:59 in time that we're in more than anybody else.
50:01 Here's let me let me say this.
50:03 Okay, I've got I've got to leave it there.
50:05 I'm sorry.
50:06 It's victim blaming.
50:07 You've got 20 seconds, Ben.
50:08 It's victim blaming.
50:10 This is this is the problem with Jimmy Kimmel and with so many.
50:14 Every single time someone tries to kill Donald
50:17 Trump there is this rhetoric afterwards like well,
50:19 I mean you could kind of it should expect
50:21 it because Donald Trump said X, Y, and Z.
50:23 Like Jimmy Kimmel the other night the audience
50:26 was clearly laughing not at an age joke.
50:29 And by the way, Jimmy Kimmel if you're being funny and you make a mistake,
50:32 you can tweet out you made a mistake.
50:34 You don't have to wait till Monday to correct it.
50:36 And he didn't correct it.
50:37 He doubled down and came up with an excuse.
50:39 Nobody thinks Jimmy Kimmel was trying to be violent.
50:42 Can we skip this crap?
50:44 This is obviously Obviously obviously obviously
50:48 has the definition of Trump derangement syndrome.
50:50 He hates President Trump.
50:53 He hates President Trump.
50:55 It was a joke about him being killed.
50:57 And if you want to clarify it if This is TAKE YOUR PHONE OUT AND YOU
51:02 BE A REAL man and you go and in light of what happened 5 minutes ago,
51:07 my joke the other night was inappropriate
51:09 and I'm sorry that it was put out there.
51:12 You can fix it.
51:13 AGAIN, BECAUSE YOU GUYS want Donald Trump to die.
51:16 That's what it boils down to.
51:18 You have no problem with people taking SHOTS AT HIM.
51:31 YOU KNOW WHO WE NEED right now?
51:32 We need King Charles to intervene to bring There you go.
51:36 My hope my hopes we can replicate what happened in the circle
51:39 there appears have sadly sadly fallen at the last hurdle,
51:43 but thank you all very much.
51:44 I appreciate it.
51:46 Thank you.
51:46 Thanks, Piers.
51:48 See you.
51:49 Well, one of the many things that was expected
51:51 to overshadow this week's royal visit was the Epstein files.
51:53 The former Prince Andrew is of course the King's brother,
51:55 but in the event it barely registered.
51:58 Joining me now is Tara Palmeri.
51:59 She's the host of the Tara Palmeri show who's covered
52:01 the story exhaustively and extremely comprehensive and well, I might add.
52:06 Tara, welcome back to Uncensored.
52:09 King Charles has been criticized for not
52:11 meeting any of the Jeffrey Epstein victims.
52:13 My understanding was that Queen Camilla was quite keen
52:17 to do that and has spoken out about this before,
52:20 but they have been advised by lawyers that it would be
52:24 inappropriate for them to do so because of the ongoing police inquiries.
52:28 What what do you feel about this?
52:30 Would it have been a good thing for them to spoken
52:33 out or should they take legal advice and just honor that?
52:38 You know, I've heard mixed things.
52:39 I think, you know, the Epstein survivors are not being advised
52:42 by the same lawyers obviously and some of them would have liked to have
52:46 met with the King even if it was like a simple handshake
52:49 to observe to observe them because many of them were on the Capitol.
52:54 Um they were in the Capitol when he was giving his address to Congress.
52:57 But I think what this entire spectacle that we saw in Washington about obviously
53:05 stating the elephant in the room
53:07 that his brother is under investigation right now,
53:10 that he's been abused by middle class American girls of sexual abuse.
53:15 You know, it's created a sort of sense
53:17 that there is elite normalization going on right
53:19 now around the Epstein files and the Epstein
53:22 case and that's what we've seen all along.
53:26 You know, you have an attendance at a state dinner.
53:29 You have this garden party where you're
53:31 having members of both sides just fetting him.
53:34 Elite media, you know, enjoying being around the King and really there are some
53:40 unresolved moral issues going on with the monarchy and that institution.
53:45 And I think that if he did the very least address them,
53:51 whether it's in his speech or acknowledge them in comments or meet with them,
53:55 I think it would send a real sign to our leadership
54:00 in our country including President Trump who has some sort of, you know,
54:04 royal I guess you could call it fascination.
54:07 He seems to be very he seems to fantasize the idea of being a king himself.
54:14 As you saw from his two kings post,
54:15 I think it would send a really strong symbol to him that it's not
54:20 something that the rest of the world is ignoring and he's willing to let it,
54:26 you know, take up a new cycle in his own visit.
54:31 Yeah, I mean Lauren Boebert the congresswoman she
54:34 said this afterwards after the King's speech to Congress.
54:37 Let's take a listen.
54:39 Congresswoman, should the King be meeting with Jeffrey Epstein survivors?
54:42 Some of his the victims of Virginia Giuffre are here today in Congress.
54:46 You know, it's interesting.
54:47 Last night we were given a list of do's and don'ts
54:50 for the King by the speaker and we were told,
54:54 you know, no selfies, no touching, no hugging, no conversations.
55:00 And it really sounds like a list of don'ts you know,
55:03 for the royal family with victims more than members of Congress.
55:09 So, sounds like everything that his family's already done.
55:14 I mean it was a sharp point and some
55:17 people will have some empathy with that point,
55:21 but I think it's important to recognize that King Charles
55:24 has never faced any allegations of any involvement with Epstein.
55:28 It's nothing to do with him.
55:29 It's his brother who's been completely disgraced.
55:31 He should face in my opinion Andrew, investigators and authorities,
55:36 but is at the moment resisting that, but we'll see how that plays out.
55:39 There is this ongoing sense though, Tara,
55:42 that the UK has been getting his act together
55:45 about holding men to account over this Epstein scandal.
55:49 Lord Mandelson disgraced and investigated by police.
55:52 Andrew disgraced, arrested, and so on.
55:55 But we're not seeing that pattern in the United States.
55:58 You're seeing some men below the radar a bit
56:00 who are sort of being brought to account,
56:02 but none of the big high-profile names that have been
56:05 associated with Epstein have had the similar kind of public shaming,
56:09 police investigation, and so on.
56:11 Why is that?
56:13 I mean it seems like the public officials,
56:15 that's the problem in America is that our civil servants,
56:18 our public officials, our politicians, they haven't faced justice.
56:22 The only people who have actually paid, I guess you could say,
56:24 in their reputations or losing their positions are
56:27 people who work at various institutions like Larry Summers.
56:31 You saw Leon Black have to step down
56:33 from the board of the private equity firm he he founded.
56:38 Glenn Dubin.
56:38 There's just been, you know,
56:40 various various members of the media and of elite, you know,
56:45 financial institutions and and education that that have
56:51 set have had to pay some consequences,
56:53 but we haven't seen anyone in public life actually be investigated and that's
56:57 the difference between the United States and the rest of the world
57:01 frankly where they're actually opening they're
57:04 actually opening investigations into possible impropriety
57:08 between Epstein and members that now are in our cabinet that, you know,
57:12 even all the way to the top, President Trump.
57:14 But I just want to go back to the idea that, you know,
57:16 King Charles he made an impassioned plea to Congress,
57:21 you know, that we need to remember our humanitarian roots.
57:25 We have to defend democratic values.
57:28 And it's like there are so many accountability
57:31 questions hanging over his brother, over, you know,
57:35 over him and I know that in the UK you are actually investigating him,
57:40 but not for the crime of sexual abuse.
57:43 It's something completely unrelated.
57:46 And so it just feels like there's a bit of a mismatch there when he
57:50 comes to the United States and sort
57:52 of tries to appeal to our moral higher ground.
57:55 And yes, he should be because we are failing
57:57 in that place and in some ways the UK is doing better,
57:59 but I don't think we can just sort of say,
58:02 you know, I don't think we can give this one a pass.
58:05 And say this was just a successful visit.
58:09 And just finally, Tara, do you think we're going to see
58:11 the remaining 3 million documents in the Epstein files?
58:15 Because it does seem quite extraordinary that half
58:17 of half of the files just haven't been made public.
58:20 I mean, I can't think of anything less transparent.
58:23 Actually more than that, Piers, if you count the 40 terabytes of video.
58:29 I mean that would answer so many questions.
58:31 And we know from, you know,
58:33 we know from emails within the FBI that they're sitting on this.
58:37 And I don't know how we're ever going to get this without either whistleblowers,
58:42 maybe maybe some of the lawsuits against the DOJ will will stand,
58:46 but it's it's really it's it's it's really baffling and I don't know
58:51 that the next administration is going to want
58:54 to release them because everyone looks so bad.
58:58 And I think it would just place so much doubt
59:02 in the Department of Justice and create so much suspicion.
59:06 And I think it really reveals, you know, national security concerns, etc.
59:12 How is Epstein related to national security concerns?
59:15 Because that's why they're withholding those millions of documents.
59:20 Yeah.
59:21 Yeah, it doesn't make any sense.
59:22 Tara, keep up your great work.
59:23 You've been doing brilliant investigative stuff on this and I appreciate it.
59:27 I'm sure lots of other people do, too.
59:29 Thank you very much for joining me.
59:30 Thank you.
59:34 Well, joining me now is Glenn Beck,
59:35 host of the Glenn Beck Program and founder of Torch.
59:38 Glenn, welcome back to Uncensored.
59:39 How are you?
59:40 Thank you very much.
59:40 Very good.
59:41 Very good, Piers.
59:42 Good to talk to you.
59:43 Did you feel Did you feel the warm glow of royal patronage yesterday as my king
59:49 Oh my god.
59:50 addressed both Congress and then then the state dinner?
59:53 I have to be real honest with you.
59:55 Don't like Charles.
59:55 Never have liked Charles.
59:57 Uh loved his mother.
59:59 Loved his what?
1:00:00 Mhm.
1:00:00 Grandmother, great-grandmother Victoria, she was fabulous.
1:00:04 Um him, not so much not so much.
1:00:07 I have great hope for uh for William and uh and Kate,
1:00:10 but you know, we're not I'm not a I'm not a king person.
1:00:14 It's It's amazing that we're marching here no kings,
1:00:17 but you got one and you're still getting the Yeah.
1:00:21 But there was the there was the irony, Glenn, wasn't there?
1:00:24 Of all the Democrats who've been marching about Oh.
1:00:27 no kings, then cheering on an actual king repeatedly [laughter] in Congress.
1:00:32 Yeah, it's not it's not irony, it's hypocrisy.
1:00:36 Um you know, but you know, there there are those and this is the thing, Piers,
1:00:41 that you know, I'm coming over for the Tommy
1:00:43 Robinson rally and I don't know what to expect.
1:00:47 Um and and I and I honestly say that because I'm you know,
1:00:52 I'm not even sure about my own countrymen sometimes.
1:00:55 The Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights is not the Magna Carta.
1:01:00 It Magna Carta was a good start, but we have something that is in totally
1:01:03 totally different and we don't just guarantee rights,
1:01:07 we guarantee the right of the individual.
1:01:10 And so many Americans don't understand that even.
1:01:15 Um you know, they're for this collective, you know, everything.
1:01:19 Um and that's not what our founders were for and I I I worry you know,
1:01:24 when I hear talk about the Magna Carta and stuff, it yeah, well,
1:01:27 you can still become a dictator and and Trump could
1:01:31 become a dictator if he doesn't concentrate on the Bill
1:01:34 of Rights and the founding document of all men are
1:01:38 created equal and we are as individuals, not a collective.
1:01:43 And I I don't know what to expect from England
1:01:46 or or Europe as we go into these scary times.
1:01:52 Well, then let's talk about Tommy Robinson then because I I saw that you posted,
1:01:56 I'm going to head to stand shoulder
1:01:58 to shoulder with Tommy Robinson at Unite the Kingdom
1:02:01 rally on May the 16th and said you were excited and proud to do so.
1:02:05 How much do you know about Tommy Robinson?
1:02:09 I think I know enough, but not as much as as you know.
1:02:13 Um I've seen him over the years change a great deal.
1:02:17 I think we all have.
1:02:18 Um and mature.
1:02:21 Um I know that he was he said himself he was very thuggish when he was young.
1:02:26 Um but I think he brings up um strong
1:02:28 warnings that are important for reasonable people to listen to.
1:02:35 But he is you know, his real his name isn't even Tommy Robinson.
1:02:38 His name is Stephen Yaxley Lennon.
1:02:40 He's got He's got convictions for assault.
1:02:43 He was a football hooligan, led a mob.
1:02:46 He uh was convicted of using a fake passport.
1:02:48 He's been done for mortgage fraud, contempt of court.
1:02:51 He's been in and out of jail for all sorts of different things.
1:02:54 And I've got a feeling that most of America most of the conservative right
1:02:58 on American side sort of either don't really know this about him or just are
1:03:03 prepared to turn a blind eye because they're kind of locked in and forgive
1:03:07 me if I don't want to include
1:03:08 you if you uh don't recognize this characterization,
1:03:12 but there's a growing sense.
1:03:13 I said it on Hannity show last night of Britain being overrun by Muslims,
1:03:18 overtaken, we're becoming an Islamic state and so on.
1:03:22 To which I say, well, we have 5% of our population is currently Muslim.
1:03:28 And I live in London, which is an incredibly multicultural city
1:03:32 with uh several million Muslims living in it.
1:03:35 I just don't recognize this this portrayal of my country
1:03:39 or my capital city as being overrun by Muslims.
1:03:42 But this is what Tommy Robinson wants America to think.
1:03:46 And he's over here all the time do doing podcasts
1:03:50 and interviews talking about the country being invaded, being overtaken.
1:03:54 Now, there are legitimate questions about immigration,
1:03:57 both legal and illegal, which I've absolutely agree with.
1:04:00 I also think, and I've said this before,
1:04:02 that Robinson was one of the louder voices calling out this absolute
1:04:07 disgrace of the grooming rape gangs and he was right to do so.
1:04:12 But Yes.
1:04:12 I'm not sure I'd be comfortable when even Nigel Farage,
1:04:15 head of the Reform Party here it would in the UK.
1:04:18 I'm in New York at the moment.
1:04:19 But but then even he doesn't stand shoulder to shoulder with Tommy Robinson.
1:04:24 Does that not give you pause for thought, Glenn Beck?
1:04:27 Sure, it it gives me pause for thought.
1:04:28 I've talked to Tommy.
1:04:30 I mean, he has told me all of the things that you just said.
1:04:33 He called himself a hooligan, said that he had made huge mistakes, etc.
1:04:36 etc.
1:04:37 Um but I I don't know what he's standing for that I would object to.
1:04:42 I mean, I'm a I'm a recovering alcoholic.
1:04:44 I've made huge mistakes in my life.
1:04:46 We all can make mistakes in our life.
1:04:48 Um but I I'm not sure you know, I cuz what I see here is an unequal
1:04:54 application to the law and a warning of Sharia law.
1:04:58 I don't have a problem with Muslims.
1:04:59 I don't have a problem with people coming into the country if you know,
1:05:03 as long as you want to become An America may be different.
1:05:06 I could move over to England and I'd never be an Englishman.
1:05:10 You can move over to America and adopt our country
1:05:13 and become a citizen and you will become an American.
1:05:16 Um it's so it's different and I want that, but I
1:05:19 don't want Sharia law and that that I think
1:05:22 is the warning that he is giving and the warning
1:05:25 that people should pay attention to all over the West.
1:05:28 You are seeing a group of people I just saw it was in Denmark,
1:05:32 48% of those who are living um as a as a newcomer and is Islamic,
1:05:40 48% want Sharia law.
1:05:42 That's incompatible with the West.
1:05:45 That's the warning that I think people should hear.
1:05:48 But I also want to be careful as I that's why I brought this up.
1:05:51 I want to be careful Mhm.
1:05:53 You can go wrong quickly if you get into us versus them,
1:05:58 you can go wrong quickly if you
1:06:00 are not understanding um universal individual rights.
1:06:07 We have to stand what kept America from going fascist
1:06:11 for so long has been we understand the individual right.
1:06:16 Um and and that I don't know how to judge in Germany
1:06:19 or Europe or any place else because you don't have That's bred into us.
1:06:24 We're losing it, but a lot of us still
1:06:26 have it bred right deeply into us that individual
1:06:29 strength uh and and love of individual rights that I
1:06:33 don't know if the rest of the country has.
1:06:35 I I mean, my my my issue with Robinson,
1:06:37 he refuses to come on my show cuz he knows I'm going
1:06:39 to ask him stuff he doesn't get asked when he does American shows.
1:06:43 And he knows he doesn't want to get into that cuz
1:06:45 it it might even send him back to prison cuz he he'll
1:06:47 he'll repeat lies where there are laws which are currently contempt
1:06:50 of court laws in the UK which he if he repeated them,
1:06:53 he'd go back to prison as he did before.
1:06:55 So, I think he's a charlatan.
1:06:58 Can I ask you a question?
1:06:59 Um And again, I'm not an expert on your laws and everything else,
1:07:02 but are you a little concerned about how many people
1:07:05 in your country are being arrested for freedom of speech?
1:07:10 I mean, you have I think it was 14,000 people in the last 2 years.
1:07:13 I mean, it's it's gravely concerning what's going on.
1:07:18 I've talked to that about that.
1:07:19 I think it is there's been a massive over done
1:07:23 response to people putting stuff on Facebook and whatever whatever.
1:07:26 And And it's inconsistent with our country saying they're
1:07:30 a country of free speech and then I mean,
1:07:31 I thought the worst one was Graham Linehan,
1:07:33 the comedian, who posted two trans jokes on X and then
1:07:38 months later got arrested by five armed police at Heathrow.
1:07:41 It was ridiculous.
1:07:42 Or the teacher in got thrown out.
1:07:45 Teacher in Ireland, I think, that is just I think got life in prison.
1:07:50 I mean, it's that's craziness.
1:07:52 That's craziness.
1:07:53 Well, there's some there are some absurd cases,
1:07:55 but I think that the thing about Robinson I don't like is that you know,
1:07:59 his recent stay in prison was nothing to do with free speech
1:08:02 and everything to do with the fact that he had lost a defamation case,
1:08:07 a libel case against with a Syrian refugee boy.
1:08:11 He won the case, won a six-figure sum in damages and there was
1:08:14 a contempt of court order put against
1:08:16 Robinson not to repeat his demonstrable proven lies,
1:08:21 which is why he lost the defamation case.
1:08:23 He then goes and makes this movie called Silence,
1:08:25 which is the one thing he never is,
1:08:27 and he repeated all the lies and then he got put
1:08:30 back in prison cuz he was in breach of contempt of court.
1:08:32 That's not a free speech issue.
1:08:34 That's someone spewing lies, being told, if you do it again,
1:08:37 you're going you're going to prison, and he does it again.
1:08:40 So, I I'm I'm not here to defend or defame uh him.
1:08:44 Um you know, let him speak for himself.
1:08:47 Uh I know I've asked him some of these questions and one of the things that he
1:08:50 did bring up that I thought was was
1:08:53 at least worth consideration is how many of these things,
1:08:57 because we've seen it in America, how many of these things are happening to you
1:09:00 because you're on the wrong side of power?
1:09:05 How much of that is actually righteous prosecution and how
1:09:10 much of that is prosecution because shut up and sit down?
1:09:14 And I don't know the answer to that.
1:09:15 Well, it's a legitimate No, no,
1:09:17 it's a legitimate question in all of these cases and I'm
1:09:19 sure there is an element of that with some people.
1:09:21 He is you know, he's a self-proclaimed sort
1:09:23 of enemy of of the establishment and so on.
1:09:26 Um I don't don't know.
1:09:28 I would feel uncomfortable, Glenn, because I I've got a lot of respect for you,
1:09:31 a lot of time for you.
1:09:32 I would just be slightly careful how close
1:09:34 your shoulder gets to his shoulder at this rally,
1:09:37 because there are some people that go to these things who are perfectly normal,
1:09:42 decent people that care about their country.
1:09:44 I've no doubt about that.
1:09:46 But, there are also some absolute hardcore genuine Islamophobic thugs.
1:09:52 And the reason I say that is if you if you ask somebody who asks Tommy Robinson,
1:09:55 here's the point I would make.
1:09:57 The vast majority of sexual uh crime in the UK is perpetrated by white men.
1:10:02 When was the last time Tommy Robinson ever alluded to any
1:10:06 of that on his social media platforms or his rallies?
1:10:09 It's always Muslim, Muslim, Muslim, Muslim, Muslim, Muslim.
1:10:12 As if the only people committing crimes in my country are Muslims.
1:10:17 And it's a grotesque mischaracterization of reality.
1:10:21 So, I I I will tell you, Piers, when you say, you know,
1:10:24 be careful who you you get close to, I would say that about anybody.
1:10:27 I think we all need to be very careful,
1:10:30 because in on both sides of the aisle in my own country,
1:10:33 it is starting to become there crazies on both sides.
1:10:37 Far more, I mean, Yeah.
1:10:38 a death cult now on the left.
1:10:40 You know, what happened over the weekend with the president, it's a death cult.
1:10:44 Yeah.
1:10:45 Uh but, there are crazies now starting to appear on the other side.
1:10:48 But, you can't you can't you have to be brave enough to say,
1:10:52 I am an individual, and this is what I believe.
1:10:55 And I I I plan on, you know, being in England to observe and to watch
1:11:00 and to speak um on what I believe is important.
1:11:03 And what I bring is a warning that individual rights,
1:11:08 this cannot be about religion.
1:11:11 And I'm not preaching to anybody in England.
1:11:13 In our own country, this is not about religion.
1:11:15 This is about a political force that wants to shut down freedoms.
1:11:21 That is a legitimate concern in Western culture and needs
1:11:25 to have legitimate airing and and discussion without hatred or name-calling.
1:11:33 Glenn, on that point, I 100% agree with you.
1:11:35 Always good to have you on Uncensored.
1:11:37 Good to talk to you.
1:11:37 And maybe see you in London.
1:11:39 Take care.
1:11:39 Take care.
1:11:40 Thanks, Piers.
1:11:40 Bye-bye.
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